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I am not very familiar with it.So to be clear, would you agree that the Kalam Cosmological argument is invalid? Off topic I guess so you don't have to answer.
No, it is not. A person can go into outer space, where there is no air, and recite part of Mozart's Requiem in his mind.Oh, I see the problem. You're a Platonist.
The material cause for music is air. When you stop acting on the air with musical instruments, the music ceases to exist.
Being a tautology does not make an argument valid. The only argument I have made, to my knowledge, is that your assumption may be rejected because you have not proved it.My argument is valid because it is a tautology, and yours is invalid because it is not well defined.
Your atheist brother already responded to this point.You're saying that this is false, so you must either determine the error in my reasoning or produce a counter example. You have done neither so you have no grounds to reject my proof.
No, you haven't said exactly the same thing twice. This isn't the law of identity. It's more like claiming you said "X - 0 = X + 0". Now you could explain why those are the same thing, you need to do so with your statement.
This:
That is undeniably an argument from ignorance. And telling me I have to show you one is shifting the burden of proof.
You need to prove that acting on nothing is in fact the exact same thing as doing nothing. They're stated differently, so you need to show that they are equivalent, like X + 0 and X - 0.
I can imagine a magician snapping his fingers and a bouquet of flowers appearing in his hand from nothing. I can't imagine a bouquet of flowers that is both made completely of roses and completely made of tulips. There is an inherent contradiction in the latter, there is not an inherent contradiction in the former. I can conceive of an instance where nothing is acted on but something is done. I can't prove it is possible in physical reality, but that is an entirely different proposition.
Now that is a fair point. "From nothing, nothing comes" hasn't been proven either. You can certainly use this in any of those "first cause" arguments that intend to prove God's existence. If people are accepting laws of causality, then they have to concede you this point, sure. I do not accept that causality has laws. You have to prove them.
I think that labelling this as a logical contradiction and declaring victory is exactly what you're doing. I'm willing to concede the Law of Non-Contradiction as an axiom we both accept, you need to show that acting on nothing and doing something violates it.But I could just reject the law of identity, or ask you to prove the law of identity. Or I could just label what I'm saying as the "law" of causality and declare victory.
You're not really arguing anything here.
Okay, fair enough. Go back to when I first made the accusation and look at the parts I quoted, those were the fallacies:Firstly, you said that I had been committing fallacies, and then when I asked you what fallacies, you pointed to something that occurred after I had already asked that question. So you've still not backed up your claim.
And secondly, I've not committed an argument from ignorance. Exactly how many logical frameworks do you think we need? One suffices, but I'm saying that my argument works in all that we know of. Making my argument more robust is not a fallacy.
Shifting the Burden of Proof.Perhaps you can explain how this is so.
Argument from Ignorance.And yet my position is even stronger than that, because while we've managed to make some things go up and never come back down, we've never performed an act of causality without acting on something.
No, I'll accept the law of identity as an axiom that we both accept, show that what you're saying can be reduced to it.And you need to prove the law of identity. Nihilism!
I think you need to re-read what I wrote. I was very careful with my words, they are very precise, and you're not paraphrasing accurately at all. For starters, "a bouquet made both entirely of roses and entirely of tulips" is not the same as "a bouquet made entirely of roses and tulips". Can you see the distinction that makes mine contradictory that your paraphrase lacks? I'd rather not go through my own quote piece by piece spelling it all out for you. Take a few minutes, read it again, and try this response one more time, please.You can't imagine a bouquet made entirely of roses and tulips... hmm... now who's committing the argument from ignorance?
The inescapable truth is that logic is literally nothing but assumptions, definitions, and the conclusions that follow. We try our best to align our assumptions with the reality we observe. For some bizarre reason, this has led you to accept the law of contradiction while also rejecting my law of causality, despite both being equally empirically verified.
If you "do nothing" and then flowers appear, and you want to convince me that you've "done nothing and then something happened," I will still be right when I say that *you* didn't cause the flowers to appear since *you* did nothing. Nothing caused them to appear, so all we could say is that they appeared for no reason and with no cause. Causality does not apply. That's not exactly a win for theism, so your play at devil's advocate fails here.
Appears to be way off topic. Tell me what to ctrl+F if I missed something relevant.
I am not very familiar with it.
No, it is not. A person can go into outer space, where there is no air, and recite part of Mozart's Requiem in his mind.
Being a tautology does not make an argument valid.
The only argument I have made, to my knowledge, is that your assumption may be rejected because you have not proved it.
Your atheist brother already responded to this point.
And I quote: So unless we prove you wrong, you're right?
If that is the case, then "God exists." Prove me wrong.
I think that labelling this as a logical contradiction and declaring victory is exactly what you're doing.
