Pattern-chaser         
         
Christoffer         
         Does every effect have a cause, or is it possible for causeless effects to happen? — Pattern-chaser
Frank Apisa         
         This is a simple question. It's the answer that's difficult.
Does every effect have a cause, or is it possible for causeless effects to happen? — Pattern-chaser
Devans99         
         The full understanding of this is unknown at the time and that's just the point. If we cannot know it, we cannot deduce that something cannot come from nothing. Claiming that requires knowing more than all of science can know at this time in history. — Christoffer
Pattern-chaser         
         
Pattern-chaser         
         We can however deduce that something permanent cannot naturally come from nothing if time was infinite (because matter density would become infinite). — Devans99
Pattern-chaser         
         Every effect on large scales has a cause. — Christoffer
Devans99         
         Unless a balancing amount of 'permanent' somethings go back to nothing at some point/time, as in the QM example? — Pattern-chaser
Christoffer         
         Assertions (without justification) are a problem here. We are wondering if effects can happen without causes, and you respond by saying they can't and don't, but you offer no justification. — Pattern-chaser
Devans99         
         
Pattern-chaser         
         the universe therefore cannot come from 'nothing'. — Devans99
Pattern-chaser         
         I'm referring to entropy, to causality for any large events — Christoffer
Devans99         
         
Christoffer         
         
Pattern-chaser         
         the universe therefore cannot come from 'nothing'. — Devans99
Christoffer         
         
Pattern-chaser         
         Did you read the entirety of what I wrote? — Christoffer
Terrapin Station         
         
Devans99         
         So the universe did come from nothing, contradicting what you just said: — Pattern-chaser
Christoffer         
         
Jake         
         
Christoffer         
         But I believe we can conclude there was a start of time and a first cause. So lack of specific knowledge of the detailed processes involved does not prevent high level deductions being made. — Devans99
Devans99         
         
Harry Hindu         
         
Pattern-chaser         
         So it's not clear i[f] we ever observe "causeless effects" or "caused effects," and it's not clear how we'd ever empirically establish the difference with any certainty. — Terrapin Station
Point being, if we can't firmly establish that time runs in only one direction, then cause and effect may be a meaningless concept. — Jake
We don't know precisely what if anything happened pre-BB. But I believe we can conclude there was a start of time and a first cause. — Devans99
I am making the special exception that for the special BB, it is possible that something came from nothing (zero energy universe hypothesis) — Devans99
We could go into detail on causality in itself... — Christoffer
...but I think the key answer to the question of causeless effects is that in our universe, no, not possible. — Christoffer
Devans99         
         Yet another unjustified assertion. — Pattern-chaser
So when we consider the only example we've come up with, of what could have been a causeless event, you dismiss it as a special case? :gasp: — Pattern-chaser
Pattern-chaser         
         if causality does not apply, it would surely be just a crazy, impossible universe? — Devans99
Pattern-chaser         
         The justification is here:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/5302/an-argument-for-eternalism/p1 — Devans99
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.