That does not follow. There merely needs to be an initial point of time. Refer back to my description of Sean Carroll's hypothesis from the other thread: the ground state constitutes the initial point of time for all universes.If time has a start then there must be a timeless first cause to create time. — Devans99
That does not follow. There merely needs to be an initial point of time — Relativist
The notion that a first cause can be "timeless" is problematic. Timeless does not mean "frozen in time" it means that something exists independent of time. Abstractions exist timelessly (consider the law of non-contradiction - it is an abstraction; it did not come into existence and it cannot cease to exist). But abstractions are not causally efficacious. Why believe a timeless entity can be causally efficacious? — Relativist
An initial state (such as the one described in the Carroll hypothesis) "causes" everything that follows. What's missing in that scenario?But time and causality are inextricably linked and a first cause is required for causality. So if there is a start of time, there must be a timeless first cause else nothing else would exist within causality. — Devans99
False dichotomy - I gave you another logical option that doesn't rely on an infinite past. Show why it doesn't succeed.Because there does not seem to any other logical option; time cannot stretch back in an infinite regress; it would have no starting moment so as a result, none of it would be defined. — Devans99
"Always existed" just means there is no point in time at which it didn't exist.- Can’t get something from nothing
- So something must have existed ‘always’. — Devans99
A "state of nothingness" is incoherent.IE if there was ever a state of nothingness, it would persist to today, so something must have permanent existence.
An initial point in time is a state of affairs that needn't be unchanging.It’s not possible to exist permanently in time (always leads to an infinite regress;
An initial state (such as the one described in the Carroll hypothesis) "causes" everything that follows. What's missing in that scenario? — Relativist
Certain eigenstates (high energy ones) are inherently unstable.What causes the initial state to start causing everything else? — Devans99
Ok, exercising my noetic intelligence, you stipulate that time has a start iff there is change, and since there is no change (an equilibrium, although used stipulatively here), then time never existed. But, we don't live in an equilibrium, thus, time had some start.
Is that correct? — Wallows
I am not sure what you mean. My argument is that any isolated system will end up in equilibrium after sufficiently long period of time, unless it has an internal driver - an intelligent internal driver (IE God) — Devans99
OK, then please explain how you are using the term "equilibrium" in more detail if you don't mind... — Wallows
I don't see how one of these could be avoided with infinite time. — Devans99
But, if I'm understanding you correctly, then in a deterministic universe where a perfect unchanging equilibrium persists, then time, understood as a change occurring, within the state space of the universe, does not exist, yes? — Wallows
Thanks for bringing this up. I always understood time as an emergent phenomenon from lower dimensions upward, instead of the absolutism of higher dimensions dictating the behavior of lower dimensions. — Wallows
By 'emergent phenomenon from lower dimensions upward' you mean time is emergent from timeless thermodynamic phenomena? — Devans99
If entropy increases causes time to flow, we would expect time to flow faster where entropy is increasing faster. This has not been observed. — Devans99
So I believe entropy does not cause time - time causes entropy. — Devans99
I suppose you can say so. Though, I don't understand the use of the term "timeless thermodynamic phenomena"... — Wallows
I don't think it's an either/or situation. They can exist simultaneously along with each other, yes? — Wallows
Carroll does not say entropy causes time, but that time, entropy, and change are related in some fundamental way.- Time runs at different rates due to special relativity; that has nothing to do with entropy. Entropy changing at different rates definitely does not cause time to run at different rates. Entropy is a result of causality (IE time) not time is a result of entropy. — Devans99
Nope, it doesn't involve anything existing that didn't previously exist. It's just changes of state of a quantum system.- It sounds a lot like creation ex nilhilo and without time. — Devans99
Irrespective of whether Carroll's hypothesis is true, one can coherently account for the big bang with the past being finite. It just means there was an initial state that was inherently unstable. You need a strong reason to reject that, not merely because you prefer an account that requires an intelligent creator who performs magic (i.e. can do things that violate the laws of nature).I don't buy 'the eigenstates are inherently unstable' - something must have changed with the ground state 14 billion years ago else there would be no Big Bang. — Devans99
