If X is true for everything within the universe, then X is also true for the universe itself. — Magnus
Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards. — Kierkegaard
Nice trick to mirror write: take a pen in both hands. A left hand pen and a right hand pen. Write the same word with left as with tight, but in opposite directions. You will see the miracle happening. — Hillary
if the speed limit for the universe was the speed of light, the size of the universe would be at most 27.6 light-years across. the observable universe is however 93 billion light-years across. — Magnus
The universe is about 13.8 billion years old, if the speed limit for the universe was the speed of light, the size of the universe would be at most 27.6 light-years across. the observable universe is however 93 billion light-years across. — Magnus
If we were to ask, from our perspective, what this means for the speed of this distant galaxy that we're only now observing, we'd conclude that this galaxy is receding from us well in excess of the speed of light. But in reality, not only is that galaxy not moving through the Universe at a relativistically impossible speed, but it's hardly moving at all! Instead of speeds exceeding 299,792 km/s (the speed of light in a vacuum), these galaxies are only moving through space at ~2% the speed of light or less.
But space itself is expanding, and that accounts for the overwhelming majority of the redshift we see. And space doesn't expand at a speed; it expands at a speed-per-unit-distance: a very different kind of rate. When you see numbers like 67 km/s/Mpc or 73 km/s/Mpc (the two most common values that cosmologists measure), these are speeds (km/s) per unit distance (Mpc, or about 3.3 million light-years).
The restriction that "nothing can move faster than light" only applies to the motion of objects through space. The rate at which space itself expands — this speed-per-unit-distance — has no physical bounds on its upper limit.
However, the "universe" is defined asIf X is true for everything within the universe, then X is also true for the universe itself"
Meaning if you accept that matter and energy cannot come from "nothing," then I think you are implicitly assuming that "universes" (defined as collections of matter and energy) cannot come from nothing either.all existing matter and space considered as a whole; the cosmos
1. I think most theists would agree with this statement.So let's start at the end, with three statements that theists make.
1. God did not begin to exist.
2. There is only one god and that is God.
3. There is only one universe.
If X is true for everything within the universe, then X is also true for the universe itself. — Magnus
"Whatever begins to exist has a cause" — Magnus
Doesn't that make premise 2 and the conclusion obsolete? — Magnus
If X is true for everything within the universe, then X is also true for the universe itself.
Is that then a statement that holds true? — Magnus
is proven false and subsequently, the Kalam cosmological argument is proven to be a false argument. — Magnus
The Kalam argument never lifted off the ground. There is no evidence for any kind of unique existence of a "personal powerful being"; so the first premise is already false because there would evidence via 'cause' to point to the existence of a powerful being being 'caused to exist'. — Cobra
How is "If X is true for everything within the universe, then X is also true for the universe itself." not a correct representation of the argument? — Magnus
I think this argument is a false argument and I will try to explain why here. — Magnus
The article (very interresting, thanks for the link) says that 18 million light years is the distance from us where space expands faster than the speed of light. — Magnus
The restriction that "nothing can move faster than light" only applies to the motion of objects through space. The rate at which space itself expands — this speed-per-unit-distance — has no physical bounds on its upper limit. — Ethan Siegel
For instance, if we said that all parts of the house were made of wood, or that all parts of the house came into existence at some point, then I believe it would follow that the house was made of wood (i.e. made of parts that were made of wood) or also came into existence at some point. I admit its been a while since I've seen Craig's Kalam argument, but I think he makes the point that if matter or energy don't just "pop" into existence, then universes don't just "pop" into existence either. Especially if these universes are collections of matter. I believe he uses the analogy such as things like horses and other objects not just coming into existence unprovoked. Maybe someone else who is more familiar with the argument can chime in here.A house, for example, is all the things that make the house, taken together. Without the parts, there would be no house. But even if all the different parts share a characteric, let's say "have the same value regardless of location", that characteristic is not true for the house.
However, once again, the distinction is "alive" can apply to a collection of atoms despite not applying to each one individually. Kalam's argument, on the other hand is more like saying "matter and energy do not just spontaneously come into existence. The universe is a collection of matter and energy. Therefore, the universe could not spontaneously come into existence."No atoms are alive. Therefore, nothing made of atoms is alive
I totally agree. If God exists he could make many universes/multiverses. Each one could either have the same or a different God (who knows), if a god or gods exist. In my experience, some of the theists I've talked to are hesitant about the multiverse not because it does away with the idea of God but simply because it is a non-falsifiable theory (how would it be empirically verified?). As a result, according to some, why would multiverse be considered a scientific theory while theism would not?The Kalam argument says nothing about multiverses and I agree with you, how could you possibly know? If there is a God, maybe this is just one of many universes he made. Or maybe there are many gods and they all made their own universes. :)
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