Your claim to falsify "The universe was created" by appeal to the total body of knowledge is weak because it isn't possible to ascertain the total body of knowledge. — Pantagruel
So again, if I say that I believe the universe was created (I don't make that claim) then my belief is reasonable. Unless I exhibit a whole lot of other beliefs that appear to be unreasonable, in which case it might be legitimate to question the reasonableness of my beliefs in general. — Pantagruel
Anyway let's drop as it has become a question of the legitimacy of metaphysical claims in general which I'm not prepared to argue at this time. :) — Pantagruel
You're treating the claim "the universe was created" like it doesn't require any further explication — fdrake
In the sense that it is a metaphysical claim, it doesn't. This is an idea whose origins predate science certainly, probably recorded history. It is an idea that has "historical content" (forgive me, I'm just finishing off R.G. Collingwood's "Philosophy of History" which talks a lot about the self-creation of the mind as historical knowledge). As such, I don't think, prima facie, it requires any more justification than that. As I said, I'm not really into doing a "deep-dive" at this time. — Pantagruel
Because something has been believed historically and had social institutions devoted to that belief does not entail it is well justified given what we know (even as part of a metaphysics). This is just as true for phlogiston, the theory of humours and homeopathy as it is for creator hypotheses and their associated worldviews. — fdrake
You're allegedly proving the existence of a creator, so you can't assume it.1) Does the supernatural exist? (P=.5)
2) Can an unembodied mind exist? (P=,.5*.5)
3) Can material come into existence without prior material? (P=.5*.5*.5)
4) is it possible for a mind to plan something as complex as a universe? (P=.5*.5*.5*.5)
5) Was there an intent to create life? (P=.5*.5*.5*.5*.5)
— Relativist
[1] Is 100% IMO, spacetime is a creation, so 'super-spacetime' must exist — Devans99
You can follow both possibilities, and consider the probabilities. If he's material, and performing acts - he's expending energy; if the material and energy of the universe "must" have been created, then this material, energy-expending "god" must have been created.[2] Who says God is an unembodied mind? He may have a body. I do not know.
This implies he didn't create the universe, he just played a role in shaping it - but this raises other questions: can energy come into existence, violating conservation of energy?[3] Material could timelessly pre-exist the creation of spacetime. God could have used that in creation of the Big Bang
There is zero basis for your claim that it is possible.[4] I think this is 100% yes. God might have done a few prototypes first
Artistic pleasure; the joy of problem solving; scientific experiments to see what might result.[5] Is 100% IMO. What other motivation could he have?
Wow. You have a real issue with this, don't you? — Pantagruel
Many people (myself included) have an inkling, an expectation, a hope, that there is more to life than meets the eye. The things that happen to people qua people don't resolve into scientific terms. Life is complex and multi-dimensional.
Do you really think that what we know exceeds what we don't know?
Who said it has to be justified? A belief is essentially a hypothesis. Justification goes beyond the hypothesis to its proof. Again, per Popper, the origin of a hypothesis doesn't matter.A non-cognitive explanation for holding a belief describes a cause for it but is not a justification. — fdrake
Who said it has to be justified? — Pantagruel
A belief is essentially a hypothesis. — Pantagruel
Many people (myself included) have an inkling, an expectation, a hope, that there is more to life than meets the eye. — Pantagruel
For claims like "there was a creator of the universe", which already play part in conceptual arguments and constrain empirical matters, the ability to justify them is presumed. — fdrake
By definition, belief is not knowledge. You are treating belief as if it were knowledge. — Pantagruel
historicity — Pantagruel
tradition — Pantagruel
intuition — Pantagruel
No, a reasonably held belief has a justification for it. — fdrake
1) Does the supernatural exist? (P=.5)
2) Can an unembodied mind exist? (P=,.5*.5)
3) Can material come into existence without prior material? (P=.5*.5*.5)
4) is it possible for a mind to plan something as complex as a universe? (P=.5*.5*.5*.5)
5) Was there an intent to create life? (P=.5*.5*.5*.5*.5)
— Relativist
[1] Is 100% IMO, spacetime is a creation, so 'super-spacetime' must exist
— Devans99
You're allegedly proving the existence of a creator, so you can't assume it. — Relativist
[2] Who says God is an unembodied mind? He may have a body. I do not know.
