So absent the assumption of a "Prime Mover", is there actually any compelling reason to imagine that reality has ever done anything other than continually change...forever before? — Siti
↪Athena Thanks Athena! I am afraid I'm not much of a physicist and photons are a mighty mysterious particle, but below are my thoughts.
I understand that photons are tiny packets of energy that are emitted by energised atoms when an election in a high energy orbit falls back into a normal orbit. This happens during various sorts of reactions (chemical, nuclear, etc).
A photon is a massless particle so is not effected by gravity according to Newton. Einstein's work however indicates that gravity is actually due to distortions in spacetime and as such photons are effected by gravity as well. This is why a black hole is possible, the curvature of spacetime is so extreme that not even photons can escape. But under less extreme scenarios, photons appear to be unaffected by gravity and travel in straight lines.
Photons are strange because they travel at the speed of light because they have no mass and so do not experience the passage of time. They also experience another relativistic effect call length contraction - at the speed of light distances are compressed down to zero. Photons appear to have motion from our perspective but if it were possible to see things from a photon's perspective, it might seem as if it can travel anywhere in the universe in no time whilst covering no distance.
The prime mover argument is all about massive objects so how do photons fit in? Well they do have some momentum so they can interact with massive objects to cause their motion. And their production is caused some sort of reaction involving matter. Einstein says E=mc^2 so energy is equivalent to matter, so maybe we could think of the prime mover argument as being about matter and energy rather than just matter only and being about momentum rather than movement.
So maybe the prime mover argument could be restated so as to include photons:
We look around us, we see matter/energy with momentum, but matter/energy must have a source of its momentum and the source must itself have another source of its momentum. But these chains of sources cannot proceed out to infinity else there would be no first/ultimate source of momentum in the universe and all would be still, so there must be a prime momentum that is the ultimate cause of all momentum in the universe.
The Big Bang obviously is a candidate for this ‘prime momentum’. — Devans99
How can it travel and be here and there at the same time? — Athena
If the prime mover ran out of energy it would slow down and everywhere there was nothing, everywhere there would be something. — Athena
Wrong - an infinite regress of anything has no first term - that's all you can say...using the example of the negative integers, I can think of the biggest integer I can imagine and because I can imagine it, it exists (at least as an idea in my mind) and so does the entire series of negative integers between it and -1 - and I know for sure that there is another 1 before it, and another before that (even if I can't name those numbers). Its exactly the same with causes - just because I don't know what the primordial causes of the universe becoming as it came to be at the point where we can begin to pick up the threads of cause and effect doesn't mean those causes don't exist. "Prime Mover" is just a gap filler - and in any case, the kind of "Prime Mover" Aquinas was talking about simply replaces one infinite regress with another - God (as he was 1 second before the act of creation, then as he was two seconds before, 3, 4, 10 million years before...and before you argue that time didn't exist "before" the BB, you will also have to convince me that how that could possibly have changed in no time. And that really is the problem with notion of a prime mover - it - whatever we imagine it might have been, would have to have "acted" to cause "change" in "no time". To me, its a far simpler induction to show that "action" and "change" cannot happen in "no time".An infinite regress of causes has no first or ultimate cause, so it's a simple matter of induction to show that the whole of such sequence cannot exist. — Devans99
Motion with a prime mover is is not perpetual...but really the evidence suggests that perpetual motion is exactly what we see - if you want to convince me otherwise, you just have to name one thing (just one) that is not moving right now.Perpetual motion without a prime mover is an impossibility. — Devans99
Wrong - an infinite regress of anything has no first term - that's all you can say...using the example of the negative integers, I can think of the biggest integer I can imagine and because I can imagine it, it exists (at least as an idea in my mind) and so does the entire series of negative integers between it and -1 — Siti
Prime Mover" is just a gap filler - and in any case, the kind of "Prime Mover" Aquinas was talking about simply replaces one infinite regress with another — Siti
In this argument you contend that the "lack of an initial state invalidates all the subsequent states - a system’s initial state determines all subsequent states." But what exactly is a "state" - the universe does not really have "states" - it has, or rather it IS, process..."states" are purely imaginary and therefore by your own definition do not have physical existence. "States" are "freeze-frame" snapshots - abstractions, not realities. To refute this, simply name one thing that is not moving - i.e. is actually in a "state" right now (PS - to make it easier, "now" can be any time you like 14 billion years ago, 10 billion years in the future...whenever you like).Please consider the argument given in this OP:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/6218/the-universe-cannot-have-existed-forever/p1 — Devans99
