(April 27, 2016 at 8:56 am)SteveII Wrote: (April 26, 2016 at 1:39 pm)wiploc Wrote: - If things can happen without causes, then we have no need of a creator god. "The universe just happened" is every bit as good an explanation as "My god exists without cause."
- Since you claim your creator god is eternal, you are not avoiding "a past infinite regression absurdity."
- There is no sense of "begin" for which your god didn't begin but the rest of the universe did. Therefore--even according to your own logic--if the rest of the universe needs a cause, so does your god.
You are not understanding the argument.
I can't tell if you're trying to give offense here. I will continue to give you the benefit of the doubt, but this kind of thing doesn't help.
Quote:1. Whatever begins to exist has a cause of its beginning.
I understand this part. I don't see anything about it not to understand. Three points, though:
- I have no reason to believe it is true.
- I believe it is contrary to the current scientific consensus
- It seems to me arbitrary and self-serving, as if the worshipper of, say, a blue devil, proclaimed that everything that isn't blue has a cause.
We can still look at whether your argument is valid, but it already doesn't seem to be sound.
Quote:2. The universe began to exist.
- I'm not sure this is true. Asimov said the universe began at the big bang, but then he immediately hedged, saying something like, "At least we can
call it the beginning, since we don't know what happened before that." Hawking made the same move in
A Brief History of Time.
But I keep reading this claim, made by Christians, as if the beginning of the big bang was literally the beginning of all. They often talk as if this issue were scientifically settled. They often talk as if doubting them on this is unscientific. But they are often the same people who say that begun things have to have causes, so I have to wonder if they don't support science only when they think it supports them. Often enough they'll say first that nothing comes from nothing, and then turn around and say that Jehovah created the universe from nothing.
So I went on campus and found a cosmologist and put the question to him. He said, "Nobody knows what happened before the big bang. Nobody knows what happened before the big bang. Nobody knows what happened before the big bang."
Bertrand Russell said something like this: "When the experts are agreed, the layman does well not to hold the opposite opinion; when the experts are not agreed, the layman does well not to hold any opinion at all."
So here's my opinion as to whether the beginning of the big bang was the ultimate beginning: I don't know.
I'm not aware of a scientific consensus on the matter, and I don't have the expertise that would warrant me having my own opinion.
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I have some concern about equivocation on the word "universe." To me, this usually means everything that exists. So, if a god exists, it is part of the universe. So I don't see how a god could create the universe. That would mean, among other things, creating itself.
But if we only mean some things, rather than all things -- for clarity, we can call it a
partaverse as opposed to the
allaverse -- then I don't see what this premise gets you.
"P2: Some things had a beginning." Yes, I'm happy to agree with that, but I don't think you can build a first cause argument on that foundation.
Quote:3. Therefore, the universe has a cause of its beginning.
If we're talking about the partaverse, not including, say, gods, then, yes your argument is valid. But all you've proven is that some stuff had causes. Big whoop.
Or, if we're talking about the allaverse, and we haven't equivocated (that is, if we were also talking about the allaverse in P2) then the argument is valid, but it "proves" that your god had a cause.
And, if "universe" refers to a partaverse in P2 but refers to the allaverse in the conclusion, then the argument is not valid.
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If we're just talking about the partaverse, I don't know why we're talking at all. The intent of the first cause argument, as I understand it, is to establish the ultimate cause of everything.
If we're talking about the allaverse, then your god (if it exists) is also caused, and that entirely defeats your claim to have established an uncaused cause.
Quote:In order to avoid an infinite regress, that explanation must be uncaused.
Maybe it's okay to conflate causes and explanations; I don't have an opinion on that. Is an uncaused explanation the same as an unexplained explanation and an uncaused cause? Here you really do have an issue that I don't understand. I can't even guess whether your point is linguistic or philosophical.
In any case, maybe you're right. Maybe it's true that our choice is either an uncaused first cause or an infinite regress. (Hawking's "finite but unbounded" imaginary time gives me pause, but I'm happy to stipulate this dichotomy for the sake of argument.)
In that case, I don't see why you think an infinite regress is less plausible than an uncaused cause. If I were to say, "In order to avoid an uncaused cause, that explanation must be an infinite regress," I would be making a mere assumption.
Quote:This is inductive reasoning.
So is "In order to avoid an uncaused cause, that explanation must be an infinite regress."
Quote:Either argue that the universe is eternal and exist necessarily or that causal principles do not apply.
You made an argument that doesn't stand up to inspection. That doesn't put the burden of proof on me to prove that you're wrong. I need only show why your argument is not persuasive.
It is not my opinion that the universe is eternal and necessary. It is not my opinion that causal principles do not apply. (Though I do follow science enough to suspect that (P1) very tiny things lack causes, and (P2) the beginning of the big bang was very tiny.)
It is my opinion that:
- You haven't shown that uncaused causes are more plausible than infinite regresses.
- You haven't shown that a begun universe can have an unbegun god (or an unbegun anything).
- Your first cause argument
-- is not apparently sound,
-- is not valid (if it equivocates), or
-- "proves" that god began and must have a cause (if it doesn't equivocate and is about the allaverse), or
-- "proves" only that some things begin (if it doesn't equivocate and is about the partaverse).
- If Jehovah created the allaverse, then I don't see how causal principles can apply.
Quote:Your conclusion "The universe just happened" is every bit as good an explanation as "My god exists without cause." is not an answer.
No, it doesn't answer anything. It just illustrates that calling infinite regresses "absurd" isn't proof that they don't exist. If you have such a proof, I want to see it.
Quote:If you do not have successful defeaters for these, you can inductively reason an inmaterial uncaused cause with enough power to create something from nothing.
Not so.
I demur on all points, but I'll discuss one of them: You seem to posit a pre-time situation in which only a being of immense power could create a universe. But you aren't the ruler of this place; you don't get to arbitrarily declare the attributes of the unknown pre-time situation. Perhaps only weak things can do creations there? We don't know. We have no reason to believe the situation is even real, and we certainly have no reason to think you get to make up rules for how it works.
Of coursethe universe is huge. Maybe you think it takes a hugely powerful cause to produce such a huge effect. But does that follow?
The Archduke Ferdinand's driver caused the nuclear annihilation of Nagasaki. That was a huge effect. Do we believe, therefore, that the driver must have been an immensely powerful man? No, we simply don't.
When we talk about the butterfly effect, a butterfly in, say, China causing a hurricane in the Atlantic, are we positing a race of immensely powerful butterflies? We are not.
Rather, we are saying that, in some circumstances, the most trifling input can have a remarkably huge result. And you can't rule that out in your imaginary pre-time situation. We don't know whether creation in pre-time situations takes power, or whether things there are immaterial, or whether any of your other preferred attributes obtain. We don't even know whether pre-time situations are more absurd than infinite regresses.