You can follow both possibilities, and consider the probabilities. If he's material, and performing acts - he's expending energy; if the material and energy of the universe "must" have been created, then this material, energy-expending "god" must have been created. — Relativist
[3] Material could timelessly pre-exist the creation of spacetime. God could have used that in creation of the Big Bang
This implies he didn't create the universe, he just played a role in shaping it - but this raises other questions: can energy come into existence, violating conservation of energy? — Relativist
[4] I think this is 100% yes. God might have done a few prototypes first
There is zero basis for your claim that it is possible. — Relativist
[5] Is 100% IMO. What other motivation could he have?
Artistic pleasure; the joy of problem solving; scientific experiments to see what might result. — Relativist
Epistemic coherentism — Pantagruel
Beliefs are justified if they cohere with other beliefs a person holds — Pantagruel
So you are also an expert on epistemic coherentism now? — Pantagruel
So as long as a person's actions don't contradict their beliefs, their beliefs may be said to be epistemically coherent — Pantagruel
If the supernatural exists, that makes certain things possible that are othewise impossible. If God is natural, it raises other questions - like energy conservation, what he's made of, how he came to exist....The point is that the question of God's existence is complex, and creating some yes/no questions to which you apply 50%probababilities cannot possibly be an objective approach - the specific questions chosen are subject to bias, and the probabilities attached are subjective.2] Who says God is an unembodied mind? He may have a body. I do not know.
You can follow both possibilities, and consider the probabilities. If he's material, and performing acts - he's expending energy; if the material and energy of the universe "must" have been created, then this material, energy-expending "god" must have been created.
— Relativist
I think this question overlaps with question [1] so it is not right to consider it separately in the probability analysis. I also think you are assuming that God must follow your common experience of what applies within spacetime. God is from beyond spacetime so I not believe that temporal constraints such as energy expenditure would apply. We as humans are only familiar with a tiny fraction of what might exist and trying to say that everything in existence must follow the tiny fraction (of what we know) is a fallacy. — Devans99
We simulate gross behavior and get general results. This simulation entails modelling from a pre-big bang state to the formation of 1st generation stars, to 2nd generation star systems with the building blocks of life and the conditions for abiogenesis- and determining in advance what life would look like. More importantly, when we model physical systems, we are applying known science. Observing and determining how the world works is of negligible complexity compared to designing how the world will work, from the ground up.We run simulations of the universe on our computers, so it is not even beyond our very limited abilities; why then should it be beyond God's? I think this is therefore 100% yes. — Devans99
Whether there was intent to create life is not relevant to the existence of a creator so this point does not belong in the probability analysis. — Devans99
It is relevant to your fine-tuning argument because that argument treats life as a design objective. Aside from the context of my questions entirely, this defeats the fine-tuning argument you stated.Whether there was intent to create life is not relevant to the existence of a creator so this point does not belong in the probability analysis. — Devans99
If the supernatural exists, that makes certain things possible that are othewise impossible. If God is natural, it raises other questions - like energy conservation, what he's made of, how he came to exist....The point is that the question of God's existence is complex, and creating some yes/no questions to which you apply 50%probababilities cannot possibly be an objective approach - the specific questions chosen are subject to bias, and the probabilities attached are subjective. — Relativist
Observing and determining how the world works is of negligible complexity compared to designing how the world will work, from the ground up. — Relativist
"Whether there was intent to create life is not relevant to the existence of a creator so this point does not belong in the probability analysis.