Irrespective of whether Carroll's hypothesis is true, one can coherently account for the big bang with the past being finite. It just means there was an initial state that was inherently unstable. You need a strong reason to reject that, not merely because you prefer an account that requires an intelligent creator who performs magic (i.e. can do things that violate the laws of nature). — Relativist
Unstable does not imply "is changing", it implies that it necessarily WILL change. We're assuming time is past-finite, so there cannot have been a temporally prior cause. A finite past is more problematic for theism: God cannot have existed prior to the universe because there is no time prior to the universe=spacetime.The universe is a macro phenomena, so the initial state is a macro state. If it is unstable, that implies it is changing in the macro world. That implies causality holds in some form. That implies a first cause. — Devans99
Agreed, and you would need a strong reason to believe causation can occur without a passage of time.You need a very strong reason to reject causality in the macro world. — Devans99
Our current physics is clearly incomplete: general relativity breaks down as we retrospectively approach the "big bang". Cosmologists believe it likely that there is a quantum basis of gravity. This is the last gap in proving the universe is a quantum system. At this point, it's at least as reasonable to assume this is the case as it is to entertain the possibility that nature is explained by something unnatural. IMO, it's even more reasonable because there is no empirical evidence of anything existing that is unnatural - there are only arguments from ignorance (AKA "God of the gaps").- You can't completely describe anything with Schroedinger's equation; it does not take account of gravity which is dominant for the macro world. — Devans99
Who said nothing is changing?- I do not see how time can emerge without something changing which implies some form of causality and thus a first cause — Devans99
OK, I'll just call it "unnatural", where "natural"= that which operates solely through inviolable laws of nature.- God is not magic — Devans99
Treat time as consisting of discrete moments that are connected to one another. It maps to a number line beginning at zero (t0) and proceeds infinitely to the future. The initial state is at t0; it's a boundary. This has to be the case if the past is finite. If God did it, then he exists at t0. My issue is that God is not needed to explain why the initial state changes.- Time is a dimension so I do not see how such could emerge from anything — Devans99
Occam's razor (the principle of parsimony) teaches that we should make no more assumptions than are necessary to explain the evidence. What superfluous assumptions are being made here?see this QM based explanation very much opposed to Occam's Razor, whereas causality based accounts are very much inline with Occam's Razor — Devans99
God cannot have existed prior to the universe because there is no time prior to the universe=spacetime. — Relativist
Agreed, and you would need a strong reason to believe causation can occur without a passage of time. — Relativist
IMO, it's even more reasonable because there is no empirical evidence of anything existing that is unnatural - there are only arguments from ignorance (AKA "God of the gaps"). — Relativist
In explaining the history and physical foundation of the universe, precisely where does God's act end and nature begin? Parsimony doesn't mean ignoring details, it means explaining details with the fewest assumptions. — Relativist
It's impossible to exist "before" time: "before" is a temporal relation.A first cause has to exist prior to time - that is the only logically way anything could have come about:
- 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 must have permanent existence.
- It’s not possible to exist permanently in time (always leads to an infinite regress; but they have no start so cannot not be), so the ‘something’ must be the timeless first cause (of time/causality). — Devans99
If there is change, then time has elapsed. You could posit another dimension of time, but not an absence of time, but that is problematic because it entails an infinite past for God. Your only hope is to consider there to have been an initial state that included God.If there is change, there is causation. Logically we have gone from a no time to time situation. That can't happen unless a change can take place without time. — Devans99
Please support you claim that natural events necessarily come in pluralities.There is evidence of something unnatural - the Big Bang:
- It is a singleton; natural events always come in pluralities
- Entropy was unnaturally low at the Big Bang
- Rather than the objects themselves moving further apart, it is space itself that is expanding - the Big Bang is no normal explosion. This expansion of space is keeping the universe from collapsing in on itself into a massive black hole.
