If you think there is a flaw there, can you figure it out? You have to have more than suspicions! — Philosophim
Take that and bring it into the argument above. And that's the next hint! — Philosophim
Other than a Dipolar God, not sure... I'm stumped — 3017amen
Take that and bring it into the argument above. And that's the next hint!
— Philosophim
That multiverse is logically possible? — 3017amen
Take a look again at the logic where A0 could equal B1 in another possible universe. Now think about what my definition of a God is. Then think about what my definition for a specific universe is. Have I missed something? — Philosophim
Yes, conscious existence. — 3017amen
don't want to say your wrong, but solution is going to be more than a one line answer. I mention a God is a "Being" which could be conscious or non-conscious of its decisions. — Philosophim
Are you sure? I mean it sounds like you are arguing cosmological existence by way of logical necessity, no? — 3017amen
In what way is that constructive?! — DingoJones
I'm not going to consider your posts as having any value to the topic. — Philosophim
FYI, I'm not really challenging you personally so much as I am the philosophy profession at large. If they knew what they were doing, you'd already know everything I'm saying and have plenty to contribute to it. — Hippyhead
I didnt complain about it being personal, or that you were grouchy. — DingoJones
I just don't want to distract from what I'm posting here, which you seem to understand. No offense taken, we'll talk on another topic another time. =) — Philosophim
I suspect that our god models may have a lot in common. The main difference may lie in our starting points. My worldview and god-model are based on my layman's non-academic non-rigorous, yet science-based, Enformationism thesis, not on a critical-logical-philosophical Ontology. So our vocabulary, and some assumptions, may be different, even though we arrive at similar conclusions about the existence and characteristics of a non-empirical metaphysical Ultimate Cause of our imperfect, but progressing, world.Thank you Gnomon for participating! You spent a good deal of time on your post, and will attempt to honor you in kind. We may come into disagreement at point, but know that it is from a place of respect. — Philosophim
I too, tried to begin with a blank slate, without any presumptions. And to simply follow the available scientific & philosophical evidence where it led. Unfortunately, our conclusion that logically there must be an uncaused First Cause for this world's sequence of secondary causes is open to question. Some Cosmologists argue that the "ultimate explanation" for our temporal Natural world is an "infinite regress" of Natural worlds (Multiverses). That non-empirical, but reasonable-sounding, possibility allows them to avoid any notions of a Supernatural Cause or Creator. Yet, they may still be uncomfortable with the necessity for Infinities beyond our space-time world.At this point, I'm not assuming there is a creator, or there is not a creator. — Philosophim
Atheists "disprove" your assertion of a First Cause for our Natural world, by asserting that automatic impersonal random Evolution itself could be a self-existent eternal Cause --- like gravity "it just is". This unfounded presumption gets around the need to debate any miraculous interventions into the progression of the world. But my god-model also accepts Evolution, and denies the need for divine meddling with the ongoing process.what you need to disprove — Philosophim
I suspect that some Multiverse proponents would agree with your logic, but still disagree with your implication that the First Cause has no causal precedent.A is not defined by anything else, and thus can only be understood as its existence, not by something that is not its existence. — Philosophim
I was merely noting what you had already implied : that an ultimate First Cause would not "pop into existence", since it continually exists forever. The answer to a "why" question must be a reason or intention, not necessarily a "something". But in the absence of a divine revelation, we may have to accept a mere place-holder : a loosely-defined G*D Concept.If you imply there is a reason, you imply something BEHIND that first cause. — Philosophim
I have no need to refute your impeccable logic. I'll simple define the Causal Creator of our world, whether a> God or b> Multiverse, as the one-&-only answer to why the creation exists. I'm not aware of any other viable answers (e.g super-aliens).only one "Why" answer — Gnomon
Until you show the above logic as incorrect, this cannot be claimed. — Philosophim
That's what I said. "Self-creation" is a circular oxymoron notion, like "pulling yourself up by your bootstraps". "Self-existence", though, is a viable characteristic of a hypothetical entity that can create new Worlds & Beings, rather than just cause new forms of pre-existing things. Other self-existent beings could exist, but if they are independent minded, like the quarreling Pantheon of Olympus, it would be more like Chaos than Cosmos.c> If so, the universe itself would have to possess the power of sudden self-creation or eternal self-existence. — Gnomon
No, if it is a first cause, it did not cause itself. It was not, then it was. If it has the power of eternal self-existence, as a first cause, it does, because it does. — Philosophim
