self-destruction is possible — Agent Smith
Why would self creation be impossible then? What's the asymmetry? — Haglund
No, that's quite wrong. You seem to think that our convictions determine how things are with reality. No. — Bartricks
Substance causation is causation by a substance rather than an event. But when a substance causes an event it does so directly. There is not some prior act on the part of the substance that causes the event. The substance causes the event. Thus the causation is simultaneous. If you think it isn't, then I think it must be because you are confusing substance causation with event causation. — Bartricks
It's not incoherent! Look - either time had a beginning or it did not. Or do you think there's some other option? — Bartricks
Also, you are confused about contingency - a contingent thing is a thing that 'can' not exist. It doesn't have to have not existed at some point. It is sufficient that it is metaphysically possible for it not to exist. — Bartricks
As for the cause and effect existing simultaneously, it fails to fulfill a criterion for causality viz. that the cause must temporally precede the effect — Agent Smith
In your ball & cushion example, the ball exists before the depression in the cushion. — Agent Smith
perhaps, something like this can happen, something out of nothing. It makes no sense of course, — Manuel
I said conviction is our means of understanding — Metaphysician Undercover
Causation is always an act. — Metaphysician Undercover
Substance itself is passive — Metaphysician Undercover
What's incoherent is your proposition that there was no time when the ball was not on the cushion. — Metaphysician Undercover
No. Substance can cause events. If all events are caused by other events, you get an infinite regress of events. So, some events must be caused by non-events, that is by things. And that's called substance causation. — Bartricks
The ball is always on the cushion. — Bartricks
Some acts are not events, but cause events, like an act of will, it causes an event but is not itself an event. — Metaphysician Undercover
It didn't 'get there'. It has always been on the cushion — Bartricks
So, things can cause events. But when? That is, when a substance causes an event, when does the causation occur? Well, at the same time as the event. — Bartricks
Like I said, then time stands still. A ball eternally on a cushion is equivalent to time standing still. Nothing happening. — Haglund
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