I like Devans...I read every one of his "ideas"...and I comment on them. — Frank Apisa
I'm NOT trying to shut discussion down...I am merely pointing out the futility of thinking "my take is the logical take...to the exclusion of the take of others." — Frank Apisa
Devans99
1.3k
I like Devans...I read every one of his "ideas"...and I comment on them. — Frank Apisa
Thank you Frank and I like you too! Appreciate you listening and engaging with my 'ideas'.
I'm NOT trying to shut discussion down...I am merely pointing out the futility of thinking "my take is the logical take...to the exclusion of the take of others." — Frank Apisa
It's important we keep the discussions going. We will not reach the truth if we do not. It can get a bit heated at times but that seems to me to be healthy. — Devans99
I do believe the truth is possible to reach even for questions like 'is there a God'. — Devans
I think you on the other hand have less faith in human ingenuity?
Demonstrate how anything in time can exist without a first cause please. — Devans99
It is absolutely impossible to ever be certain there are no gods. — Frank Apisa
by showing it was not fine-tuned for life — Devans99
That might still leave room for 'minor gods' of some sort I suppose. I am not sure you could ever disprove the existence of those. — Devans99
If a model of infinite reality consists of infinitely larger- and smaller-scale "universes" all subject to time and space in proportion to their position on the infinite scale. What seems like an eternity in this universe is just a brief moment in another, and so on. — whollyrolling
Considering the number of extinctions we're aware of, including our own, I'd say it's not fine-tuned for life. — whollyrolling
If that is the case, there is nothing to anchor reality — Devans99
I think it is unrealistic to expect a perfect universe. God had to start with the Big Bang; its not like he could hand craft the whole universe; it is a remarkably habitable place considering what it could of been — Devans99
Its anchor is its infinity. — whollyrolling
So then God is a bit dumb? — whollyrolling
I didn't say it was anchored "at infinity", I said its anchor "is its infinity". — whollyrolling
Another possibility without "first cause" or "first mover" is a complex algorithm, a simulation. Maybe we're a computer program and there's an argument outside this universe as to whether we "exist" or are "sentient" at all. Or maybe whoever coded the simulation didn't even notice that some of the code started perceiving itself as conscious. We're a blip in a vast loop of calculations, we're accidental artificial intelligence. In this case, we don't exist except as symbolism and require no creator, at least not in the sense that everyone wants so desperately to believe. — whollyrolling
Devans99
1.4k
It is absolutely impossible to ever be certain there are no gods. — Frank Apisa
I think you can disprove the existence of THE GOD by showing the universe was not created. Or by showing it was not fine-tuned for life. That might still leave room for 'minor gods' of some sort I suppose. I am not sure you could ever disprove the existence of those. — Devans99
So then God is a bit dumb? — whollyrolling
there's no good reason to believe that God exists — S
That reasons are reaching an expiry date doesn't mean they were never "good reasons" or didn't serve a purpose. — whollyrolling
I paid close attention to your comment and to my response. I guess I didn't realize you had the meaning of life in your back pocket, you could have made that known sooner. — whollyrolling
Now I know that I was correct in the first place, but I knew that while it was happening. — whollyrolling
Us feeble minds have to really have things spelled out for us, perhaps some tutoring, or a cheat sheet for the final exam you've invented. — whollyrolling
Or cruel. Or not so powerful. Or a combination. Potentially dumb, cruel and not so powerful. — S
But none of this matters, because there's no good reason to believe that God exists. — S
I'm not sure an idea has independent existence as in Plato's theory of forms — Devans99
Demonstrate how anything in time can exist without a first cause please — Devans99
Demonstrate how anything can exist with a (first) cause! — Pattern-chaser
Pattern-chaser
939
Demonstrate how anything in time can exist without a first cause please — Devans99
Demonstrate how anything can exist with a (first) cause!
The thing is we don't understand this stuff. We're trading theories, none of which can be substantiated. There is no evidence. No proof; no disproof. Just guesswork and wishful thinking. That's life! :smile: — Pattern-chaser
Devans99
1.4k
Demonstrate how anything can exist with a (first) cause! — Pattern-chaser
I, with obviously lots of help from Thomas Aquinas, have done that here:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/5577/was-there-a-first-cause-reviewing-the-five-ways/p1
The point I'm making is there are lots of ways to show there must be a first cause and no ways to show anything could exist without one. I would draw a cast iron conclusion from that - there must be a first cause. — Devans99
YOU CANNOT SHOW A "FIRST CAUSE" WITHOUT SHOWING SOMETHING THAT CAN EXIST WITHOUT ONE — Frank Apisa
Devans99
1.4k
YOU CANNOT SHOW A "FIRST CAUSE" WITHOUT SHOWING SOMETHING THAT CAN EXIST WITHOUT ONE — Frank Apisa
Eh? Showing something can exist without a first cause (which is impossible BTW) is not a prerequisite for showing there is a first cause. You are confusing me. — Devans99
f you are positing a "first cause"...whatever it happens to be today (we all know it is going to end up being this god you guess exists)...then that is something that exists without a previous cause. — Frank Apisa
Devans99
1.4k
f you are positing a "first cause"...whatever it happens to be today (we all know it is going to end up being this god you guess exists)...then that is something that exists without a previous cause. — Frank Apisa
The question I posed was:
Then Demonstrate how anything in time can exist without a first cause please — Devans99
The first cause does not exist in time so is not subject to causality so does not need a previous cause. IE I'm asking how anything else but the first cause could exist (if the first cause did not).
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