One might ask, if all beings have causes, what the being of a being that is uncaused would be. — tim wood
Where does the logic break exactly though? — Philosophim
Can you introduce a flaw I missed? — Philosophim
I have no formal training in analytical philosophy, so I'm not qualified to detect flaws, such as unwarranted assumptions, in your argument. So, I'll just note that argumentation in words has the inherent weakness of subjective interpretation of intended meanings.I ultimately determined its conclusion was wrong, but no one else was able to at that time. Can you figure out my flaw? — Philosophim
If you can show that the norm is wrong in this instance, then feel free. — Philosophim
Can you figure out my flaw? Can you figure out another flaw I didn't think of? — Philosophim
Hi there Philosophim, thanks for engaging.
Say I make claims X,Y and Z by referencing the Bible as the relevant authority. In that case it would be my burden to demonstrate that the Bible is in fact a qualified authority on the subjects of X,Y and Z.
Point being, it's not my burden to prove that the methodology you've chosen is qualified for the task to which you've applied it. It's your burden.
If you wish just to play a logic game while admitting it has no proven relevance to reality, ok, no problem.
All that said, I would agree it's entirely normal, almost universal, for folks to just assume without questioning that human reason is qualified to address any topic, no matter how large. Normal, but not very good philosophy. Imho, if your professors didn't already present you with this challenge (so far it sounds like you've not heard it before), then you should request a refund. — Hippyhead
I think you are letting your bias against religion — Philosophim
Or is it you're worried you won't be able to figure out the flaw?
You don't go to other topics and tell them, "You haven't proven logic first, so its pointless!"
Within human logic, where is the flaw in the original post?
You're making a VERY COMMON unwarranted leap from...
Logic is good for many things.
TO:
Logic is good for everything. — Hippyhead
The post assumes the rules of human reason are binding upon the subject of gods, without questioning such a huge assumption in any way at all, or offering evidence of any kind to support that assumption. — Hippyhead
No. But I have gone through my own reasoning process regarding the probable existence of a Creator God. It was in the form of a layman's non-academic non-mathematical thesis statement, and was based on a variety of modern scientific "facts"."The Probability of God". . . . . Can you figure out my flaw? — Philosophim
Either infinite intermediate causes or an eternal final Causal Principle.1. Either all things have a prior cause for their existence, or there is at least one first cause of existence from which all others follow. — Philosophim
a> Turtles all the way down3. This leads us to 3 plausibilities.
a. There is always a Y for every X. (infinite prior cause).
b. Y eventually wraps back to an X (infinite looped prior cause)
c. There comes a time when there is only X, and nothing prior to Y (first cause) — Philosophim
Yes, the Creator makes the rules. Our local First Cause could be an Eternal Principle of Causation.there is no rule on how that first cause has to exist — Philosophim
The only limitation for our human definition of the Creator is that it must make sense to our imperfect logical minds.4. a first cause could be anything without limitation — Philosophim
Multiverse theorists tend to take the unexplainable "just is" diversion to avoid further questions that are unanswerable with empirical scientific methods. It's like a parent's answer to a pestering child's5. then we're right back where we started. The only answer that can be given is, "It simply is". — Philosophim
Would that it were so simple!6. Therefore the only conclusion is that there is a "First Cause" to our universe. This means that there is no rule or reason why the universe exists, besides the fact that it does. That being the case, wouldn't it be fun to examine the potential of what a first cause would entail, — Philosophim
a> Does that imply that the First Cause simply popped into existence at an arbitrary point in eternity, for no reason at all? I find that hard to believe. Instead, I think that some Power or Potential or Principle must have always existed, in order for anything to exist. I call that Principle "BEING" : the power to be.7. a> We already know that a God forming as a first cause is possible, because with a first cause, there are no rules.
b> Of course, this also means that a universe could have formed without a God just as easily. In either case, it simply is.
c> At first glance, this might mean that it is equally likely that a universe could have formed on its own, — Philosophim
A Specified Universe would be the effect of a specific Cause. But our universe is not completely specified or deterministic. Instead, it seems to have begun with "program" similar to DNA that had the potential for gradually developing into a functioning living thinking "organism", but with the freedom to adapt along the way to random variations. Freedom within Determinism.8. What is a specific universe? — Philosophim
In our real world experience, "Creative Power" is what we call Potential, to bring into existence something that does not yet exist. Intelligent Creative Power would have the power & know-how to create intelligent beings.9. A God would be a being that has the power and knowledge — Philosophim
Relative to our imperfect finite universe, the First Cause would have to possess infinite Potential, or at least something like an asymptote to Infinity --- is 67% creative power sufficient to produce a world from nothing?10. We can simplify this power to think and manipulate environments as a number. — Philosophim
See 10 above.11. A God would be a prime cause that meets this minimum capability, creates the big bang, and our universe occurs exactly as in the one situation in which the big bang was the prime cause. — Philosophim
Infinite independent-minded Beings instead of a single Infinite BEING? That sounds like Chaos.13. If we take this to its conclusion, there is nothing to stop a God of greater power being . . . An infinite number of beings — Philosophim
See 13 above.14. an infinite number of Gods — Philosophim
Good & Evil are human evaluations of our less than perfect world. But an infinite creator would have to encompass both Good and Evil, which in equal amounts would cancel-out to Neutral. Neither Good nor Evil, just all possible values.15. It may be good or evil, . . . . it would be indistinguishable from a universe which has no God, — Philosophim
I'm not quite that optimistic. We don't have enough information to calculate such odds, without making some arbitrary unfounded assumptions. So, I simply say the universe looks like it could be a progressive program created by a Prime Programmer. But what was the question that prompted the program????16. it is infinite to 1 that our universe was formed by a God instead of simply forming on its own. — Philosophim
I don't know . . . did I miss something? :joke:Alright, the challenge is on! Where is the flaw I finally found? Can you introduce a flaw I missed? — Philosophim
First, I never claimed logic is good for everything — Philosophim
Can you explain to me why logic is not good for the argument posted?
