But if its infinite, it can't be a regress — Devans99
...the first event defines the second, the second the third, and so on down the chain. — Devans99
But you cannot start in 2018 - 2018 does not exist until 2017 has happened. 2017 defines 2018. You have to choose the start as the oldest item - and there is no oldest item in an infinite regress.
Because there is no start, none of the years are defined. — Devans99
We know of more than one. The material, of course, and the idea - maybe capital I Idea. That is, there is that that is, and that that mind creates in itself.We only know of one way of existence. Are other forms of existence possible? — Devans99
And energy and matter are different forms of the same thing, yes? As suggested in e = mc^2.I think the challenge is how do you represent information if it is not with material? All I can think of is energy. — Devans99
That's codswallop. Each year is defined by the previous year, to infinity. There's an infinite number of defined events. They're all defined. Every single one of them. — S
We know of more than one. The material, of course, and the idea - maybe capital I Idea. That is, there is that that is, and that that mind creates in itself. — tim wood
And energy and matter are different forms of the same thing, yes? As suggested in e = mc^2. — tim wood
So we have infinite reality devoid of time and space, and then a universe is born. Where and when is it located within the infinite reality?
And what is it made from, I'm also curious about this? — whollyrolling
1. God wouldn't be creating something from nothing, God would be creating something from God--because there was only God. In this example, God is material and infinite. — whollyrolling
2. If material existed along with God, then God is separate from material, not omnipresent, both are finite and also infinite and God is arguably non-material. — whollyrolling
Let's keep this going and make less sense of something that is already absurd. — whollyrolling
Material exists in time and space, which is finite, but if material existed prior to all things, along with God, then both are also infinite. — whollyrolling
If God existed amid nothingness, then both would be finite because neither would omnipresent. Two things existing independently requires both space and time. You can't just cherry pick natural laws and apply them where they fit your imaginary model of reality while removing them where they don't fit your model. — whollyrolling
It's inconsistent and pointless. — whollyrolling
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.