- That the expansion is speeding up rather than slowing which also seems unnatural — Devans99
In explaining the history and physical foundation of the universe, precisely where does God's act end and nature begin? Parsimony doesn't mean ignoring details, it means explaining details with the fewest assumptions.
— Relativist
It's a very simple model I'm proposing. God caused the Big Bang somehow. The associated expansion of space is what is keeping us out of equilibrium - that is down to God. — Devans99
When precisely? At the end of the Planck epoch? At the beginning of it? If there is a God, he could have created the universe 10 minutes ago, inserting false memories in each of us, and starlight in flight. That's as simple as your scenario. If God is a live option, no evidence should be trusted. Historically, unknowns have been the driver for science. "Goddidit" could as simplistically been used as an explanation for any.The Big Bang is effectively the end of God's evolvement in the universe from our perspective. — Devans99
If the total energy of the universe is zero, as many cosmologist think, then it IS in equilibrium. If it isn't, it may be that the total energy of the multiverse is zero.Any isolated system decays to equilibrium without an active agent - this applies to the universe. So God is required. — Devans99
It's impossible to exist "before" time: "before" is a temporal relation. — Relativist
If there is change, then time has elapsed. You could posit another dimension of time, but not an absence of time, but that is problematic because it entails an infinite past for God. Your only hope is to consider there to have been an initial state that included God. — Relativist
"Somehow" is not an explanation. "Somehow" the big bang occurred, and "somehow" the early universe was in a state of low entropy. "Somehow" the universe is expanding. Neither of us can explain it, but concluding this gap in knowledge implies "therefore Goddidit" is a fallacious argument from ignorance. — Relativist
When precisely? At the end of the Planck epoch? At the beginning of it? If there is a God, he could have created the universe 10 minutes ago, inserting false memories in each of us, and starlight in flight. — Relativist
If the total energy of the universe is zero, as many cosmologist think, then it IS in equilibrium. If it isn't, it may be that the total energy of the multiverse is zero. — Relativist
On the contrary, I refuted it. You had said:It's impossible to exist "before" time: "before" is a temporal relation. — Relativist
Something logically must exist before time - I proved that using Aquinas's 2nd way and you have past it by without comment. — Devans99
I accept your premise that the the past is probably finite, but I already refuted your conclusion:Alternatively: an infinite regress of time is impossible, so there is no other solution - a timeless first cause is the only possibility. — Devans99
Agreed. That was my point.There cannot be another time dimension - that leads to an infinite regress of times nested one within the other. — Devans99
See my above refutation.The only way to avoid an infinite regress is a timeless first cause.
