Hm. Have you ever visited Hilbert's Hotel? It will help with the mathematics — Banno
Says who? Devans? — Banno
Well, no. It shows instead that for presentism there is no start to time — Banno
It would be an error to think that the universe acts logically. Instead, we choose logical descriptions of the universe. The universe acts as it will; it's our descriptions that are "restricted" by logic. If our descriptions do not work, we don't conclude that he universe is being perverse, we change the description.
We can't "give up on logic" and still be saying anything interesting. — Banno
I do not regard ∞+1=∞ as a valid logical proposition. — Devans99
I suppose the best way to describe the reality of an eternal universe is that it would exist with an actual infinite age but any attempts to quantify it would fall within potential infinity — coolguy8472
Within your proof you try to disprove it by appealing to the actual infinity which doesn't work within real number math. — coolguy8472
But there is no "start" because there is no beginning — coolguy8472
Also would it not be possible for a universe to be created with infinite age by a god? — coolguy8472
The age of the universe is a numeric property; it takes a single numeric value. Actual infinity has no fixed value. Having a fixed value is the defining characteristic of a number. So Actual infinity is not a number. So it cannot be used for the age of the universe, size of the universe or any other real life numeric property. — Devans99
Actual infinity has its own mathematical rules like:
∞+1=∞
Which make no logical sense. An object that when you change it, it does not change? There is no such object so the actual infinity concept flies in the face of our everyday experience and logic. — Devans99
It does not matter if it's called 'start' or 'beginning', objects must have one in order to exist. — Devans99
Pretty close to agreement. It's more like "if age of the universe is finite then it has a numeric property". By proving the age of the universe does not have a value in an eternal universe does not contradict that statement because it's a conditional. — coolguy8472
not in conventional math. At best we could say as x approaches infinity x+1=(no limit) or infinity as a symbolic value to mean no upper bound — coolguy8472
Proving the universe did not have a cause in an eternal universe does not make the statement false. It makes A false but not "if A then B". — coolguy8472
I could say if the universe does not have an age; it is not a universe. Having no age implies the universe has no temporal start implies none of it exists. — Devans99
You have lost me. An eternal universe would not have a cause makes sense.But apart from that I not sure what you mean? — Devans99
Universes that have a beginning need a temporal start but that does not mean that universe that don't have a beginning need a temporal start. — coolguy8472
Similarly if you have the statement "if something begins to exist then it needs a cause". This statement is not disproven when you show the universe had no cause. We can take the contrapositive and say "if it does not need a cause" then "it does not need a beginning" — coolguy8472
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
2. If the particle does not have a start, then it cannot have a ‘next to start’ (because that would qualify as a start)
4. And so on for next to, next to start, all the way to time start+∞ (IE now)
Therefore Santa Clause exists at the north pole — coolguy8472
The point of time where any would-be starting point may not exist but that particular point of time still exists except does not have the property of being a "starting point". Any point in time next to this point of time also exists. So we could say the point of time "next to start" does exist except the point it's next to does not have the property of being the "starting point". Like the North Pole and the place next to the North Pole still exists regardless of whether or not Santa Clause exists there — coolguy8472
Referencing our universe from a non-existent point of time or a point of time in parallel universe — coolguy8472
ither NOTHING exists...or at least ONE THING had no cause. — Frank Apisa
Devans99
1k
ither NOTHING exists...or at least ONE THING had no cause. — Frank Apisa
Correct. The timeless prime mover has no cause. That is what started everything else off. — Devans99
Your argument shows that Santa does not exist. That does not show my argument is invalid. — Devans99
Just because time still exists, does not mean that the object existed at that time. We know the object has no temporal start point so the object will not exist at the next point in time (even though that point of time exists). — Devans99
I am not; it is a fact that the start is connected to the end. So if the start does not exist, the end does not exist. All that is required is to know that the start is missing. — Devans99
Within your argument you're using the absense of existence of a start point to spread that non-existence to infinity to "now". That's the same concept as me using santa's non-existence at the north pole to spread his non-existence to where I'm at now to prove I don't exist therefore santa must exist by contradiction. — coolguy8472
Within your proof you we assume a start point does not exist but then invoking the existence of it anyway when doing "start+infinity". If we assume an eternal universe in our premise then we are assuming the start does not exist. — coolguy8472
You cannot use Santa's non existence to prove you don't exist. — Devans99
It is a fact that the start is always connected to the end so it is always valid to traverse from start to end proving non-existence. — Devans99
Devans99
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↪Frank Apisa
Well we can say that an infinite regress is impossible - it has no start - so how could any of it come about? So the only way to avoid an infinite regress is a first cause.
Then we have the start of time (see OP); that requires a timeless first cause too.
So I would argue my position is the most logically coherent model for the start of the universe.
Silencing the debate is not in the interests of truth. — Devans99
Using your "reasoning" either NOTHING exists...or at least one thing has always existed — Frank Apisa
But you then go to the totally illogical conclusion that the "one thing"...cannot be everything that exists. — Frank Apisa
↪Frank Apisa
I am trying to use logic rather than pontificating. — Devans99
I do no agree that inconsistencies in my reasoning having been demonstrated.
Using your "reasoning" either NOTHING exists...or at least one thing has always existed — Frank Apisa
'Always' existing in time is impossible; rather it is that something has permanent existence outside of time.
But you then go to the totally illogical conclusion that the "one thing"...cannot be everything that exists. — Frank Apisa
If we assume that everything that exists, exists in time, we always end up with an infinite regress. So there must be something outside of time that caused everything else. Something beyond cause and effect so needs no cause itself. Sorry if I'm repeating myself, but it's the only possible solution to how the universe started.
As to whether the first cause is God, I think you have to define 'God' first. If the definition is the traditional religious definition then that reduces the likelihood that the first cause is God - the 3Os do not follow logically from anything - so it's hard to logically argue for the traditional view of God.
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