Everything that undergoes change has a cause, yes, — Michael Nelson
The first is that particular quantum events do not have a cause. — Banno
Every event has a cause" is an all-and-some proposition and hence can neither be proved, nor disproved. — Banno
This is why "God" is sometimes used as a name for it. That word connotes, among other things, an insurmountable mystery. — frank
You lost me. Not following how what you said relates to the bit you quoted. — Banno
Nah. It connotes a guy sitting on a cloud in charge of stuff. "God help us!", "God knows!", "Pray to God that doesn't happen", "God loves his children", "God said to Abraham..."... This ineffable mystery crap is just tacked on post hoc when we look at the top of the cloud and find it glaringly unoccupied. — Isaac
SO there are uncaused events. Cool. I agree. — Banno
The second is an issue of logic. "Every event has a cause" is an all-and-some proposition and hence can neither be proved, nor disproved. — Banno
frank specially presented a definition of God that he was working under — Hanover
Certainly, "uncaused things" are contingent.I don't think it is right to say that that contingent things are uncaused. — Michael Nelson
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.