— Devans99
It is relevant to your fine-tuning argument because that argument treats life as a design objective. Aside from the context of my questions entirely, this defeats the fine-tuning argument you stated. — Relativist
...but we have no evidence of anything existing that is not part of spacetime, so you can't just assume it. Without evidence, it's merely a bare possibility - infinitesmal probability. So if we start with this question, we're done: no need to consider anything else. The fatal flaw in your argument is that it's a biased framework - choose questions that are loaded with biased assumptions.God as the creator of spacetime cannot, by definition, be of spacetime (be of nature). — Devans99
If a material creator exists it's not God - because the same questions arise for the creator's material existence as for the universe's existence.As to whether God is made of some sort of material and whether he is complex or simple, I am not sure. — Devans99
You're interjecting your prior beliefs about God, which means you're reasoning is circular. My original point stands that your fine-tuning argument depends on the assumption that life is a design objective. Since that entails a designer, you are basically assuming God exists in order to prove he exists; i.e. it's circular."Whether there was intent to create life is not relevant to the existence of a creator so this point does not belong in the probability analysis.
— Devans99
It is relevant to your fine-tuning argument because that argument treats life as a design objective. Aside from the context of my questions entirely, this defeats the fine-tuning argument you stated.
— Relativist
The meaning of life is surely information - more information of good quality results in a better life. This applies to us and God equally. Which contains more good quality information - a non-life supporting universe or a life supporting universe? It is the 2nd, and that is what a god would seek to create.
In addition, God is constrained by logic to being benevolent. That means given the choice between creating a non-life supporting universe and a life supporting universe, he would always take the 2nd path. — Devans99
It's not valid to write ... -> -5 as '...' is undefined then -5 is also undefined. — Devans99
Anything existing in time forever is impossible. It would have no initial state so no subsequent states — Devans99
Hindus or Buddhists certainly wouldn't. — Wayfarer
Well, if the universe had no beginning then the past is infinite. So here we have the past as negative infinity as that's what you mean using the integers. Now consider the now to be any number on the integer number line: -3567, -9, 0, 1, 2019, etc. How do we reach these points? We'd have to pass through a positive infinity of time to reach these points. Now, is that possible? Of course not. Why? Think of the positive infinity {0, 1, 2, 3,...}. Can we pass through this positive infinity of time to reach any point that can be considered the present? Impossible, right? There has to be a beginning. It's not turtles all the way down. — TheMadFool
Petitio principii. :yawn:1. The universe is fine tuned for life so there must be a fine tuner — Devans99
False. Loops, circumferences, cycles, fractals, etc can be infinitely regressed ... Travel in a straight line, D99, in any direction on Earth and after traveling c24.9k miles you must arrive where you'd departed from because the Earth's surface is finite yet unbounded.3. An infinite regress ... is impossible
...but we have no evidence of anything existing that is not part of spacetime, so you can't just assume it. Without evidence, it's merely a bare possibility - infinitesmal probability. — Relativist
You're interjecting your prior beliefs about God, which means you're reasoning is circular. My original point stands that your fine-tuning argument depends on the assumption that life is a design objective. Since that entails a designer, you are basically assuming God exists in order to prove he exists; i.e. it's circular. — Relativist
I'm not trying to convince you God doesn't exist, I'm just trying to help you understand why "proofs" of his existence fail. — Relativist
You are confusing your evidence-free intuitions with a rational argument. — fishfry
If you want to believe that time or the universe must necessarily have a beginning, you are free to make that assumption.
I am suggesting that it is logically coherent to make the opposite assumption, and I offer the totally ordered set of integers as a thought-model or analogy. — fishfry
Why couldn't the universe have simply existed forever? Or for that matter why couldn't it go forward in time a long ways, then loop back to the past, a circular model of time. Take the unit circle in the plane as a model of time. You just keep going 'round and 'round and there's no beginning and no end. — fishfry
What makes you so sure your model is correct, except for a vague feeling that there must be a first cause. Well then that first cause existed forever. You can't escape this problem by saying God did it. — fishfry
1. The universe is fine tuned for life so there must be a fine tuner
— Devans99
Petitio principii. :yawn: — 180 Proof
3. An infinite regress ... is impossible
False. Loops, circumferences, cycles, fractals, etc can be infinitely regressed ... Travel in a straight line, D99, in any direction on Earth and after traveling c24.9k miles you must arrive where you'd departed from because the Earth's surface is finite yet unbounded.
FINITE YET UNBOUNDED. — 180 Proof
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