Theology, I admit, belongs to classical metaphysics; but the "god of the philosophers" is not worshipped or what religious / mystical seekers seek. — 180 Proof
My position is that philosophy concerns intelligible-explicable concepts and "god of religion" is neither an intelligible nor explicable concept. — 180 Proof
...I can't imagine the possibility of anything uncaused... — Metaphysician Undercover
But I don't know what you mean by saying time is "metaphysical". — Metaphysician Undercover
As I already pointed out, our epistemology on god can only shed light on the Anthropological aspect of the cultural concept...not the ontological one. We don't have verified epistemology on the existence of god in reality in order to render any discussion on it "Philosophical".That's too obvious to state. Pick up an introductory book on philosophy and be informed! 180 Proof claims philosophy and god are incompatible. I beg to differ. — Agent Smith
That's the best thing one can do in life! Deepity? — Agent Smith
And yet in the mouth of (most?) believers these days, "God" is just a three-letter epithet (or crutch) for ego ("why"). — 180 Proof
Does this incline you to think time has a cause? — ucarr
Does the following train of thought reflect your thinking: Since time predates God and God created the material world of physics, time must be something other than physical. — ucarr
Science relies on observation and experimentation, while the pursuit of God is often based on subjective experience and personal conviction. — gevgala
If we wanted to speak of something prior to time, we would have to use terms other than temporal terms to describe this sort of "priority". We might say "logically prior to" for example. — Metaphysician Undercover
...we have an inductive principle that there is a cause prior to every material thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Does the following train of thought reflect your thinking: Since time predates God and God created the material world of physics, time must be something other than physical. — ucarr
No, that's backwards, you need to reverse it. We have the physical world first, as our source of evidence. We see that something preexists each and every material thing as the cause of existence of that thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since, by your declaration, logical priority ≠ temporal causality, it seems to follow that a realm of ideal forms exemplifies your statement that:
...we have an inductive principle that there is a cause prior to every material thing.
— Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, it seems to follow that this realm of ideal forms, being outside time because it timelessly causes material objects to exist, holds possession of a metaphysical identity in the sense that it is beyond both the temporal and the physical. — ucarr
Furthermore, you seem to be implying time is physical. — ucarr
A cause... cannot be outside of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
1. Logic produces the conclusion that there must be a cause prior in time to all material (physical) things. — Metaphysician Undercover
the conclusion that there must be a cause prior in time to all material (physical) things. (?) — Metaphysician Undercover
1. (Continued) This cause cannot be material (physical) because it is prior in time to material (physical) things. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we wanted to speak of something prior to time, we would have to use terms other than temporal terms to describe this sort of "priority". We might say "logically prior to" for example. — Metaphysician Undercover
This cause cannot be material (physical) because it is prior in time to material (physical) things. — Metaphysician Undercover
1. (Continued) Theologians call this "God" — Metaphysician Undercover
2. If time is the product of physical activity then God must be outside of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
3. As an actual cause, it is impossible that God is outside of time. — Metaphysician Undercover
4. Therefore time as well as God must be prior to material (physical) things, and is not material (physical). — Metaphysician Undercover
...trying to parse what god can and cannot do, or where God resides and in what form is pointless and subject to the paucity of human understanding. If the laws of physics get in the way of a person's understanding God then they're not doing it right... — Tom Storm
can we assume someone can speak or write a logical statement that necessarily leads to:
the conclusion that there must be a cause prior in time to all material (physical) things. (?) — ucarr
Okay. Regarding the ordering of reality, if something is logically prior to time, then its priority over time is by a standard of measure not temporal? — ucarr
In the above quote priority is temporal? — ucarr
So time is the product of physical activity is a false premise? — ucarr
So God exists and acts within time is your main premise? — ucarr
God’s existence in time is non-physical whereas human existence in time is physical? — ucarr
So God causing the physical-material universe out of time does not cohere with the axiom: causation cannot occur outside time? Theological God is thus incoherent with causation? — ucarr
So God causing the physical-material universe out of time does not cohere with the axiom: causation cannot occur outside time? Theological God is thus incoherent with causation? — ucarr
Okay. Time predates God. And God created the material universe.
So, time before God was metaphysical and there were no material things?
Okay. God can only act within time.
