Long post. Be ye warned...
Nevertheless, that something arises from nothing.
Not
from nothing but
by nothing.
And what, pray tell, might that event be?
Various means;
~
http://www.ratical.org/radiation/NRBE/NRBE3.html
Well, no, but we're discussing that at a later point.
fun fun fun.
Invalid? Wholly impossible? Such bold claims require bold proofs: what is your disproof of 'something from nothing'?
I'll take a bit from an analysis of Parmenides.
His point is that one cannot conceive of what is not, since one can neither think nor speak about nothing. Nothing cannot be, therefore, since it cannot be conceived, and only what can be conceived can be.
Nothing is
absolutely nothing; something comes about always from non-being to being; not-tall to tall, etc. But nothing is
absolute there is not not-tall(or anything) from which to progress being; no change can occur in that which has nothing to change.
A basis? Whatever are you on about?
The apparently causeless items would not occur unless certain conditions were met; they have basis.
Says you. What proof do you have that nothing can arise from nothingness?
And don't use the "Well, what proof do you have?" counter. You make claim, you provide the proof.
Above.
Only if your presumption is correct, which the evidence does not support.
Anything that can be or not be is caused, or moved.
And what do you mean, 'indifferent'? Are you referring to potentiality? Agency? Causality?
It does not care if it exists or not.
A stiff breeze that blows a ball off a cliff performs the same function, so I don't see the significance of this 'indifference'. But you could argue that the breeze is the cause itself, right?
Yes, but the chain of causation continues for the breeze; existence is different.
While that's true, there are nonetheless uncaused events: quantum tunnelling, for instance. A quantum particle sitting in a potential well doesn't have enough energy to overcome said potential, yet its associated wavefunction 'leaks' through. Since the potential is finite, there is a finite (albeit abysmal) chance that the particle can be found outside the well.
I'm no quantum physicist, but random events within the realm of something don't seem impossible; and most definitely are not something from nothing.
This is in stark contrast to classical mechanics, wherein a particle in a potential well must have sufficient energy before it can escape.
Alrighty then.
Actually, they are: though they require certain conditions, meeting them is not a guarantee that they will spontaneously appear. The whole point of spontaneity is that there is no cause.
Yes, but when those conditions are not met it is a guarantee they will not appear. Anyway, how can you call an event causeless and go home? Is it not possible there is much more to the universe beyond our current understanding?
But if they're not a case of "something from nothing", then whence do they come?
From something.
Err... no. Teleology concerns design and purpose. This 'indifference' you keep mentioning doesn't seem to have anything to do with the teleological argument. To summarise it:
- The appearence of design in something is proof of the existence of its (intelligent) designer.
- The universe appears designed.
- Therefore, the universe has a (intelligent) designer.
Not necessarily, there is more than one way to think teleologically. You can point to the universes causation, the fact a cause would not cause unless it meant to, infer that cause must have been purposeful, then try to determine if the universe is also.
Who says there's no prior substances? If this nebulously defined 'God' exists, why can't other nebulous things?
Because that would defeat the purpose of a first cause.
Actually, it's not. First, I never mentioned the Christian God. Second, I was pointing out that Aquinas never explained why the entities concluded in each of the arguments are, in fact, one and the same.
We have a Prime Mover, a First Cause, an Intelligent Designer, etc. You seem to just assume that these are all the same being, which you call 'God'.
I contend that this is just another assumption you have to make for Aquinas' arguments to works.
Nope, Aquinas arguments tie the things together by proving each aspect must be all-powerful(btw, prime mover and first cause are the same), and to say they are seperate would be contradictory.
Perhaps, but these events are truly random. I don't think you quite grasp the physics behind it, but I assure you that, quantum mechanically, the universe is probabilistic.
I don't claim to grasp the physics behind it, I'm no good that way.
Again, randomness in the realm of something does not prove something can come from nothing.