better way, the physicist way, is to find a language that describes what is going on... to do experiments and theorise using mathematical models that suit what you see. — Banno
Seems to me that there is an assumption here that logic tells the universe what to do. I don't think it works that way. Rather, we choose a logic - a language or grammar - that best suits what the universe does. — Banno
So the line of philosophising that you adopt is fraught with potential error. A better way, the physicist way, is to find a language that describes what is going on... to do experiments and theorise using mathematical models that suit what you see — Banno
The style of argument you use in this OP - and elsewhere - is that adopted by medieval monks to show that God exists. Just as with those arguments, no one was convinced except the monks. — Banno
I'm not sure what a "counter logic" is. — Banno
I think there is an assumption in my argument that the universe won't do anything deeply illogical or magical. I think you will find the same assumption is used very extensively in science and in our everyday lives. Without this 'no magic' axiom, we would have made little progress in science. — Devans99
I've given a theoretical argument; its true some empirical evidence is needed to back it up. I can point to the Big Bang; time slows down the closer we get to the Big Bang; so that looks like supporting empirical evidence for a start of time. We then can look at the low entropy nature of our universe and take that too as evidence for a start of time. It would be better to have more empirical evidence than this but it is hard to collect empirical evidence for something that happened 14 billion years ago. — Devans99
You are referring to the prime mover / first cause arguments of St Thomas Aquinas? These arguments have stood the test of time. I believe they are still valid: once you allow that quantum fluctuations lead to infinite density so are impossible as a cause of the universe then cause and effect is back as an axiom and so there is no reason to doubt the prime mover / first cause argument except in its general abstractness. It shows there must logically be a first cause. That it not the same thing as demonstrating the existence of God I grant. — Devans99
No, I'm referring to the general style of arguing from any sort of first principle to a self-serving conclusion. They are examples of confirmation bias, not of philosophy. If you assume there is a first cause, it will not be surprising that you can conclude, validly, that there is a first cause. But no one else need agree with you. They are dreadful arguments. — Banno
X. ‘Can get something from nothing’, IE matter is created naturally. With infinite time, matter density would be infinite. So this is impossible. — Devans99
Y. ‘Can’t get something from nothing’, IE matter has always existed. Meaning the matter had no temporal start. So this is impossible too* — Devans99
1. Assume a particle does not have a (temporal) start point
2. If the particle does not have a start, then it cannot have a ‘next to start’ (because that would qualify as a start)
3. So particle does not have a next to start (by Modus Ponens on [1] and [2]).
4. And so on for next to, next to start, all the way to time start+∞ (IE now)
5. Implies particle does not have a (temporal) end
6. Implies particle never existed — Devans99
Not in an infinite space. — Banno
IT would be simple to take this argument's logic and show that there are no integers. Assume there is no first integer. Then there cannot be any next integer... — Banno
Eternalism is true
A. Assume only now exists (presentism)
B. So before the start of time there was nothing
C But creation ex nihilo / without time is impossible
D. So something 'other' than only now exists
E. The ‘other’ must be timeless (else we end up in a infinite regress of time1, time2, time3 etc...)
F. The ‘other’ must have created our time (at time=0)
G. So the ‘other’ ’sees’ time=0 and time=now simultaneously (its timeless)
H. Hence eternalism must hold — Devans99
But matter is appearing in every possible place in the universe - Big Bangs are occurring all over through natural processes. It does not matter if space is infinite, it still reaches infinite density everywhere if time is infinite. — Devans99
This makes no sense for me. There are no big bangs going on in my lounge-room; I would have noticed. And simple mathematics shows that your last sentence here is problematic. The sequence of reals contains infinite positive numbers, while leaving room for infinite negative numbers... — Banno
Really? What is it? — Banno
So your argument becomes: Devans thinks there must be a start time, therefore presentism is wrong. — Banno
But we are assuming that 'something comes from nothing' naturally. So for arguments sake, I've said that matter is created during Big Bangs. They would be very occasional events but with infinite time, there would be an infinite number of them so matter would reach infinite density. — Devans99
And it is your maths that is letting you down; if you have a fixed volume of space with infinite matter in it then density is infinite. It does not matter that space is infinite - matter is appearing everywhere. — Devans99
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