No. That is the understanding of Atheists who challenge Theists with "who created the creator?" But the "Creative Potential" I have in mind is the Power to Exist, that I call "BEING", for short. There could be no space-time limit on an Infinite Pool of Possibilities. You could imagine that PoP as the eternal law of statistics, governing what is possible in Enfernity (Infinity-Eternity), and what is probable in space-time.As long as you understand the underlying concept that at any point of creative power, we can imagine a greater creative power — Philosophim
I was talking about the infinite Potential (possible creations) of a single omnipotent deity, not a sequence of Creator Gods all-the-way-down. The First Cause (Agent) is also the Final Cause (Design) --- all-in-one.. . . . the First Cause would have to possess infinite Potential — Gnomon
I don't think this is logical. . . . the infinitely powerful God is only one of an infinite other possible gods. — Philosophim
For Atheists, that might be true. But for my thesis, a multiplicity of gods is no better, no more powerful, than Creation by Random Accident. And that's not a God by my definition. It's statistical Chance. So, if I was a betting man, I'd put my money on a Unitary Creative Cause, instead of waiting for infinite rolls of the dice. :joke:13. If we take this to its conclusion, there is nothing to stop a God of greater power being . . . An infinite number of [possible] beings — Philosophim
I am not arguing cosmological existence by necessity. We already know we live in a universe. — Philosophim
You have accepted your logically necessary universe, just just like have accepted your logically necessary first cause. It's as if you've presented a straw man argument. — 3017amen
"Theists and atheists agree there must be some ultimate explanation, some end to the infinite regress. But they disagree over which properties this 'ultimate being' must have". — Gnomon
Atheists "disprove" your assertion of a First Cause for our Natural world, by asserting that automatic impersonal random Evolution itself could be a self-existent eternal Cause --- like gravity "it just is". — Gnomon
I was merely noting what you had already implied : that an ultimate First Cause would not "pop into existence", since it continually exists forever. — Gnomon
The answer to a "why" question must be a reason or intention, not necessarily a "something" — Gnomon
BEING, per se, could be inert immobile existence, equivalent to nothingness. But "Creative BEING" would be able to use its inherent power of existence to cause other beings to exist. No one can deny that our existence implies the "power to be", and the sudden appearance of our world from who-knows-where is impossible without the prior Potential for existence. So I'm simply defining an eternal Law of Being that must logically cause & create all other laws, principles, and things in existence. — Gnomon
No. That is the understanding of Atheists who challenge Theists with "who created the creator?" — Gnomon
For Atheists, that might be true. But for my thesis, a multiplicity of gods is no better, no more powerful, than Creation by Random Accident. — Gnomon
3. There is one technical restriction to a first cause however. It cannot contradict itself. I cannot both be, and not be. I think that is a given, but I wanted to make sure that was also understood.
I would say if these are logically necessary, then the argument is sound. If something is not logically necessary, then it is not sound. You seem to state this is a problem but perhaps I'm not fully understanding what the issue is. — Philosophim
Can you point out specifically where I have introduced something that can neither be true or false? — Philosophim
Of course, a first cause does not have to be a God. Remember, I'm using the big bang as an easy starting point for comprehension. There may have been something that caused the big bang, maybe the little pop. — Philosophim
Alright, the challenge is on! Where is the flaw I finally found? Can you introduce a flaw I missed? — Philosophim
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
Of course, a first cause does not have to be a God. Remember, I'm using the big bang as an easy starting point for comprehension. There may have been something that caused the big bang, maybe the little pop. — Philosophim
The argument is sound but it lacks its existential meaning, — 3017amen
And so in your item 3 above, if you were to parse the attributes of a first cause, you would have to address cosmological concepts (just to name a few) such as: determinacy/indeterminacy in physics/nature, contingency (what supports/explains the super-turtle) in nature, timelessness and time dependent (temporal time v. eternity and the beginning of time/BB) not to mention Being and becoming, consciousness, etc.. — 3017amen
LEM/bivalence would relate to a Dipolar feature of existence and consciousness and subconsciousness working together in an illogical manner — 3017amen
So, how can you explain a causational Being who presumably is logically necessary who has a consciousness? One of many questions would be, what are its attributes and what were the reasons for its existence? What was it doing prior to the BB? Since you introduced Being, who (what/where/how/why) caused and created existence; the burden is within your theory to provide answers to those questions (and more), using logic. — 3017amen
My example was to show that the first cause of our universe might have been the big bang, or might have been something else that inevitably lead to the big bang. The "little pop" was just a suggestion to give you a more concrete visual. — Philosophim
