 Pippen
Pippen         
          Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
          SophistiCat
SophistiCat         
         How do you prove that nothing can come from nothing? — Pippen
 Rich
Rich         
          Pippen
Pippen         
          SophistiCat
SophistiCat         
         I understand "nothing can come from nothing" as: it is false that something can follow from nothing. — Pippen
I see causality as a special case of inference, so if I can show that such an inference is wrong then it holds even more for causality. — Pippen
 dclements
dclements         
          Pippen
Pippen         
          Srap Tasmaner
Srap Tasmaner         
          Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         but then she/he would need to give me one example of casuality that we cannot express as an inference. — Pippen
 Pippen
Pippen         
          SophistiCat
SophistiCat         
          SophistiCat
SophistiCat         
         "¬p→p" has an obvious countermodel when p is false, which happily you assumed in (1). — Srap Tasmaner
 A Christian Philosophy
A Christian Philosophy         
          A Christian Philosophy
A Christian Philosophy         
         Just because we don't see something from nothing, it does not mean that we can't see something from nothing — Samuel Lacrampe
 A Christian Philosophy
A Christian Philosophy         
          Pippen
Pippen         
         Not that this trivial exercise reveals anything interesting, of course. If p stands for "something exists" and then ~p stands for "nothing exists," all that he shows is that, if nothing exists, then it is not also the case that something exists. Duh. — SophistiCat
 Srap Tasmaner
Srap Tasmaner         
         follows from — Pippen
 Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
          SophistiCat
SophistiCat         
         If p stands for "something exists", ~p stand for "nothing exists" and ~p -> p for "something follows from nothing" — Pippen
 SophistiCat
SophistiCat         
         I can prove that ~p and ~p -> p is a contradiction — Pippen
 A Christian Philosophy
A Christian Philosophy         
         'By some miracle'? As in 'caused by a miracle'? But a miracle is not nothing. What this says is that, while miraculous events escape the laws of physics by definition, they too don't escape the nihil ex nihilo principle. And neither do you in practice, apparently. ;)If then, by some miracle, another apple appears outta nothin' ... — SophistiCat
By way of footnote, the cosmological theory popularly referred to as 'big bang theory' comes awfully close to a literal 'creation ex nihilo'. — Wayfarer
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