Yes sorry, my original point was that infinite (unlimited ability to act) is self-contradictory in a finite universe. — Devans99
So part of the background assumptions you're working with is that the physical world has different (and unknown) logic? You'd need to support that claim. — Terrapin Station
You don't have to buy anything a la platonism to do proofs. — Terrapin Station
I don't know that I see Cthulhu as a potential deity. But if you want to start a thread to discuss it, that should be great fun!I think the most plausible theology is Lovecraft's. — Theologian
How is a language expression not a real-world phenomenon? The essence of ostensive definition is language binding itself to the real world. — Pantagruel
If I utter the phrase "Pick up that stone" and you pick it up, how is that not a real-world phenomenon? — Pantagruel
Logic does not operate on real-world observables. It operates on statements, which are not real-world, but language objects that live in their own abstract, Platonic world. — alcontali
In fact, the term "Platonic" is just a figure of speech to refer to an abstraction, i.e. a mere language expression. I just use it to distinguish them from physical, real-world objects. So, a chair is a physical object, but the language expression "chair" is not. — alcontali
That's just one view. Another view is that there is no separate "abstract, platonic world," yet we still have logic, here in the real world — Terrapin Station
There is a view that the linguistic expression "chair" most certainly is physical, as is everything else. That view is called "physicalism." — Terrapin Station
I tend to follow David Hilbert's view on (real-world) constructivism, for similar reasons, and I am therefore also very negative about it. I think that the constructivist mentality is unproductive. Therefore, I consider it to be a heresy. — alcontali
If a being exists, its explanation must exist. — Dfpolis
A usual formulation is that God can do anything not contradictory. Yes? No? — tim wood
I assume that as an "infinite" being God is, now - exists. If that is so, then on your definition God could not exist now, at the same time he exists. — tim wood
That leads back to the God who can do anything not contradictory. Which itself means that God is limited, which throws us back to the definition of God as infinite, as opposed to finite. — tim wood
If "no possible act is negated by its specification," then either his non-being is possible, or if not possible, then this God is god is not limited to thenot, per definition, infinite. — tim wood
Implies God is neither in nor of the univeedrse. — tim wood
Whatever part of God that is in the universe would necessarily be a part of some collection of things in the universe, therefore finite. — tim wood
we might have a problem in limiting the number of Gods to one: why one? It would seem there would have to be very many, an infinite number, of Gods. — tim wood
Does God have location? — tim wood
In as much as God can do anything(?) he can sometimes be not there. — tim wood
Why do believers need 'proof' ? — fresco
It's hard to judge your premises 4 to 6 without a clear definition of "explanation". — Echarmion
Having an explanation is certainly nice, but I fail to see how it would be necessary. — Echarmion
Similarly, your justification for premise 6 does not convince me. — Echarmion
When you earlier (and correctly, I think) noted that existence is always distinct from essence. — Echarmion
The existence of a finite being might still be unlimited in time, for example. — Echarmion
Or finite beings might explain the existence of each other. — Echarmion
you never specify why the explanation for a being needs to be another being — Echarmion
Science does not require that literally everything have explanation. Science only requires that some things have explanation. — Theologian
Much of physics, as an intellectual project, has been an attempt to determine the fundamental laws of the universe. If there are fundamental laws, by definition they are unexplained. — Theologian
at any one time there is a base level of explanation. — Theologian
Note that “explanation” has two senses: (1) the fact(s) that make some state of affairs be as it is. (We may or may not know these.) This is the sense I am using. (2) Our attempt to articulate our understanding of (1). This is not the sense I am using here.
I am not going to say that there are brute facts. I am going to say that it is not a self evident truth that there are not - and since you're the one offering the proof, the burden is on you. — Theologian
If brute facts are not for you, you also do not seem to consider the possibility of antifoundationalist infinite regress — Theologian
Another unconsidered possibility here is that of an Escher-esque universe that is ontologically circular. — Theologian
I'm afraid I can't agree. To be human (or to be anything at all) is to exist. — Theologian
Yes, even if one accepted this proof (which I don't) one must be careful about the implicit leap ... — Theologian
You have a theory that can explain literally anything. It's the absolute antithesis of falsifiable. — Theologian
3 is contrary to what most cosmologists believe, which is that the universe is infinite. — andrewk
4 and 5 are assertions of the existence of explanations, for which there is no logical need. The universe doesn't need an explanation. — andrewk
Further, I find the insistence that God must be omnipotent unnecessarily limiting, given the well-trodden logical problems with the notion of omnipotence. — andrewk
I don’t think you ought to appeal to Buddhism for support of this kind of argument. Buddhists only generally address the existence of God in order to dispute it (regardless of what universalists are inclined to say.) — Wayfarer
In other words your argument depends on a premise (finite entities can't explain themselves) that is shaky because it rests on the mistaken certainty that the finite can't explain itself. — TheMadFool
Why do believers need 'proof' ? — fresco
On the basis that 'proof', 'existence', 'thinghood', 'limit' and 'God' are all concepts with contextual utility, I suggest the main reason believers have for these (incestuous) word games is a 'belief reinforcement exercise' to shore up weaknesses in their 'utility insurance policy'. — fresco
A finite being outside of time has no need to explain its own existence, it is beyond causality, it just 'IS'. — Devans99
I would argue that infinite (unlimited ability to act) is self-contradictory in a finite universe. — Devans99
'square circles exist or they don't' - complete disjunction so true. — Devans99
'The infinite exists' - contradictory (could a completely unlimited being exist in a finite universe?) — Devans99
it needs to be demonstrated that an infinite being is not a logical contradiction. — Devans99
↪Dfpolis Your main argument is:
1. A finite entity can't explain itself
So,
2. There exists an infinite entity (God) that explains all finite entities — TheMadFool
I am a human; I have come into existence, will pass out of existence. But my component parts, matter, have not gone in-and-out of existence — god must be atheist
All existing humans exist.
I am a human.
Therefore I exist. — god must be atheist
Your reasoning is wrong in he sense that humans exist in a temporal fashion. But they do exist when they do. — god must be atheist
Being human implies that you currently exist. — god must be atheist
If specifications exist, then there is a creator. — god must be atheist
What are we supposedly quoting if not a person? — Terrapin Station
Yes, I was wondering what exactly Dfpolis has in mind by the term "being." Although if God is completely unlimited in ability to act the point becomes moot, since that would include the ability to act in all the ways that one would attribute to a sentient being. — Theologian
Falsifiability is a requirement applicable to the scientific or hypothetico-deductive method, not to strict deductions. It is no criticism of Godel's work to say that his conclusions are unfalsifiable. While it is irrational to posit a hypothesis that cannot be adequately tested, it is equally irrational to require falsifiability where it does not apply. We have a different, but well-defined method of examining deductions. We consider the truth of the premises and the validity of the logical moves. If both pass muster, the conclusion is true. — Dfpolis
If a being exists, its explanation must exist. — Dfpolis
the fact(s) that make some state of affairs be as it is. — Dfpolis
I agree with what you wrote but you might want to expand on it to fill in the holes. I'm going to put in my journal and analyze it line by line. — christian2017
I do not deny, but affirm, that humans exist when they exist. I went even further, saying that once they begin to exist, it is necessary that they exist then. So, I have no idea what point you're trying to make. — Dfpolis
But, being human does not imply that I exist. — Dfpolis
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