So, outside of time God cannot exist? — ucarr
I think my answer to all this is generally yes. But I don't know what you mean by saying time is "metaphysical". If you mean that it's an object of study in metaphysics, then I agree. — Metaphysician Undercover
3. As an actual cause, it is impossible that God is outside of time.
4. Therefore time as well as God must be prior to material (physical) things, and is not material (physical). — Metaphysician Undercover
We know through observation and induction that each and every material thing has a cause. The cause of a material thing is prior in time to the existence of that material thing. Therefore there is a cause prior in time to all material things. — Metaphysician Undercover
So God exists and acts within time is your main premise? — ucarr
For that part of the argument. However that God exists and acts within time are conclusions drawn from the preceding part, which we already discussed. — Metaphysician Undercover
The gravitational field of earth's moon causes the rising and falling of ocean tides. Do you say that the moon's gravitational field predates the oceans covering the earth? — ucarr
Do you instead acknowledge that before creation of the material universe, cause and effect were temporally sequential whereas, in the wake of said material creation, cause and effect are not always sequential? — ucarr
Upon consideration of the above essentials, your thesis gives highest priority to time. It is the principle essential, ranking above even God. This must be so since God cannot exist or take action without the sanctioning empowerment of time, a principle essential that predates God. — ucarr
No, if the gravitational field is the cause of the tides, it predate the tides, not necessarily the oceans. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you instead acknowledge that before creation of the material universe, cause and effect were temporally sequential whereas, in the wake of said material creation, cause and effect are not always sequential? — ucarr
...cause and effect are always sequential by definition... — Metaphysician Undercover
I've already agreed that ordinal relations are not necessarily temporal. — Metaphysician Undercover
Okay. The gravitational field doesn't predate the ocean. So, at all times, the ocean currents are under influence of both earth and moon gravitational fields.
Does the strengthening gravitational field predate the rising tide?
The ocean tide rises with the progressively closing approach of moon to earth. As strengthening field intensifies, ocean tide heightens simultaneously. There is no time lag in the action-at-a-distance of the gravitational field. Were that the case, when a suicide jumps from the bridge, they would hover in the air for a positive interval of time before accelerating towards the ground. — ucarr
Have you seen this hover-in-the-air hesitation first-hand in your own experience? — ucarr
Can you cite a definition of cause and effect that explicitly incorporates temporal antecedence?
4 hours ago — ucarr
When I joined this forum, being rather naive of the current state of philosophy, I was surprised to have my philosophical reasoning & conjectures challenged for empirical evidence, rather than logical reasons. I thought that was the whole point of Philosophy : to go where Science cannot. Yes, philosophies often evolve into restrictive religions, but they may also free us from misconceptions.Sure, the quest for knowledge of the divine, if I could put it that way, operates by different standards to empirical science and peer-reviewed journal articles. But there are domains of discourse, communities of faith, within which that quest is intelligible, and which contain those quite capable of judging whether an aspirant is progressing or not. — Wayfarer
the "action-at-a-distance" of gravity is understood to not be instantaneous. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why would you think that gravity would only avt [sic] after the person steps ove [sic] the edge? — Metaphysician Undercover *1
The gravitational field doesn't predate the ocean. So, at all times, the ocean currents are under influence of both earth and moon gravitational fields. — ucarr
Obviously gravity is acting on the person prior to falling over the edge. — Metaphysician Undercover
...when a suicide jumps from the bridge, they would hover in the air for a positive interval of time before accelerating towards the ground. — ucarr
I do not deny that one might define causality such that it is not necessary for the cause to be prior in time to the effect. What I've said is that this would render causation as incoherent and unintelligible. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've already agreed that ordinal relations are not necessarily temporal. — Metaphysician Undercover
...some might allow for simultaneity, but as I said this renders causation as unintelligible because then there is no true principle to distinguish cause from effect. — Metaphysician Undercover
Causality is not inherently implied in equations of motion, but postulated as an additional constraint that needs to be satisfied (i.e. a cause always precedes its effect)." — Metaphysician Undercover
"Enformer"-of-the-gaps, unsound arguments (about your own citations), and continuous strawman & ad hominem replies are among the parade of logical challenges I, @universeness, @bert1 & others have raised collectively over hundreds of posts just in the last twelve months. All you do lately is whinge on about what a victim you are of "materialist, reductionist, anti-metaphysical bias" or whatever. :ok: :sweat:... challenged for empirical evidence, rather than logical reasons. — Gnomon
My latest run-in was with the Logical-Positive belief system, which constructs artificial fences around Logic ; functioning like electronic ankle cuffs, to limit the range of Reason to verifiable empirical questions. In other words, forcing Philosophy to obey the rules of Science. — Gnomon
When I joined this forum, being rather naive of the current state of philosophy, I was surprised to have my philosophical reasoning & conjectures challenged for empirical evidence, rather than logical reasons. I thought that was the whole point of Philosophy : to go where Science cannot. Yes, philosophies often evolve into restrictive religions, but they may also free us from misconceptions. — Gnomon
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