Wrong. Inflation entails a prior existing state of affairs that temporally (and causally) preceded it. This does not imply that prior state was "first". It may, or may not be. We agree the past is probably finite, but the mere fact that it is finite does not tell us the nature of the initial state. We also don't really know the nature of time, so all we can do is speculate. Sean Carroll's hypothesis that time emerges from a ground state is as reasonable and coherent as any other. It may or may not be true, but it's false to claim that it (and by extension, all natural possibilities) can't be true. Find a logical problem with it, or admit it's a possibility."Somehow" is not an explanation. "Somehow" the big bang occurred, and "somehow" the early universe was in a state of low entropy. "Somehow" the universe is expanding. Neither of us can explain it, but concluding this gap in knowledge implies "therefore Goddidit" is a fallacious argument from ignorance. — Relativist
For example, eternal inflation posits a first cause of some negative gravity particles in a high energy environment that result in a chain reaction of eternal inflation, giving birth to a multiverse. This cannot have happened by accident. — Devans99
Are you making a positive case, or just showing that reality is consistent with the possibility of a God?This is just the sort of thing a benevolent God would do; create a multiverse from nothing. If God was able, he would not be able to resist it. — Devans99
You're missing the point: you have pointed to gaps in scientific knowledge as reason to assume it's due to something unnatural. You have the same burden as a naturalist at explaining exactly where nature leaves off and the unnatural (e.g. God) begins. That was why I asked you to identify specifically where his fingerprint is. I realize that as a theist, you believe God is behind it all, and I don't have a problem with claiming this theistic view is consistent with reality. I just have a problem with an assertion that God's existence is entailed by what we know.When precisely? At the end of the Planck epoch? At the beginning of it? If there is a God, he could have created the universe 10 minutes ago, inserting false memories in each of us, and starlight in flight. — Relativist
I don't believe in magic. God engineered the Big Bang through conventional means. — Devans99
I agree that the Big Bang is suggestive of something prior, and a lot of theoretical physicists are investigating possibilities. I gave you Sean Carroll's hypotheses: it covers these issues. There are others (e.g. Vilenkin, Krauss, Hawking,...). Perhaps each is wrong, but even this doesn't imply there's not a natural basis. I've refuted all the claims you've made that support your claims, and you can't show my general observations to be impossible, in particular: a finite past that begins with an initial state of a quantum system. That initial state exists by brute fact, and as a quantum system - it is necessarily the case that there is quantum "uncertainty," which accounts for the emergence of one or more universes.If the total energy of the universe is zero, as many cosmologist think, then it IS in equilibrium. If it isn't, it may be that the total energy of the multiverse is zero. — Relativist
The universe should be gravitational or thermodynamic equilibrium. That it is not is due to an active agent (God). The Big Bang is the complete opposite of equilibrium. It is that unnatural expansion of space that is keeping us from equilibrium. — Devans99
So I'll reiterate: It's impossible to exist "before" time: "before" is a temporal relation. — Relativist
To be clear: if time is past finite (as we both assume), something "always exists" if there is never a time when it did NOT exist. (I agree that something cannot come from "nothing." Nothing is not a state of existence; it cannot have been a prior state, because it doesn't even constitute a state). — Relativist
If God caused anything, he has to be in frame 1 (or at least extend into frame 1); if there were a prior frame, THAT would be frame 1. — Relativist
You're missing the point: you have pointed to gaps in scientific knowledge as reason to assume it's due to something unnatural. You have the same burden as a naturalist at explaining exactly where nature leaves off and the unnatural (e.g. God) begins. That was why I asked you to identify specifically where his fingerprint is. I realize that as a theist, you believe God is behind it all, and I don't have a problem with claiming this theistic view is consistent with reality. I just have a problem with an assertion that God's existence is entailed by what we know. — Relativist
I agree that the Big Bang is suggestive of something prior, and a lot of theoretical physicists are investigating possibilities. I gave you Sean Carroll's hypotheses: it covers these issues. There are others (e.g. Vilenkin, Krauss, Hawking,...). Perhaps each is wrong, but even this doesn't imply there's not a natural basis. I've refuted all the claims you've made that support your claims, and you can't show my general observations to be impossible, in particular: a finite past that begins with an initial state of a quantum system. That initial state exists by brute fact, and as a quantum system - it is necessarily the case that there is quantum "uncertainty," which accounts for the emergence of one or more universes. — Relativist
Time can't just start on its own — Devans99
Why can anything start on its own (as in whatever you figure started time)? — Terrapin Station
What do you think time is? What does it mean to you to say that "time starts"?Time can't just start on its own. It can't emerge from anything unless there is something pre-existing it causally. Time cannot start without something causally before it. — Devans99
IMO, Time isn't a thing — Relativist
n my opinion, the A-theory of time is correct: only the present has actual existence, and the present has been reached in a sequential series of past moments — Relativist
Every present moment causes the next, so it's reasonable to expect the initial moment would cause the next. — Relativist
There is a timeless first cause that has existed permanently that starts everything else. — 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.