Please tell me how something can start by itself? — Devans99
1. The "argument from motion" is a paradox. It is full of sentiment, assumption and speculation. Just as easily as we can speculate that there must be a "first mover" and assign a human personality to it, we can also speculate that "the singularity" was not the first event to have ever occurred in all of reality. Also, if a "first mover" was to exist as was assumed in the "proof", the implication is that the "first mover" began all things and is outside all time and space, eternal. If not time and space, then something must extend infinitely in all directions through all dimensions or some lack thereof, and this is assumed to be the "first mover". Either without time and space, or if time and space were infinite, both of which are impossible, it would be irrational to think that any instance could occur. By this rationale, we don't exist, and neither does the "first mover". — whollyrolling
2. First Cause. He argues against himself again here, determining that the "first mover" can't have existed eternally because nothing can exist prior to itself, and nothing exists which hasn't been initiated by something else. To paraphrase this nonsense, he says "I'm confused, therefore God". It's ridiculous to use examples from observable reality to support claims of imaginary things that not only have no foundation in observable reality but effectively contradict it. — whollyrolling
. Necessary Being. Here he hits the nail on the head by iterating what I just pointed out in my previous rant: that this is all absurd. Again, a paradox. "I'm confused, therefore God". — whollyrolling
4. Degree. To assume any intrinsic valuation is preposterous. He is now preaching based on abstract human notions of nobility and truth that a God, who if human would be a raging sociopath, is responsible for all that is good and decent in humans but not responsible for anything that is corrupt or evil. — whollyrolling
5. He presumes, again based on religious belief and in the absence of science, that anything that doesn't appear to be self-aware by human standards is unintelligent and aimless, which was fine in the 1200's, when everyone was a blithering moron, but none of this stuff holds true in modern times. — whollyrolling
This argument, and it's no argument at all, is just another confused rant from a place of scientific ignorance and intellectual deficiency. If its writer isn't intellectually deficient, then he's attempting to mislead his reader and pander to authorities his life depends on. The only thing infinite here is the writer's self-contradiction. — whollyrolling
Im not claiming something can start by itself, I do not know.
You DO know, so tell me the answer. How do you know that simething cannot? What evidence do you have for this claim? — DingoJones
It isn't a deep argument at all. It's quite shallow. He assumes the "first mover" by writing on behalf of a church and education system that will jail him, possibly torture or kill him, if he doesn't. It's obvious from the flow of the dialogue that he began with the premise that God exists and is writing everything else in an attempt to fortify that position. It's a house of cards with a complimentary 90mph wind. — whollyrolling
It does not produce matter. Its all transitory. — Devans99
f you don't believe that an arrow in flight must be motionless, then why do you believe that there must be a first cause?
Looks like the same kind of logic to me. — S
And I did. Address my explanation or pipe down. — S
Devans99
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Please tell me how something can start by itself? — Devans99
You are assuming a start. — Frank Apisa
S
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You are assuming a start. — Frank Apisa
Ah, yes. But he has an argument against an infinite regress. An argument which resembles ancient logic which leads to absurd conclusions. Except that his logic only gets partway through the breakdown and then just, again, simply assumes a start, instead of continuing on to infinity. So it is actually far worse, because although this ancient logic is unsound, it is at least valid, whereas his logic makes an invalid logical leap to his desired conclusion. — S
Sorta like someone saying, "How can there be a creation without a creator?" — Frank Apisa
The moment you postulate a "first cause"...you essentially are conceding that somethings have no cause...but "always was" — Frank Apisa
Ah, yes. But he has an argument against an infinite regress. An argument which resembles ancient logic which leads to absurd conclusions. Except that his logic only gets partway through the breakdown and then just, again, simply assumes a start, instead of continuing on to infinity. So it is actually far worse, because although this ancient logic is unsound, it is at least valid, whereas his logic makes an invalid logical leap to his desired conclusion. — S
Whilst by ancient logic, Homer can never reach the end of the path — S
But remember, none of us have presented any criticism! — S
I'm sure it must have been asked and answered, but I don't see it If there is a non-material God, what is/are he,she, it, they if not material? — tim wood
— Devans99
Sorta like someone saying, "How can there be a creation without a creator?"
— Frank Apisa
It is impossible to have a creation without a creator. — Devans99
Where does it break down? — Devans99
I do not assume a start; I assume that an infinite regress has no start. — Devans99
You have either not read or not understood my argument. — Devans99
We already discussed this. By ancient logic, the universe is discrete is the point. — Devans99
Frank and S have presented pages of waffle not containing any actual criticism of my arguments. — Devans99
No, you start by assuming that an infinite regress has no start, and then you do as I described above, which still assumes a start, just not straight away. First, you pretend to be logical, and then you assume a start. — S
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