My usage of the term wouldn't change anything whatsoever about anyone's ontology. It just changes whether we're saying that something belongs to the universe or not. God would simply be beyond the source of the rest of the universe. — Terrapin Station
I’m not misunderstanding the way you’re using the word. Your definition is problematic because it makes it impossible to speak properly about God, who is beyond and the source of the universe as commonly defined. He’s not beyond, but part of, but not subject to the universe, however you define it, because that’s just heap of contradictions. — AJJ
To say the universe brought itself into existence, or has always existed for no reason is magical talk. You’ll have to explain why it’s special pleading. — AJJ
To say the universe brought itself into existence, or has always existed for no reason is magical talk. — AJJ
You’ll have to explain why it’s special pleading. — AJJ
I know, that’s why the source of the universe can’t be simply be a concept, as I said. — AJJ
God would simply be beyond the source of the rest of the universe. — Terrapin Station
If you introduce god, either he has always existed (maybe in timeless existence if you think that makes sense), or he suddenly appeared at some point. — Terrapin Station
No it isn't, and that's a false dichotomy. What about there's no known reason? — S
I have, so I interpret that as a request to needlessly repeat myself, which is a request I refuse, as I refused Rank Amateur when he tried that shit with me. — S
He is posited as the source of the universe, so necessarily exists, and is necessarily timeless, so He can’t possibly have begun to exist, and therefore must always have existed. — AJJ
Which is nonsense, because God as defined by classical theism is the source of the universe, all of it. — AJJ
That's simply using "universe" in a different way, which is fine. That's just not the way I use the term. The way I use the term doesn't change anything other than a word we're applying to things. — Terrapin Station
The reason is either within the universe, in which case the universe is its own source, or it is beyond the universe, in which case it is God. Unless you can think of one, there is no other option. — AJJ
I’m calling BS on that then. There are no unfavourable aspects of my case that you’ve pointed out and I’ve ignored. What I’ve said is itself a justification for believing in God; asking for a justification of the justification is silly, so unless you can be specific with your objections, rather than throwing alleged fallacies around, I’m bored and don’t want to argue about this anymore. — AJJ
The universe, if it has such a nature, cannot have it necessarily,
— AJJ
Why not? — Terrapin Station
Wouldn't you be able to talk "properly" about God without even using the word "universe"? — Terrapin Station
God is necessarily timeless, and has his eternality by virtue of this. The universe is not timeless, so if it has eternality then it just has it, for no reason, as if by magic. — AJJ
Yeah. But you can’t talk properly about Him using your definition of “universe”. — AJJ
And we don't know anything about any possible event - if that's even the right word - prior to the Big Bang, or even if there was a "prior" to the Big Bang. — S
"The universe has always existed by virtue of its own, necessary, nature."--what does that have to do with "timelessness"? — Terrapin Station
You could say exactly the same things sans the word "universe." — Terrapin Station
Well if there wasn’t anything prior to the Big Bang then either the universe brought itself into existence or it was created. — AJJ
Everything else you said was assertion and prejudice. You’ll disagree, of course, but I’m bored and I don’t care. — AJJ
Nothing. But that’s exactly what I’m calling magical thinking. — AJJ
Your definition of “universe” makes it impossible to talk properly about God, — AJJ
If either side of the choice of "always existed" or "spontaneously popped into existence" is "magical thinking," then " magical thinking" is unavoidable, and what of it? — Terrapin Station
You just said that we could talk properly about god without even using the word "universe." You can do that under the way I use universe, too--you can talk properly about god without even using the word "universe." So in that regard it's the same. My usage of the term would make no practical difference. — Terrapin Station
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