Let's try this way. Let's assume you have as claimed logically proven the universe must have had a first cause. Right away the "logical" leaps out: why exactly is it there? — tim wood
4. The logic of a first cause entails that there is no rule on how that first cause has to exist. In other words, you cannot claim "Its not possible for X to exist." To say there existed such a rule would entail "X exists because of Y". But there is no Y when X is a first cause. This can mean a first cause could be anything without limitation. X as a prime cause does not follow any rules besides the fact of its own existence. — Philosophim
But more simply, given it's logically proven, how do you get from there to any assertion that it applies to the universe? — tim wood
Gosh, that's some rule. With that you can logically prove anything.The logic of a first cause entails that there is no rule on how that first cause has to exist. — Philosophim
Yours is a theology. — tim wood
You pre-suppose cause. I don't. Make me. That is, I do not grant #11. 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
You pre-suppose cause. I don't. Make me. That is, I do not grant #1 — tim wood
The view I invite you to share is of something like William James's "blooming, buzzing confusion" - the world as. In such a view cause is manifestly one of many different kinds of templates we in our reason overlay the world with, to create our own sense of it - which makes it not any part of the world primordially. Perhaps most critically expressed, cause is a necessary part of a model, but not part of reality. Whatever depends on cause, then, is in at least that respect, not in reality. — tim wood
To Tim's list I would also add
d. Things can exist without a prior cause — EricH
All fair and orderly, and agreed.represents.. model... concepts. We are able to evaluate... Causality is the notion... From this we normally construct rules and reasons in the hopes such similar events are able to occur again, and thus we gain a greater control over nature. Physics for example. — Philosophim
Here it seems your argument a pendulum, now swinging the other way. But this notion of cause must be explicated. At once it seems necessary, and at the same time exists (as it exists in its existing) only as an inference, a very convenient fiction, how the shadows seem to act. Hume said there warn't no such thing (paraphrasing), Kant one of his categories. Newton ambivalent; Kant all-in, and modern science an altogether different view of the matter. Yet at the same time for most of us most of the time it's gospel. One way out is to see the swing of the pendulum not as just a track, but instead one of many paths through the space it actually swings through.causality is not fundamentally necessary — Philosophim
Um, no. Aristotle somewhere makes the point that with either-or is also neither-nor. Recognizing that cause-and-effect is my invention (so to speak), mighty useful and dependable, I still ought to remember it's mine and not the world's itself. This lesson clearest in consideration of all matters religion and theologic. The several ideas may be good and useful, but not only are they not real, but cannot be real. And this last because the ideas that ground and found them usually do not allow for the possibility of their ultimate ordinariness.But even if you take issue with the notion of causality, it would seem you must agree with me that there is the potential of something that can exist without causality. — Philosophim
But even if you take issue with the notion of causality, it would seem you must agree with me that there is the potential of something that can exist without causality.
— Philosophim
Um, no. Aristotle somewhere makes the point that with either-or is also neither-nor. Recognizing that cause-and-effect is my invention (so to speak), mighty useful and dependable, I still ought to remember it's mine and not the world's itself. — tim wood
Everything so many yards, feet, and inches, while at the same time nothing is. — tim wood
Quantum fluctuations alone do not presuppose or prove an existence without a prior cause. Would you like to point out why you think we do? — Philosophim
Believe? What matter belief? Cause and effect (CE) is how I structure my world - reality enough in that. And it is either in the world, and maybe I'm lucky enough to find it, or not. And if it isn't and I still find it there, then I've made a major mistake, and one my science likely will not recover from - a fatal mistake.if you do not believe that cause and effect is real, — Philosophim
Quantum mechanics shows that events at the sub-atomic level are random and "un-caused". These "un-caused" events behave in a statistically predictable pattern, but each event has no prior "cause". — EricH
At best, the notion that everything has a "prior cause" is a hypothesis that needs to be proven. — EricH
The flaw was not in any of the possibilities, it was in denying the same possibilities to a non-being as I gave a being. Since the ratio is now equal, this leaves the chance of a Being as a first cause versus a First Cause that is not a being at 50%. Of course this still holds a God is possible, just not as possible as my first conclusion held. — Philosophim
In fact, any event can be explained by an infinite variety of mundane causes, and an infinite variety of supernatural ones. And if your criteria is not mundane vs. supernatural but literally anything (i.e blue Ys vs any other colored Ys), you still get infinity on either side. Using this method, the probability is always 50%. Therefore, this method has zero predictive power, and discloses zero information about the world.
The real flaw is, this is not how probabilities are calculated. You don't just enumerate the possibilities and count them, you need to assign weights to them. Merely enumerating possibilities tells you exactly nothing. — hypericin
Thanks for finally revealing the missing piece of the puzzle. Your reasoning is exactly why I defined my hypothetical "First Cause", not as an empirical physical "being". but as meta-physical "BEING per se" (the power to be, to exist). In Physics, all causation is attributed to the mysterious force we call "Energy". But, like all causes, we only know Energy by its effects.The flaw was not in any of the possibilities, it was in denying the same possibilities to a non-being as I gave a being. Since the ratio is now equal, this leaves the chance of a Being as a first cause versus a First Cause that is not a being at 50%. Of course this still holds a God is possible, just not as possible as my first conclusion held. — Philosophim
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