A. Argument From Nothing
Can’t get something from nothing so something must have existed ‘always’. IE if there was ever a state of nothingness, it would persist to today, so something has permanent existence. It’s not possible to exist permanently in time, so the ‘something’ must be a timeless first cause. — Devans99
But I don't see how you can get from here to the claim that the first cause has to be timeless — PossibleAaran
If things go back forever, they have no start. If they have no start, there is no middle or end so they don't exist. So things cannot 'always exist'. — Devans99
No-one has come up with a valid counter argument to it so far. — Devans99
Right. So why on earth do you keep re-posting the same argument? — Isaac
If the entire mathematical world disagreeing with you isn't enough to dissuade you from your position, then what possible use to you could dissenting opinion on an Internet forum be? — Isaac
And if dissenting opinion is of no use to you, then why post at all. You clearly already agree with your own conclusion, it makes no difference to you if the entire world disagrees. What is there left to discuss? — Isaac
I have not posted an argument for a first cause / commentary on the 5 ways before. I'm not sure what you mean? — Devans99
I have barely mentioned maths/infinity in the OP - what do you mean? — Devans99
I hope that by reviewing dissenting opinion that we can arrive at the truth of the proposition. — Devans99
All of your arguments hinge on your idiosyncratic definition of infinite. It is obvious to any moderately intelligent reader and your denial is disingenuous. — Isaac
How? You have been presented with the dissenting opinion. You say you disagree. This has all already been done. Now what? — Isaac
For fuck's sake. You think there have been no substantive, valid, counter arguments presented.
Other people think their counter arguments are substantive and valid.
Now what? — Isaac
Isaac
534
There have been no substantive, valid, counter arguments presented to my points in the OP. — Devans99
For fuck's sake. You think there have been no substantive, valid, counter arguments presented.
Other people think their counter arguments are substantive and valid. — Isaac
My guess is that Devans will offer some variation on:
Go back to a different spot on the circle...and see where it leads. — Frank Apisa
Can’t get something from nothing so something must have existed ‘always’. IE if there was ever a state of nothingness, it would persist to today, so something has permanent existence. It’s not possible to exist permanently in time, so the ‘something’ must be a timeless first cause. — Devans99
What you refute as a ‘state of nothingness’ is more accurately a state of zero entropy - which is also the ‘start’ of time as we are aware of it - but not necessarily the start of spacetime (ie. the Big Bang) — Possibility
Outside of this sense of time is indeterminacy, potentiality - a timeless, formless existence that is frequently dismissed as ‘nothingness’, yet is the underlying ‘cause’ - the origination - of everything that can and does occur in time. — Possibility
It seems either:
1) Time causes entropy
2) Entropy causes time
I am of the first persuasion. Time appears to pass the same in low and high entropy environments so I deduce that entropy cannot be the cause of time. — Devans99
Time always flows from low to high entropy — Possibility
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