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The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
RE: The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
(July 8, 2023 at 5:29 am)Deesse23 Wrote: This ignoramus gets about every single scientific issue which he addresses completely wrong, yet he boasts about his excellent education.
What i am however taking more issue with than his ignorance per se, is his WILLFUL ignorance. He will, no doubt, avoid to learn anything new and correct his errors. Lalala

(Bold mine)

Which supports the axiom that expertise in one field does not translate to expertise in another.

Boru
‘I can’t be having with this.’ - Esmeralda Weatherwax
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RE: The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
(July 8, 2023 at 5:35 am)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote:
(July 8, 2023 at 5:29 am)Deesse23 Wrote: This ignoramus gets about every single scientific issue which he addresses completely wrong, yet he boasts about his excellent education.
What i am however taking more issue with than his ignorance per se, is his WILLFUL ignorance. He will, no doubt, avoid to learn anything new and correct his errors. Lalala

(Bold mine)

Which supports the axiom that expertise in one field does not translate to expertise in another.

Boru

Which begs the question, "where did the writing in his OPs come from" ?
Every religion is true one way or another. It is true when understood metaphorically. But when it gets stuck in its own metaphors, interpreting them as facts, then you are in trouble. - Joseph Campbell  Popcorn

Militant Atheist Commie Evolutionist 
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RE: The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
(July 4, 2023 at 7:14 am)Nishant Xavier Wrote: the First Cause of all beings/things has no Beginning of Existence, but Exists Eternally.

You've replaced infinite regress with eternal existence and think that an improvement. Congrats on exposing the fatal flaw in your argument.
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RE: The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
(July 7, 2023 at 10:54 am)Nishant Xavier Wrote: Just passing through.

@LadyForCamus said:

"Let’s concede, just for fun, that the universe had a ‘First Cause’. What is it, and how do you know?"

Ok. So if we concede that, even jff, the next step is to deduce the Necessary Properties of this First Cause.

So that's why I mentioned Properties I-IV of the First Cause. Because B1 is not contingent on a Prior Being, He/It exists non-contingently, i.e. necessarily.

Can we agree on that much? That would be the first step. And subsequent premises, just like we do in mathematic theorems, would build on those foundational axioms. That a First Cause exists, then that He/It exists necessarily, i.e. without beginning or end, eternally, then in the next steps, that He is a Personal Being, Supremely Good, Perfectly Simple, Actus Purus (Pure Actuality), without Potentiality, etc etc.

Historically, it was the God of Abraham who first revealed Himself like this, as One Supreme Being, as Almighty God, while the rest of the world, being polytheistic, thought there were as many gods as there were men and women. That is incorrect and can be disproved by deducing the Properties of the First Cause. Later on, Greek Philosophy, including those like Aristotle, Plato etc, by philosophical arguments, which St. Augustine and St. Thomas would subsequently build on, develop and improve, also established, from rational premises, some truths about the First Cause.

God Bless,
Xavier.

How do you know it’s a being? Seems like you just tried to slide that in through the door as a bare assertion. Is it conscious? How do you know?
Nay_Sayer: “Nothing is impossible if you dream big enough, or in this case, nothing is impossible if you use a barrel of KY Jelly and a miniature horse.”

Wiser words were never spoken. 
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RE: The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
Even if this universe needed or had a cause, there is no reason to assume whatever it was, was a god.

Just as the statement "god exists (eternally)" implies that god found itself in a Reality in which it did not participate in non-existence, there is, in every form of theism,
a larger unexamined Reality implied, in which the gods have no part. A real god would have to be the totality of Reality at some point, (under present definitions).

An omnipotent god could have created a race of competitive robot universe makers, vying with each other to make races of creatures, and the winner will be judged
by which one makes the universe where the humans make up the most ridiculous gods, and they get together for a good laugh.
Every religion is true one way or another. It is true when understood metaphorically. But when it gets stuck in its own metaphors, interpreting them as facts, then you are in trouble. - Joseph Campbell  Popcorn

Militant Atheist Commie Evolutionist 
Reply
RE: The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
(Off topic)

Good to have you back, Bucky. You bring a lot to this place.

