My motivation is to work out the truth of how the universe came about.
I truly doubt that...but we'll discuss that more as we move along.
- - - - -
That may or may not include God.
I have argued for God's existence in the past but I have come to the conclusion it is more productive to discuss whether there was a creator or not; that question is amenable to logic; the question 'is there a God?' is ill defined and probably not answerable.
I think it is unlikely that a traditional God exists but likely that there was a creator of the universe.
↪coolguy8472 But for it to be one object, the temporal start must be connected to the temporal end (else it is two separate objects).
I think you have to think about the topology of objects in space and then transfer that thinking to time. In space, saying something has no identifiable start point is equivalent to saying it does not exist - if it has no start point, it has no length (end-start) or breadth so it can't exist. It is exactly the same thing when you come to consider time.
For me, things without starts are in an infinite regress and thus are impossible. If you think about a moment, it defines the following moment. So infinite time forms an infinite regress. But there is no overall starting moment, so none of the moments in the infinite regress can ultimately be fully defined. Each moment makes sense by its own, but overall infinite time cannot be because the whole think is undefined.
If you think about the set of negative integers:
{ ..., -4, -3, -2, -1 }
The ... means the set is partially defined. Strictly speaking that means undefined. Anything without a start is undefined. — Devans99
That may or may not include a god, Devans! A god or gods...not God. At least that is the way it should be worded if you truly are working on what you say you are working on. — Frank Apisa
But it is a blind guess...and you truly are not treating it as a blind guess. — Frank Apisa
You are doing to the question, "Does God exist"...what the people who argue for Intelligent Design are trying to do to "Creationism." — Frank Apisa
I've already mentioned this; when talking in the singular; as in someone's name, you use the capitalised form, for example: God may exist. When using 'God' as just another verb and not someone's name, you use a small letter: He was a god, gods exist etc... — Devans99
It's hardly a blind guess. Omniscience for example; knowing the status of every particle in the universe would require a brain much larger than the universe. That's very unlikely hence my conclusion that such a God probably does not exist is not a bind guess.
I am changing the question from something unanswerable to something answerable with logic and science. Intelligent Design is an inappropriate analogy as that is not logic/science; it purports that God was somehow involved in evolution which is ridiculous. All I am arguing for is that the Big Bang was caused deliberately which is not ridiculous (at least a 50%/50% shot).
All you are talking about it a blind guess. None of it is the result of logic — Frank Apisa
You are being duplicitous. — Frank Apisa
How exactly is that a blind guess? How would a brain exist of such dimensions? It would take years for distant parts of the brain to communicate with each other... not a viable brain... so not a viable god. — Devans99
Or omni-benevolence... that requires getting it right all the time, but clearly things go wrong in the universe, so again we can use LOGIC to rule out the traditional view of God.
I am not a deceitful person.
I see nothing wrong with answering the question 'was the universe created?'.
It would further human knowledge if we had an answer.
One...you are making a blind guess that it would take a brain that size...fabricating the guess from essentially NOTHING. — Frank Apisa
You are being duplicitous whether wittingly or unwittingly...and whether toward your audience or toward yourself. — Frank Apisa
Explore it. Don't claim victory over it even in modest amounts. — Frank Apisa
↪coolguy8472
Space is the only other dimension so drawing analogies to time is tempting. So I'm thinking from the spacetime viewpoint. So thinking of an object as a solid brick in 4D space time, if there is no temporal start, it implies one side of the brick is missing. That's not a valid object IMO.
I'm trying to formulate an argument from a different angle:
1. Can’t get something from nothing
2. So something must have permanent existence (else there would be nothing)
3. That something in itself has no cause
4. To have no cause; something must be beyond cause and effect; IE beyond time.
5. So time must have a start and eternalism holds — Devans99
Devans99
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One...you are making a blind guess that it would take a brain that size...fabricating the guess from essentially NOTHING. — Frank Apisa
You can't fit a pint in a half pint pot. That information (on all the particles in the universe) has to fit somewhere. This is logical. — Devans99
Besides, to be truly omniscience would require a nervous system that encompasses every particle in the whole universe. How likely is that? We have not noticed such a thing empirically (CERN etc...). So we can inductively conclude it's unlikely. Again, that's using logic.
Hardly... I'm being perfectly straight-forward in saying a think there is probably a creator and its not like the traditional God. What is dishonest about that?
I am exploring it. You are not helping a great deal. Specific counter arguments to my points would help us get at the truth rather than this endless rant about me having a hidden agenda.
Humans contemplating the REALITY of existence are like ants contemplating the extra-galactic cosmos, Devans — Frank Apisa
My guess is that I have already nailed it. You are attempting a backdoor "There is a God" thesis. I further suspect a young, intelligent, ambitious, zealous, egotistical guy thinking he can do what people like Einstein, Sagan, Degrasse, Hawking and others could not — Frank Apisa
Devans99
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Humans contemplating the REALITY of existence are like ants contemplating the extra-galactic cosmos, Devans — Frank Apisa
You seem to be denying 2000 years worth of scientific progress. — Devans99
I am middle aged if you must know. Look at it this way; why would you bother with philosophy if you did not think you had a chance of discovering something? I certainly would not. And I am not claiming to have discovered anything, I am just floating arguments for consideration. If someone shoots down one of my arguments; I shut up about it. That's the way it works. Why do you have a problem with it?
↪coolguy8472
Having time start without a cause is a sort of creation ex nihilo but seems worse because time itself is absence too - could time start/be created whilst lacking both time and a cause? — Devans99
Hi folks. It’s an argument in two parts. First I argue time has a start, then I argue eternalism (believe that past, present and future are all equally real) is true. — Devans99
I don't think it is possible for time to be eternal - that would require everything (matter etc...) to exist 'forever' which does not seem possible: — Devans99
There sure isn't anything contradictory in saying that time could be everlasting. You couldn't have time if at some point there was no time. You would have to go from no change to change, how could that be possible? You couldn't get a universe from a completely static state. — Sam26
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