Egg zackly! And to be a cause of a physical effect, one has to exist in time n'est-ce pas? Do you know of any cause that exists "not in time"?Everything that exists in time has a cause. — Devans99
In this argument you contend that the "lack of an initial state invalidates all the subsequent states - a system’s initial state determines all subsequent states." But what exactly is a "state" - the universe does not really have "states" - it has, or rather it IS, process..."states" are purely imaginary and therefore by your own definition do not have physical existence. "States" are "freeze-frame" snapshots - abstractions, not realities. To refute this, simply name one thing that is not moving - i.e. is actually in a "state" right now — Siti
Egg zackly! And to be a cause of a physical effect, one has to exist in time n'est-ce pas? Do you know of any cause that exists "not in time"? — Siti
You are moving relative to more or less everything else - you just don't sense it because because you are sitting on a fairly large lump of rock that is spinning you around its own center of gravity faster than a jet plane, whizzing you around the sun faster than a rocket and is itself being carried around the center of the Milky Way at half a million miles per hour...how is that "a state"? Relatively, of course, and those are the only kind of states there are...relative states - approximations - abstractions - not real...I am not moving relative to anything else so I am in a state. — Devans99
Nothing can be causeless and nothing can be the cause of itself. — Devans99
You are moving relative to more or less everything else - you just don't sense it because because you are sitting on a fairly large lump of rock that is spinning you around its own center of gravity faster than a jet plane, whizzing you around the sun faster than a rocket and is itself being carried around the center of the Milky Way at half a million miles per hour...how is that "a state"? Relatively, of course, and those are the only kind of states there are...relative states - approximations - abstractions - not real... — Siti
..systems do not jump from state to state - that's really what Zeno's arrow paradox shows - arrows don't jump from state to state in space, they fly continuously through space - they process continuously... obviously our descriptions can't match that because we would have to have an infinite set of descriptions with infinitesimal graduations for every aspect of reality - the arrow hitting the target does not depend on any previous "states" of the arrow, it depends on the process of its flight, which is potentially (potentially mind you) describable (describable mind you) by any number of an infinite array of imaginary "states" (i.e. momentary - actually 'timeless' - locations and velocities). The locations and velocities are not real - but the flight (i.e. the process) is real. — Siti
P1 there can be no uncaused cause
P2 nothing can be self-existing
Therefore there must be a self-existing uncaused cause
That would certainly rank as an epic fail in a Logic 101 exam. — Siti
Well no they don't really, indeed it seems to be a fundamental (not just practical) limitation of the universe that "particles" (whatever those are) cannot have both a clearly defined velocity (momentum) and a clearly defined position at the same time...but in any case, a clearly defined position and velocity can only be true at a "moment" - i.e. no time has elapsed - as soon as the clock ticks to the next attosecond, not only is the "state" of that particle abstract, it is also history...an abstract approximation of the history of that "particle's" process.All the particles involved always have well defined positions and velocities. — Devans99
I don;t have a solution that encompasses both of your premises because I would challenge the first premise...1. It is clear that nothing can exist permanently within time.
2. It is also clear that everything in time requires a prior cause.
I see no other option but a recall to a timeless 'something' that is the ultimate cause of everything.
If you disagree, what is your solution that encompasses axioms [1] and [2] above? — Devans99
First of all, how do you know that nothing can exist permanently within time? — Siti
1. The universe does indeed exist permanently (it perdures, is a perduring process) within time
2. Everything in the universe requires a prior cause
Therefore, the cause of everything in the universe exists within the universe. — Siti
Why does the first cause have to be a substance? Buddhism speaks of thoughts without a thinker and action with an actor — Gregory
Your formulation leads to an infinite regress of causes into the past with no first/ultimate cause. Thats impossible - the cause of everything has to be external to time. — Devans99
But how can you prove logically that it is "impossible"? Just because someone - even someone as smart as Aquinas - can't get their head around it doesn't prove its impossible. — Siti
Neither can you disprove perpetual motion — Siti
By definition, an infinite causal regression (into the past) has no first cause - so none of the subsequent causes in the regression exist. — Devans99
Well that gets back to - who was it - Russel's (?) - counter argument — Siti
But you still have not proved that there cannot be a "turtles all the way down" infinite regress of causes. — Siti
I can only assume that you have not yet thought of anything in the history of the universe that was not/is not moving? — Siti
I'm not sure what to say - I've explained it as clearly as possible - including an example a child could follow - I give up. You will just have to continue onwards with your belief in magic. — Devans99
Okey dokey then! We've progressed from "dumb" and Wikipedia, to "child" and "magic"...and still no logical argument establishing the claimed impossibility of an infinite regress. I am beginning to lose hope! — Siti
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