And Devans99, why don't you read Aquinas's first book of the Contra Gentiles. He tries to "prove" God is all-knowing. — Gregory
If you guys want to believe in medieval physics, go for it. I'm not wasting my time anymore — Gregory
Unchanging causing change is as incoherent as something coming from nothing. — Harry Hindu
See? You can't escape talking about God relative to the universe. You are implying space-time encompassing God and your universe, as God is located relative to the universe and expresses itself in time. — Harry Hindu
They exist only as imaginings in the human mind in this particular universe. — Harry Hindu
I dont know what you're talking about. Maybe you're talking about realtive change. There is more or less change in one area relative to another. — Harry Hindu
1. suppose there's no 1st cause
2. if there's no nth cause, then there's no n+1th cause
3. so, by induction such causes don't have such (definite) numbering — jorndoe
TIme starts from the first motion of gravity — Gregory
You're position really is the Third Way. — Gregory
The world is self-caused, like you say of the dude out there. — Gregory
Who said anything about discarding arithmetic? It is very useful for very many purposes, especially those encountered in everyday life, which generally involve dealing with finite quantities of discrete things. A different approach is required to handle potentially infinite sets, and yet another is required for true continuity. Whether this accords with "common sense" or not, it is the reality. — aletheist
Is it common sense that there are numbers incapable of being calculated as fractions of integers? Or that matter consists of atoms that in turn consist of varying quantities of protons, neutrons, and electrons? Or that gravity is the curvature of spacetime, rather than a direct force of attraction between massive bodies? — aletheist
Nonsense, there is no single set of mathematical assumptions that perfectly matches reality--just different models that are useful for different purposes. — aletheist
Answer: embracing your God given sense of wonderment, and your Kantian intuition. — 3017amen
Do parallel lines ever meet? — tim wood
I explained why. Pay attention. What vase would be large enough to keep putting in 10 balls while only removing one. The vase works have to be an infinite sized container, which makes no sense. How can something be both infinite and contain? — Harry Hindu
If has an atemporal existence then that is the same as saying that it doesn't exist. How foes something cause everything else without being in time itself? How does it cause anything without changing itself? Even God has to exist in time if God changes. Change is time. — Harry Hindu
But 3 is a non sequitur — jorndoe
There are no "wrong" assumptions in pure mathematics. It is the science of reasoning necessarily about hypothetical states of things. — aletheist
There is nothing inherently contradictory about the mathematical concept of an infinitesimal, which is not necessarily defined as 1/∞. Again, if you truly want to understand, please read one or both of the short articles that I linked. If you prefer to remain ignorant, carry on. — aletheist
looks (to me) like you want to show that you can't number all such moments non-indexically, but then you call it a day there, still no contradiction derived. :meh: — jorndoe
By the way, still treating ∞ as a number (integer in this case)...? — jorndoe
You think you can peer into the nature of time. You think that proving to yourself that God exists means you have to convince us. Why don't you spend your day trying to communicate with "Him" through prayer and good works instead of starting threads on here? I don't get it — Gregory
Again, this reflects a complete misunderstanding of infinitesimals. A moment of time has a duration that is not zero, but is less than any assignable or measurable value relative to any arbitrarily chosen unit. — aletheist
In other words, continuous lapses of time with finite duration, arranged such that each one starts when the previous one ends. Calling this "discrete time" is a misnomer. — aletheist
The last sentence is correct, because the first sentence demonstrates a complete misunderstanding of infinitesimals. — aletheist
On the contrary--if time were discrete, then it would necessarily consist of durationless instants at some fixed interval. The fact that "now" cannot have zero duration requires time to be continuous, such that "now" has a duration that is infinitesimal--not zero, yet less than any assignable or measurable value. — aletheist
You physically can't keep putting 10 balls in a vase, while only removing one. It's an unrealistic thought experiment. — Harry Hindu
If causation (space-time) isn't infinite, then you have to come up with an explanation as to how something came from nothing. — Harry Hindu
I wonder if it is simply an " illogical abstract " that actually exists in reality. Much like the metaphysical phenomenology of how the subconscious and conscious mind work together in an illogical manner (violating the laws of bivalence/LEM). — 3017amen
Examples of abstract reality include the paradox of time, mathematics (Pi), cosmology (infinite universe theories), metaphysical phenomena, consciousness, so on and so forth.. — 3017amen
It only leads to absurdities if one insists on attempting to apply the same rules to infinite sets as to finite sets. Mathematicians have long recognized this, which is why there are different rules for infinite sets. — aletheist
Imagine a hotel with infinite rooms and with an infinite number of guests a1, a2, a3,... Now imagine a new guest b1 who wants to stay in that hotel. The manager simply moves a1 to a2, a2 to a3, aN to aN+1,... and b1 gets a1's room. Notice that though the quantity, infinity is still infinity, hasn't changed, the quality has: b1 is the new guest. — TheMadFool
Yet again: mathematical existence does not entail metaphysical actuality. Within mathematics, the number 10^100 (1 googol) indubitably exists and is a member of the set of natural numbers; but according to physics, the total quantity of actual particles in the entire universe is only about 10^80. — aletheist
You keep saying so without showing it. :confused: — jorndoe
He won't even consider Hawking's no boundary hypothesis — Gregory
How can you possibly know this? Have you traversed the spectrum? — jgill
Well, merely saying so doesn't make it so.
Can you at least deduce a contradiction then? — jorndoe
Causality is not a physical law; it's a speculative category (metaphysics) or methodological principle (epistemology applied to model theory/building e.g. classical physics). And if the topic is 'the origin of the universe' then we are always, necessarily dealing with the "macroscopic level" at its microscopic - plamck scale, or quantum - initial conditions (i.e. quantum cosmology). — 180 Proof
Physical constants belong to scientific models and not to what they model, namely, the universe — 180 Proof
Also, the Many-Worlds Interpretation of QFT, especially with respect to QG (quantum cosmology) entails that the Planck Era universe c13.8 billion years ago in superposition (so-called) BB consisted in a countless universes each constituted by every possible physical value (i.e. ratios we designate "constants"), with this, our current "anthropic" universe just one of many possible universe; thus, the plausibility of which alone debunks the "need for" "intelligent" "fine tuning" as the late particle physicist & philosopher Victor Stenger points out at length in his The Fallacy of Fine-Tuning. — 180 Proof
Sure, but in the quoted text, he did not claim that there is an actual set containing all the natural numbers. And his (incorrect, in our view) belief that there is an "actually infinite number of created individuals" does not somehow falsify all of his mathematical ideas about infinity. — aletheist
Please provide an authoritative reference for the claim that "all sets are actual." Remember, mathematical existence does not entail metaphysical actuality. — aletheist
How does that work? Can you set it out concisely? — jorndoe
No, it is defined as a potential infinity. One more time: mathematical existence does not entail metaphysical actuality. No one, except perhaps an extreme platonist, claims that there is an actual set containing all the natural numbers. — aletheist