You note this as a translation to my point "There comes a time when there is only X, and nothing prior to Y (first cause)"c> Nothing cannot be a Cause — Gnomon
there is no rule on how that first cause has to exist
— Philosophim
Yes, the Creator makes the rules. Our local First Cause could be an Eternal Principle of Causation. — Gnomon
Yep. If you imply there is a reason, you imply something BEHIND that first cause. A first cause does not have a reason. It simply is. And this is not as a cop out btw (I undersood what you meant though). This is a logical conclusion, and in fact, the only conclusion I can draw.Does that imply that the First Cause simply popped into existence at an arbitrary point in eternity, for no reason at all? — Gnomon
Until you show the above logic as incorrect, this cannot be claimed.The existence of the universe has only one "Why" answer — Gnomon
c> If so, the universe itself would have to possess the power of sudden self-creation or eternal self-existence. — Gnomon
In our real world experience, "Creative Power" is what we call Potential, to bring into existence something that does not yet exist. Intelligent Creative Power would have the power & know-how to create intelligent beings. — Gnomon
Relative to our imperfect finite universe, the First Cause would have to possess infinite Potential — Gnomon
13. If we take this to its conclusion, there is nothing to stop a God of greater power being . . . An infinite number of beings — Philosophim
But aren't you assuming, without questioning or any evidence, that logic is qualified to address topics the scale of gods? More to the point, isn't such an unexamined assumption extremely common, not just on philosophy forums, but among philosophy professionals as well? — Hippyhead
Alright, the challenge is on! Where is the flaw I finally found? Can you introduce a flaw I missed? — Philosophim
Logic has a proven reliability and usefulness — DingoJones
This is like questioning science (in general — DingoJones
What about to replace logic? — DingoJones
So whats this gripe you got with philosophers — DingoJones
Alright, the challenge is on! Where is the flaw I finally found? — Philosophim
Yes, logic has proven useful for too many things to list at human scale. That is certainly true. But that does NOT automatically equal logic being useful for EVERYTHING, no matter how large the question. — Hippyhead
Here's an example. Holy books have provided comfort and meaning to billions of people over thousands of years, an astounding accomplishment which science can't begin to touch. Holy books have proven themselves beyond any doubt to have this ability in very many cases. But that does not automatically equal holy books being qualified for any claim they might make. We can't blindly leap from one proven ability to any claim whatsoever, no matter how large, and label that logic. — Hippyhead
I'd be happy to question science in general, but let's save that for another thread. Start one if you wish, and I'll try to join you there. — Hippyhead
I'm attempting to replace your logic with real logic. Real logic, not ideological assertions made from an emotional attachment to some ideology which perhaps makes you feel superior to somebody else. — Hippyhead
I'm just joining them in leaving nothing above inspection and challenge. — Hippyhead
I’m merely pointing out that we have no reason to think logic would fail at any particular thing. — DingoJones
You dont have a better tool to offer, so with science as with logic you have no substance to your argument — DingoJones
Yes, we do have good reason to suspect that the highly imperfect reasoning ability of a semi-suicidal species only recently living in caves with thousands of hydrogen bombs aimed down it's own throat (an ever present threat it finds too boring to discuss) just might not be capable of generating credible answers to the very largest questions about the most fundamental nature of everything everywhere, an arena which said species can not define in even the most basic manner. — Hippyhead
Apologies, but you are merely chanting atheist ideology dogmas. — Hippyhead
I don't need to provide an alternative, that's not my burden. As an salesman for logic and science it is YOUR burden to prove that such methodologies are qualified for the tasks which you are applying them to. You're advocating the universal qualifications of reason, without actually doing reason yourself. Classic atheist error. — Hippyhead
We b do the best with what we have. — DingoJones
Well, if you are telling me im not allowed or shouldnt use my current tools then Im asking you which ones you would like me to use — DingoJones
I think that one of the flaws associated with a causational God not having any attributes could be problematic to some ( your items 4 thru 9). — 3017amen
For those reasons, causation or first cause ex nihilo has to consider a dipolar attribute of some sort. — 3017amen
You appear to be assuming, like almost all commentators on the subject, that a God can only exist or not, one or the other. Such an assumption is seriously challenged by an observation of reality, which reveals that the vast majority of reality, space, does not fit neatly in to either the "exists" or "doesn't exist" categories. — Hippyhead
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