think it carries plenty of meaning. First, it concludes with certainty that our universe has a first cause. It then concludes a basic tenant of what a first cause must entail; that its being is not bound to anything necessary. A first cause can be anything. That is the logically concluded nature of its existence. Its not a "maybe it could be anything," its the fact that a first cause is not bound by any rules in its existence. — Philosophim
If you understand that a first cause is not bound to necessarily be anything, then none of the above are necessary to address. Well, perhaps we could dive into what the idea of a "being" is, but its still unimportant. — Philosophim
The most obvious flaw, broadly speaking, is that the argument is an exercise in creating information ex-nihilo, which is to say it operates on the assumption that stringing some mathematical operations together will somehow result in new information, which isn't actually possible. — Echarmion
There is nothing stopping us from supposing an infinity of "natural" causes to counter the infinity of gods. — Echarmion
Because we know that's not an option. Causality is a necessary condition that results in a necessary outcome. A first cause is a condition that results in a necessary outcome, but the first cause does not have a prior necessary condition for its own outcome, its existence in this case.What about the option that nothing has a cause? — Echarmion
There is only one thing that matters to the definition of a God, and that is that it is a being that has the power to create our specific universe. And of course, the rest that follows from there. — Philosophim
never said that this is something that had to be. I'm only talking about what is possible, when anything which does not contradict itself is possible. As long as your definition of such a being is not self-contradictory, it is possible. It does not mean it is necessary or certain, just simply possible. — Philosophim
No apologies necessary, thank you. We're critiquing here. — 3017amen
Unless I'm missing something (which is entirely possible) you are basically saying that a Being known as God is the first cause. That's all you've said to describe that Being known as God, no? — 3017amen
Or are you simply discussing a priori kinds of thinking/logical necessary truth's? If it's the latter, what's the point of significance? — 3017amen
There is only one thing that matters to the definition of a God, and that is that it is a being that has the power to create our specific universe. And of course, the rest that follows from there.
— Philosophim
Exactly my point. What is: "the rest". ?? — 3017amen
Sorry for the piecemeal, but that's not true. The conscious and subconscious mind violate rules of Bivalence/LEM. So in essence, you yourself are outside of a logical description from logic. In essence you are illogical. Or, you can make the case whether you or God can transcend logic. Another reason you should explore the Anthropic Principle in your cosmological model. — 3017amen
The being is not logically necessary. I'm just saying its a logical possibility. This is important, because prior to this argument, the idea of of a God being possible has never been actually proven. If a first cause can be anything, then it is possible that the first cause of our universe is a God. That is all the argument says about this. — Philosophim
You cannot ask a question, "Why does it exist" if it is a first cause, and look to something else. "Why does it exist" implies there is prior causality to its existence. A first cause has no prior causality. Why does it exist? It simply is, there is no why to its existence, besides the fact that it exists. Not because its an opinion, but because this is logically the only thing which can be. As for its attributes, who knows? All we know is that it had the power to create our universe. We cannot know from this reasoning, anything more than that. — Philosophim
There is a first cause to our universe.
There is no rule of what a first cause must be
We do not know what that first cause is, so we can imagine all of the possibilities, and see if we can figure anything out.
There is one possibility of our universe's first cause being a non being.
There are infinite possibilities of our universe's first cause being a being which has the power to create our specific universe. — Philosophim
Okay now you're changing from a logically necessary, causational Being, to a logically possible Being. Are you going to change your propositional model accordingly? Again I take no exceptions, but I think you need to rewrite your model that discusses that topic. — 3017amen
Are you telling me we cannot question anyone's theory that God is a first cause? That seems contradictory and/or paradoxical because if you didn't have a sense of wonderment, you wouldn't have posited a cuz a tional being to begin with, correct? — 3017amen
Okay, no exceptions taken. To me, that's in the spirit of logical possibility. But your model needs to provide analogies. What makes it more possible than not? What from physics and metaphysics can provide clues in so-called support of your own model? — 3017amen
No, you could definitely question if what you are calling a God is a first cause. I didn't mean you couldn't ask the question, but that there is no answer to the question because a first cause has no prior conditions for being. — Philosophim
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