↪Agent Smith ↪Agent Smith A good question for which I do not have the answer except for my post on the origin of the universe. — val p miranda
Classical materislists (i.e. atomists) like Epicurus & Lucretius reasoned that "the gods" were material (i.e. constituted of atoms & void) if they exist, but that as "perfect beings" (i.e. perfect combinations of atoms & void, therefore "eternal"), unlike the universe and its constituents, "the gods" were far away, even outside this imperfect universe, such that in their blissful perfection they took no notice of – neither affecting nor were affected by – this universe. IIRC, the Cārvāka tradition in ancient India taught this too. So again, your scholastic misunderstanding of non-scholastic (free) thought. Add 'history of philosophy' and 'comparative philosophy' to your toolbox asap is my humble recommendation.god is not material; therefore, god does not exist. — val p miranda
Metaphysics Tools are tools of reason of three kinds: principles, logic and knowledge. No existent can create itself, from nothing comes nothing, the principle of non-contradiction (is or is not) and every existent has a beginning except for the first existent are such tools. Tools of logic are the syllogism, the if then and either or construction. As for knowledge, it can be either a priori or empirical. With these tools and imagination, one should be able to arrive at the first existent, and consequently, the origin of the universe. — val p miranda
With these tools and imagination, one should be able to arrive at the first existent, and consequently, the origin of the universe. — val p miranda
Again, Kant erred on space; he made it perceptual. If you read my post on the origin of the universe, it eludes Kant's antinomies. — val p miranda
this imperfect universe — 180 Proof
IIRC, Tertullian is the first Church Father to single-out epicureanism (as representative of "Greek wisdom") as heresy which was foundational in early apologetics and later Christian theology. Leibniz, a devoutly theological and philosophically astute Christian, develops his panglossian modal theodicy deliberately ignoring heresies (such pagan philosophies e.g. atomism / epicureanism) whenever and as much as possible. — 180 Proof
we don't make reality as Kant and Berkeley did — val p miranda
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