everything has to have a cause to exist, — Varese
This is totally unrelated to the teleological argument. Please read the thread accordingly. — Varese
He says that everything that BEGINS to exist has a cause. — fishfry
... is patently false. See Causa sui, etc ... follow links for further contexts.the premise [ ... ] everything has to have a cause to exist — Varese
The present is t=0; the farthest back to the past our current, best, measurements go — make physical sense according to contemporary physics — is t= minus 13.81 billion years; physical speculations "beyond the physical" are, therefore, unwarranted and even nonsensical (e.g. before the beginning, cause of causality, north of the north pole ...)[ ... ]
"3. An infinite regress ... is impossible"
False. Loops, circumferences, cycles, fractals, etc can be infinitely regressed (or egressed) ... Travel in a straight line ... any direction on Earth and after traveling c24.9k miles you must arrive where you'd departed from because the Earth's surface is finite yet unbounded. — 180 Proof
God, as a proposed entity, is always defined as always existing. God is never defined as having a moment of birth. So I don't see where the conclusion is baked in other than perhaps in assumptions about what and which entities have beginnings -- other than God. — Garth
since I believe in the negative integers: …,−4,−3,−2,−1. In this case each "event" has a cause, namely its immediate predecessor, yet there is no first cause. — fishfry
I couldn't find any counter arguments against the cosmological argument? — Varese
I think you'd have to order them the other way. — Garth
I think you'd have to order them the other way. They arise in group theory as the additive inverse of the natural numbers. — Garth
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