Boru
‘I can’t be having with this.’ - Esmeralda Weatherwax
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RE: The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
[Image: 7rxir6.jpg]
[Image: extraordinarywoo-sig.jpg]
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RE: The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
I've come upon an interesting question in a sidestreet of some thinking about God and contingency today, and I'd just like to put it to the forum to solicit comment on it.  It occurred to me that while, even if one accepts that there had to be a first cause, the argument gives no reason why there need be only one first cause.  It would seem possible that there could be multiple first causes so long as the multiple first causes originate simultaneously, and all first causes perform the same initial causative action simultaneously.  Under these constraints, there could be an infinite number of first causes.  But this presents a problem.  According to general relativity, there is no such thing as absolute simulteneity.  Whether or not two events appear simultaneous to an observer is dependent upon their movement relative to the two things occurring and such, so that from one observer's perspective, two first causes might be simultaneous with the observer, who is also a first cause, but another first cause who may be moving with respect to the other three first causes would not see them as simultaneous.  So, while an infinite set of first causes seems possible from the perspective of classical physics, it's not clear that the idea is even coherent from a relativistic perspective.  Thinking about it just now raises another wrinkle, as if the first cause is postulated to be God, from one perspective, God would precede the effects which he causes; however, it's not clear how to define the notion that God as first cause precedes his effects as there is no such thing as an absolute frame of reference in relativity, so while God may appear to precede an effect from one observer's perspective, the causal arrows may not be as readily apparent from another in which an effect of God appears to precede God causing it.  I'm not sure what to make of all this.  It seems to open up a whole can of worms with no ready resolution.

@Nishant Xavier : What are your thoughts?

Quote:Roger Penrose advanced a form of this argument that has been called the Andromeda paradox in which he points out that two people walking past each other on the street could have very different present moments. If one of the people were walking towards the Andromeda Galaxy, then events in this galaxy might be hours or even days advanced of the events on Andromeda for the person walking in the other direction.[contradictory] If this occurs, it would have dramatic effects on our understanding of time. Penrose highlighted the consequences by discussing a potential invasion of Earth by aliens living in the Andromeda Galaxy. As Penrose put it:

Quote:Andromeda paradox

Two people pass each other on the street; and according to one of the two people, an Andromedean space fleet has already set off on its journey, while to the other, the decision as to whether or not the journey will actually take place has not yet been made. How can there still be some uncertainty as to the outcome of that decision? If to either person the decision has already been made, then surely there cannot be any uncertainty. The launching of the space fleet is an inevitability. In fact neither of the people can yet know of the launching of the space fleet. They can know only later, when telescopic observations from Earth reveal that the fleet is indeed on its way. Then they can hark back to that chance encounter, and come to the conclusion that at that time, according to one of them, the decision lay in the uncertain future, while to the other, it lay in the certain past. Was there then any uncertainty about that future? Or was the future of both people already "fixed"?
   — Roger Penrose, The Emperor's New Mind: Concerning Computers, Minds, and the Laws of Physics

The "paradox" consists of two observers who are, from their conscious perspective, in the same place and at the same instant having different sets of events in their "present moment". Notice that neither observer can actually "see" what is happening in Andromeda, because light from Andromeda (and the hypothetical alien fleet) will take 2.5 million years to reach Earth. The argument is not about what can be "seen"; it is purely about what events different observers consider to occur in the present moment.

Wikipedia || Rietdijk–Putnam argument
[Image: extraordinarywoo-sig.jpg]
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RE: The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
(July 8, 2023 at 8:36 am)Paleophyte Wrote:
(July 4, 2023 at 7:14 am)Nishant Xavier Wrote: the First Cause of all beings/things has no Beginning of Existence, but Exists Eternally.

You've replaced infinite regress with eternal existence and think that an improvement. Congrats on exposing the fatal flaw in your argument.

he can only reason by analogy for so long before his pathological Stockholm syndrome craving for an abusive overlord overthrows even such tiny and sorry imitation of reasoning as analogy he is capable of.
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RE: The Principle of Contingent Causation: The Impossibility of Infinite Regress.
(July 8, 2023 at 8:36 am)Nishant Xavier Wrote: [quote pid='2153135' dateline='1688469260']
the First Cause of all beings/things has no Beginning of Existence, but Exists Eternally.

No. In Theology "eternal" does not mean "endless time". It mean "timelessness". That's very basic. 
A timeless being cannot stop it's timeless existence and mark a moment by "doing" something. I learned it in Grade School.
.... like "sending his son", changing his view due his son dying etc etc. The timeless being cannot be the cause of anything, 
as the causation event marks a moment in endless time ... for which there is a before and an after. That is meaningless 
for a being that is eternal and whose environment is timelessness.
Every religion is true one way or another. It is true when understood metaphorically. But when it gets stuck in its own metaphors, interpreting them as facts, then you are in trouble. - Joseph Campbell  Popcorn

Militant Atheist Commie Evolutionist 
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