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I´m glad I had pre-emptively explained that, how and why I don´t, and what my point actually was . Please reread the explanation and address the rest of the post.Materialism: the doctrine that nothing exists except matter and its movements and modifications.
It certainly seems that you are. You are a priori ruling out an immaterial cause for the beginning of the universe.
thanks for the bluff. I'll not hesitate to explain then that I took every college physics course available and had a 4.0 average in those classes. I've also read multiple books on relativity, particle physics, I remember reading about Schrodinger's cat, Young's dual slit experiments, etc. and a few on quantum physics. I'll also admit that I'm much older now than when I first took those classes. So yes, even though it might take me a few minutes to remind myself about vectors, that does not mean I am unfamiliar with the concepts. Taking less than 10 seconds only proves that I might have taken the course yesterday, or that I read that stuff everyday, which I don't anymore.I'll call your bluff. