:lol:IMO, I've satisfactorily addressed all your points already. — Devans99
(You're right!) Res ipsa loquitur ...↪180 Proof So you are saying I'm wrong but refusing to say why I'm wrong. — Devans99
You are failing completely to understand the dynamics of causal regresses. I have given you examples that I child could follow. I am almost at a loss. — Devans99
Is infinity a Western Concept? I wasn't aware of that? Anyway...here's a simple argument: — TheMadFool
if we travel from our past which is negative infinity to the present, point 0 on the integer number line, then we would have to traverse a positive infinity of time to reach the present, point 0 on the integer number line. However, positive infinity is, by definition, an interminable quantity and a task that cannot be completed. — TheMadFool
If I travel from Istanbul to New York by plane the distance is 8,065 km. If I return from New York to Istanbul, again by plane and on the same route the distance will again be 8,065 km right? — TheMadFool
Uh ... yeah, is this a trick question? — fishfry
You might be a few molecules off. — fishfry
In the quantum realm, cause doesn’t necessarily come before effect — fishfry
People's mental model of there being a first moment of time then a next then a next and always going in one direction, is something they picked up when they were eight years old. The very idea of sequential time doesn't even hold up to the scrutiny of modern physics. — fishfry
Why won't you recognize that you have and opinion, and not a fact? — fishfry
Am I dumb or how is the second proposition valid at all? If the fine tuner is an omnipotent deity (and take any form), why would it need to be "fine tuned for life"? — Pelle
We are talking about the origin of everything; IE huge amounts of matter; IE a macro, not micro problem. In the macro world the cause always comes before and determines the effect. — Devans99
A. Assume an infinite causal regress exists
B. Then it has no first element
C. If it has no nth element, it has no nth+1 element
D. So it cannot exist — Devans99
I think I'm missing more than a "few" molecules but that's beside the point. What I want to know is whether the distance AB is the same as the distance BA where A and B are the same points. — TheMadFool
If the past stretches to negative infinity from the present wouldn't that mean the universe would've to experience positive infinity to reach the present? — TheMadFool
If B = past and A = the present then the time AB = negative infinity and the time BA = positive infinity. — TheMadFool
If you agree with me so far — TheMadFool
and I see no reason to not do so then that would mean a positive infinity of time should've elapsed to reach the present i.e. a completed infinity is require and we know that completed infinity is an oxymoron or, to be explicit, a blatant contradiction. However, I keep an open mind about this: there are more things in heaven and on earth than can be dreamed up in your philosophy — TheMadFool
"We are talking about the origin of everything; IE huge amounts of matter; IE a macro, not micro problem. In the macro world the cause always comes before and determines the effect.
— Devans99
Did you get that from God's lips to your ear? You have an opinion, nothing more. — fishfry
C is confused. The integers have no first element. But every element has a successor. For every n there's an n+1. It does not have "n-th elements" because it's not a well-ordered set. There's no fifth member of the integers. What of it? — fishfry
How do YOU know that the universe is not eternal? — fishfry
"Common sense" intuits That I am the center of the universe ... That the earth is flat ... That the sun goes around the earth (rising, moving east to west, setting) ... That the earth does not turn on an axis ... That hammers fall faster than feathers because they are heavier ... That a vacuum is impossible ... That willing is free ... That self is continuous ... That one's memories do not change ... That what is familiar is usually safer or better than what is unfamiliar ... That there are no coincidences ... That tradition or authority or popularity or mystery justifies beliefs ... That time "flows" ... That quantum actions/events are not (really) real ... :roll: The very parochial, myopic, biased scope of "common sense" engenders the need for the uncommon sensibility of scientific inquiries, aesthetic exercises & philosophical reflections. So full of incorrigible doxa, D99, you are - what Plato says philosophers must strive not to become - a sophist (of a fideistic sort, no doubt).My opinion is at least based on common sense/experience — Devans99
"Common sense" intuits That I am the center of the universe ... That the earth is flat ... That the sun goes around the earth (rising, moving east to west, setting) ... That the earth does not turn on an axis ... That hammers fall faster than feathers because they are heavier ... That a vacuum is impossible ... That willing is free ... That self is continuous ... That one's memories do not change ... That what is familiar is usually safer or better than what is unfamiliar ... That there are no coincidences ... That tradition or authority or popularity or mystery justifies beliefs ... That time "flows" ... That quantum actions/events are not (really) real ... :roll: The very parochial, myopic, biased scope of "common sense" engenders the need for the uncommon sensibility of scientific inquiries, aesthetic exercises & philosophical reflections. So full of incorrigible doxa, D99, you are - what Plato says philosophers must strive not to become - a sophist (of a fideistic sort, no doubt). — 180 Proof
If the past is infinite, then time has no beginning. If time has no beginning how can any point in the temporal sequence be attained? — TheMadFool
That's Freethought Materialist Land to you, kid. :naughty:You are living in an atheist fantasy land ... — Devans99
Strawman. Not only are infinite regresses AND egresses "possible" along circumferences of FINITE YET UNBOUNDED surfaces, they are actually extant (e.g. the Earth's equator). :yawn:where actual infinity is possible (it is not)
Strawman redux. The vacuum is not "nothing" ... :roll:... and where something comes from nothing (it does not).
Strawman. Not only are infinite regresses AND egress "possible" along circumferences of FINITE YET UNBOUNDED surfaces, they are actually extant (e.g. the Earth's equator). — 180 Proof
Strawman redux. The vacuum is not "nothing" ... — 180 Proof
Particularly it doesn't. Finite Yet Unbounded paths, however, do. Just ask Euclid ...We are talking about infinite causal regresses in time. I fail to see how the earth's equator has anything to do with it. — Devans99
The vacuum is NOT "nothing". 99.9999...% of every THING is empty space, or vacuum. Things (i.e. patterned structures of mass-energy) are created via conserved transformations of mass-energy (e.g. nucleogenesis), even though mass-energy itself is not created (i.e. gained or lost), remaining constant in total.So you cannot get something from nothing.
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? 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. — Pantagruel
Believe? No, kid; we know it is.↪180 Proof So you believe that energy is conserved? — Devans99
:confused: This question makes no sense. "Always" implies temporality, and time is a metric description of entropy, or changing densities (i.e. complexities) of mass-energy. "Always" only has meaning in terms of mass-energy.That matter/energy ... therefore 'always' exists?
Not my "explanation" :roll: ... We've done this 'reframing the BB in terms of the no boundary conjecture dance' before, kid.What is your explanation for the Big Bang?
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