I'm willing to concede the Law of Non-Contradiction as an axiom we both accept, you need to show that acting on nothing and doing something violates it.
Okay, fair enough. Go back to when I first made the accusation and look at the parts I quoted, those were the fallacies:
Shifting the Burden of Proof.
Argument from Ignorance.
No, I'll accept the law of identity as an axiom that we both accept, show that what you're saying can be reduced to it.
I think you need to re-read what I wrote. I was very careful with my words, they are very precise, and you're not paraphrasing accurately at all. For starters, "a bouquet made both entirely of roses and entirely of tulips" is not the same as "a bouquet made entirely of roses and tulips". Can you see the distinction that makes mine contradictory that your paraphrase lacks? I'd rather not go through my own quote piece by piece spelling it all out for you. Take a few minutes, read it again, and try this response one more time, please.
I'm going to work through the rest of your post, but can you demonstrate that it is a tautology and not just two similar sounding statements? Like I said, you could demonstrate that X + 0 = X - 0. It boils down to the law of identity at some point, but you can reduce it to that without simply saying, "Well, look at it!". Can you do that with your claim? Or do I simply need to look at it and feel they're similar enough like you do?Pretty much, yes.
That is a perfectly normal way to describe a bouquet. You're seriously telling me that if someone said that to you, it would confuse you and you'd ask, "Wait, is it roses or tulips? It can't be both!"."You can't imagine a bouquet made entirely of roses and tulips
No, the material cause is not his brain. The man’s brain cells are not formed into Mozart’s Requiem.Then the material cause is his brain. What's your point?
Actually, it does.
You've told me that causality can occur without an input, and I'm saying that is not a well defined notion.
You misunderstand the difference between a statement and a proof.
If you provide me with a statement, I can reject it on the grounds that it is not proven.
If you provide me with a proof, the burden is then on me to find something wrong with the proof. Someone who is providing a proof has met the burden of proof, so the burden then goes to the other party.
I provided a tautological proof, and tautologies suffice as proofs. It's just a matter of what you accept as an axiom.
But, of course, an axiom can be poorly defined, such as your idea that causality does not require input.
No, the material cause is not his brain. The man’s brain cells are not formed into Mozart’s Requiem.
I'm going to work through the rest of your post, but can you demonstrate that it is a tautology and not just two similar sounding statements? Like I said, you could demonstrate that X + 0 = X - 0. It boils down to the law of identity at some point, but you can reduce it to that without simply saying, "Well, look at it!". Can you do that with your claim? Or do I simply need to look at it and feel they're similar enough like you do?
That is a perfectly normal way to describe a bouquet. You're seriously telling me that if someone said that to you, it would confuse you and you'd ask, "Wait, is it roses or tulips? It can't be both!"
Okay, I'm going to stop there for a bit. I had a bunch of other stuff written about your response, but I deleted everything else. I had to say my peace on that because it bugs me, but I think I'm starting to get your argument.
I was pondering my magician acting on his hand to snap his fingers and producing something ex nihilo and It occurred to me that he was causing nothing to produce something...
That needs some time to stew.
Relax, man. I said I was going to work through the rest of your post. I didn't cut out the rest because I was trying to dodge it.It's not as easy because this is spoken language, which is more casual than the formal language of logic. I was leaving it to you to define the terms.
If I were to define it formally, I'd start with the analogy of the functions which you redacted along with nearly everything I said.
I would define "act" and "do" basically the same way. I think the sticking point is you adding "on" in there. Why does something have to acted on?At this point it just comes down to how we're defining "act on" and "do." The point seems to be self-evident to me. Could you tell me how you define those terms?
But I'm not claiming anything is well defined. I'm claiming that there's no reason to assume something is impossible simply because we haven't defined it well. We're still working on defining quantum physics, which is extremely difficult because it's all so counter-intuitive to everything that we've ever experienced. That doesn't mean that whatever concepts we haven't defined are impossible to define.Again, says you. I say I gave a tautology. You say I have to prove what I'm saying. Round and round we go. Just tell me exactly how "act on" and "do" differ in any meaningful way, because the way I see it, it makes no sense to do something without acting on anything. The notion is not well defined.
It's like I'm saying this:
f(x)=5x is well defined, but f( )=5x is not well defined.
And you're saying this:
I don't have to know how f( )=5x works, it is still a well defined concept.
And to spell it out, f is the efficient cause, x is the material cause, and 5x is the effect.
And after my response to this you added:I didn't straw man you. My paraphrasing sufficed.
IF I had said, "I can easily come up with a bouquet made of both roses and tulips - a mixed bouquet!" then I'd be strawmanning you. Perhaps you need to reread what I said:
"You can't imagine a bouquet made entirely of roses and tulips... hmm... now who's committing the argument from ignorance?"
