Re (3), time could be infinite with matter/energy creation occurring at just one point in time and that's it. Or space could be infinite, too. Or matter/energy could disappear, too. There are any number of possibilities that would make (3) false. — Terrapin Station
As for (4), the notion that finite time requires a God is completely arbitrary. — Terrapin Station
my only point was, you seemed willing to leave scientific consensus to argue against his point. — Rank Amateur
His point that the universe is finite seems a valid assumption for his argument, — Rank Amateur
so that would be an unnatural event caused by God. — Devans99
So what. Matter/energy density would still reach infinite levels with infinite time. — Devans99
As long as matter/energy increases on average my premise holds — Devans99
If the creation of time was a natural event, there would be many instances of time — Devans99
It would be unnatural and caused by God per what? Those claims don't follow from anything — Terrapin Station
Again, this is a complete non-sequitur. You're assuming something that you're not stating. Imagine that we have a universe with infinite time and space and re matter/energy, we have a single gym sock and that's it. You'd have to argue why that's not possible. You can't just assume whatever you're assuming. — Terrapin Station
"As long as matter/energy increases on average my premise holds
— Devans99
You'd need to present an argument that it does. — Terrapin Station
"If the creation of time was a natural event, there would be many instances of time
— Devans99
What does that follow from? — Terrapin Station
Yes, the universe had a beginning. Yes, it could be God but is it? — TheMadFool
I would guess he would be timeless though. If he existed in time, he'd have no start, no coming into being so that's impossible. If he did have a start in time, what would come before God? Nothing but an empty stretch of time. Nothing to create God - impossible. So to get around these problems, he has to be outside time. — Devans99
But, didn't you say time is finite. If so, ONE Big Bang isn't unnatural is it? There just wasn't enough time for more Big Bangs. — TheMadFool
If time is finite, the argument is that God created that finite time. — Devans99
So you say. Consider, though; whatever you say, you have not really solved any problem. Even if the Godliest God you can imagine is exactly right, where did he come from? It would help if you spent even a little time with even secondary literature of the better thinkers on the subject of God. At the very least there seems consensus among them that God is incomprehensible. But even that is self-recognized as an assumption, by those who make it.So it really could be turtles all the way down?
— tim wood
Turtles all the way down is just an infinite regress and all infinite regresses are nonsense. — Devans99
Even if the Godliest God you can imagine is exactly right, where did he come from? — tim wood
If the event occurred once only in infinite time it must be unnatural. The rule is with infinite time, if an event is possible it happens an infinite number of times. So any natural event would happen an infinite number of times. A singular event is a non-natural event in infinite time. — Devans99
Creation of time naturally requires some natural causation mechanism to exist. — Devans99
Yes, because it's a logical argument, and those don't rely on scientific consensus in any significant way (it would be to their fault if they were to; a premise could be a statement of a common scientific view, but there's no requirement for it to be, and the argument--that is, the connections/implications of one statement in the argument--can't assume scientific consensus without committing a fallacy). — Terrapin Station
Validity, especially in a logical context, has to do with the connection between premises and the conclusion. The only way a premise can itself be valid is if it has premises and a conclusion packed into it and it meets the definition of validity (which is that it's impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion false, where "and" is traditionally parsed as the inclusive "or"). Truth in logic isn't at all the same thing as validity. Whether any premises are true isn't for logic itself to decide (again unless a statement or formula has a logical argument packed into it). — Terrapin Station
So the overwhelming scientific support for his position over yours — Rank Amateur
That's a longer, more detailed version of the claim. It's not an argument for any of it. — Terrapin Station
It requires some natural causation mechanism per what? — Terrapin Station
The act of creation is the cause and the created thing is the effect. If time has a start, it must of been caused by something. So there must be something outside of time that supports cause and effect. At the very least it the cause of time is outside time. — Devans99
I think thats debatable; cause and effect are enabled by time; that does not mean there could be something else time-like that also enables cause and effect. — Devans99
And this "time-like thing", would it then be finite or infinite? Replacing time with not-time doesn't solve any problem with the argument, at most it shifts it. A timeless "act" that is also a "cause" with time as the "effect" is simply incoherent. — Echarmion
As I pointed out above, God would be timeless, IE he 'always' existed, was not created, just is. So there is no chicken and egg/infinite regress of creators once you remove time from the picture. — Devans99
nd just for the heck of it, a timeless god would be around for some amount of time - but the amount of time he was around would always be longer.... Right? — tim wood
The photon changes (position) and yet it experiences no time. That suggests time and change are independent. Change is possible without time. Cause and effect without time follow. — Devans99
Your view, account, of the existential status of this god, please. — tim wood
It's quite immaterial whether or not the photon "experiences" time. Because all we know about photons, we know from observing them — Echarmion
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