OK - but can I use my own words that I already used...or do I need to reduce the complexity of the language?how is any of that a commitment to teleology? Like really, explain it in your own words. — StreetlightX
The assumption of ID and irreducible complexity is that there exists a teleological relationship between biological structure and functionality (i.e. it is 'made' like that to serve that 'purpose' — Siti
Again, just because a hypothesis begs a question does not mean that that hypothesis isn't true. — RogueAI
IC has no commitment to teleology. IC is essentially the thesis that shit happens; nothing more. — StreetlightX
By irreducibly complex I mean a single system which is composed of several well-matched, interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, and where the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to effectively cease functioning. — Behe
An irreducibly complex evolutionary pathway is one that contains one or more unselected steps (that is, one or more necessary-but-unselected mutations). The degree of irreducible complexity is the number of unselected steps in the pathway. — Behe
If the improbability of the pathway exceeds the available probabilistic resources (roughly the number of organisms over the relevant time in the relevant phylogenetic branch) then Darwinism is deemed an unlikely explanation and intelligent design a likely one. — Behe
Then the rest of what you said is of no relavence — StreetlightX
Why don't you take those seriously? — RogueAI
No. The null hypothesis is that nothing is going on at all. It has nothing to do with the supernatural, and nothing to do with the 'extraordinary'. That one's theory explains nothing at all is indeed an assumption, an assumption that all science must take seriously without which it gives up its right to call itself science at all. — StreetlightX
What do you mean "off the hook"? — RogueAI
Not in the slightest. The 'point of science' is to follow the evidence, and not make a priori assumptions as to what reality ought to be like. — StreetlightX
No, but if we're going to take seriously the hypothesis that advanced aliens exist, we're going to have to take seriously the idea that ID might have taken place here. Ditto if we're serious about simulation theory. — RogueAI
Perhaps ironically, 'irreducible complexity' is - or ought to be - the null hypothesis of all evolutionary science. — StreetlightX
Materialism is just theology without God. — Wayfarer
I am not a believer in ID either, but I think the field is at least a required counter-balance to mainstream evolutionary science. — Devans99
Now we have this absurd list of 50 genders — Bitter Crank
It doesn't make sense to take an extreme essentialist or a constructionist position. Clearly, both methods of shaping behavior are in play, — Bitter Crank
Although my moderate worldview does not divide the world into simplistic dualistic categories, it also can't abide the absurdity of infinite regression. — Gnomon
I think I understand a little what you are saying? We say the cause of boil water is the heat, but if there is no oxygen in the water will it boil? I suppose water with no oxygen wouldn't even be water, but I am getting to, things can not happen if the condition for the happening is not right and we do not have grounds for claiming this happened before that happened. Is that anywhere close to right? — Athena
I should probably have said 'the matter that constitutes the universe exists within time'. Matter can't exist forever within time and with no matter the universe would be null - leading to the requirement for something external to time to start everything off. — Devans99
The universe exists in time — Devans99
If the first cause is timeless then it is beyond cause and effect. This seems the only possible explanation for the origin of everything - there must be an uncaused cause somewhere - else the universe would be null and void. Only something timeless can be an uncaused cause - there is nothing sequentially/logically before such an entity - it has permanent existence. — Devans99
The whole point of my argument was to show that causes require prior causes — Devans99
Can you point them out please. — Devans99
I'm not sure what to say - I've explained it as clearly as possible - including an example a child could follow - I give up. You will just have to continue onwards with your belief in magic. — Devans99
By definition, an infinite causal regression (into the past) has no first cause - so none of the subsequent causes in the regression exist. — Devans99
Your formulation leads to an infinite regress of causes into the past with no first/ultimate cause. Thats impossible - the cause of everything has to be external to time. — Devans99
Well no they don't really, indeed it seems to be a fundamental (not just practical) limitation of the universe that "particles" (whatever those are) cannot have both a clearly defined velocity (momentum) and a clearly defined position at the same time...but in any case, a clearly defined position and velocity can only be true at a "moment" - i.e. no time has elapsed - as soon as the clock ticks to the next attosecond, not only is the "state" of that particle abstract, it is also history...an abstract approximation of the history of that "particle's" process.All the particles involved always have well defined positions and velocities. — Devans99
I don;t have a solution that encompasses both of your premises because I would challenge the first premise...1. It is clear that nothing can exist permanently within time.
2. It is also clear that everything in time requires a prior cause.
I see no other option but a recall to a timeless 'something' that is the ultimate cause of everything.
If you disagree, what is your solution that encompasses axioms [1] and [2] above? — Devans99
Opinions, arguments, pro et contra, ...? — jorndoe
You are moving relative to more or less everything else - you just don't sense it because because you are sitting on a fairly large lump of rock that is spinning you around its own center of gravity faster than a jet plane, whizzing you around the sun faster than a rocket and is itself being carried around the center of the Milky Way at half a million miles per hour...how is that "a state"? Relatively, of course, and those are the only kind of states there are...relative states - approximations - abstractions - not real...I am not moving relative to anything else so I am in a state. — Devans99
Nothing can be causeless and nothing can be the cause of itself. — Devans99
In this argument you contend that the "lack of an initial state invalidates all the subsequent states - a system’s initial state determines all subsequent states." But what exactly is a "state" - the universe does not really have "states" - it has, or rather it IS, process..."states" are purely imaginary and therefore by your own definition do not have physical existence. "States" are "freeze-frame" snapshots - abstractions, not realities. To refute this, simply name one thing that is not moving - i.e. is actually in a "state" right now (PS - to make it easier, "now" can be any time you like 14 billion years ago, 10 billion years in the future...whenever you like).Please consider the argument given in this OP:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/6218/the-universe-cannot-have-existed-forever/p1 — Devans99
Egg zackly! And to be a cause of a physical effect, one has to exist in time n'est-ce pas? Do you know of any cause that exists "not in time"?Everything that exists in time has a cause. — Devans99
Wrong - an infinite regress of anything has no first term - that's all you can say...using the example of the negative integers, I can think of the biggest integer I can imagine and because I can imagine it, it exists (at least as an idea in my mind) and so does the entire series of negative integers between it and -1 - and I know for sure that there is another 1 before it, and another before that (even if I can't name those numbers). Its exactly the same with causes - just because I don't know what the primordial causes of the universe becoming as it came to be at the point where we can begin to pick up the threads of cause and effect doesn't mean those causes don't exist. "Prime Mover" is just a gap filler - and in any case, the kind of "Prime Mover" Aquinas was talking about simply replaces one infinite regress with another - God (as he was 1 second before the act of creation, then as he was two seconds before, 3, 4, 10 million years before...and before you argue that time didn't exist "before" the BB, you will also have to convince me that how that could possibly have changed in no time. And that really is the problem with notion of a prime mover - it - whatever we imagine it might have been, would have to have "acted" to cause "change" in "no time". To me, its a far simpler induction to show that "action" and "change" cannot happen in "no time".An infinite regress of causes has no first or ultimate cause, so it's a simple matter of induction to show that the whole of such sequence cannot exist. — Devans99
Motion with a prime mover is is not perpetual...but really the evidence suggests that perpetual motion is exactly what we see - if you want to convince me otherwise, you just have to name one thing (just one) that is not moving right now.Perpetual motion without a prime mover is an impossibility. — Devans99
2. An Infinite Regress of Causes is Possible
This is plainly nonsense — Devans99