OK, let's put in your pointless clarification:
"You can't imagine a bouquet made entirely of roses and [entirely] tulips... hmm... now who's committing the argument from ignorance?"
The point is that you are saying that because you cannot conceive of a universe wherein the law of non-contradiction does not apply, then it follows that it must apply. And you're the one appealing to ignorance now, plain and simple. You're doing exactly what you said was a fallacy when I did it. And my paraphrasing didn't change the meaning of what I said.
I did not misread. I wrote a sentence that was clearly contradictory, you paraphrased a sentence that was a perfectly normal way to describe a bouquet. You further tried to say that I was trying to prove the Law of Non-Contradiction with my analogy, that isn't right either.I think you misread what was said.
Why? Why is acting in the universe automatically acting on the universe? Why is it impossible to not act on anything and something still be caused? The bouquet appeared in the universe, why must that mean the universe spawned it, or that some part of the universe transformed into the bouquet?No, even if the magic was real, he's acting on the universe and causing it to bring forth flowers. He's not "acting on nothing"; to do so - as I assume you understand the phrase - would require that the universe and all other things which exist in any possible way somehow cease to exist.
Relax, man. I said I was going to work through the rest of your post. I didn't cut out the rest because I was trying to dodge it.
I would define "act" and "do" basically the same way. I think the sticking point is you adding "on" in there. Why does something have to acted on?
But I'm not claiming anything is well defined. I'm claiming that there's no reason to assume something is impossible simply because we haven't defined it well. We're still working on defining quantum physics, which is extremely difficult because it's all so counter-intuitive to everything that we've ever experienced. That doesn't mean that whatever concepts we haven't defined are impossible to define.
And after my response to this you added:
I did not misread. I wrote a sentence that was clearly contradictory, you paraphrased a sentence that was a perfectly normal way to describe a bouquet. You further tried to say that I was trying to prove the Law of Non-Contradiction with my analogy, that isn't right either.
You said that we can't even conceive of something coming about from someone not acting on anything. I made the magician's trick analogy as an attempt to show me conceiving of that, and then I described the bouquet to show something actually inconceivable. I'm not attempting to prove that the Law of Non-Contradiction is true, I was simply agreeing that inconceivable things are violations of it, and my magician isn't unconceivable. It doesn't matter whether the law is true or not for my analogies to be appropriate for your test of contradiction, namely, conceivability.
Now, admittedly, the magician acted on his hand to snap his fingers. But that finger-snap isn't linked to the bouquet the same way that, say, a sculptor's clay is linked to a statue. I think that's the sticking point.
And lastly, like I said, I think I'm starting to get your argument, and it's starting to look more like you're equivocating "no thing" with "nothingness" especially after this next bit:
Why? Why is acting in the universe automatically acting on the universe?
Why is it impossible to not act on anything and something still be caused?
The bouquet appeared in the universe, why must that mean the universe spawned it,
or that some part of the universe transformed into the bouquet?
I’m going to, probably, oversimplify this. Let’s say that I need to borrow a car, and you lend me yours. You tell me that it’s your only car, and you need it for work tomorrow and to be careful. I speed off, drive carelessly through the day, and eventually wreck your car.Why, then, did Jesus die on the cross? What is the point of that if God is able to forgive us as an act of will?
Something has to be acted on because there must be a material cause, although that of course has become the point in question for some reason.
I’m going to, probably, oversimplify this. Let’s say that I need to borrow a car, and you lend me yours. You tell me that it’s your only car, and you need it for work tomorrow and to be careful. I speed off, drive carelessly through the day, and eventually wreck your car.
While you may be upset, you graciously forgive me and I go my way.
Now, who pays for the repair? You do, because you forgave me. You can’t forgive a debt, and at the same time bill someone for that debt. But it still needs a payment. So forgiveness always costs the forgiven something. It’s not free.
I think we see this in Colossians.
8 See to it that no one takes you captive by philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the world, and not according to Christ.
9 For in him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily,
10 and you have been filled in him, who is the head of all rule and authority.
11 In him also you were circumcised with a circumcision made without hands, by putting off the body of the flesh, by the circumcision of Christ,
12 having been buried with him in baptism, in which you were also raised with him through faith in the powerful working of God, who raised him from the dead.
13 And you, who were dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made alive together with him, having forgiven us all our trespasses,
14 by canceling the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands. This he set aside, nailing it to the cross.
15 He disarmed the rulers and authorities and put them to open shame, by triumphing over them in him. - Colossians 2:8-15
We (those made alive) were forgiven, but the forgiveness had a cost. And that cost was the cross.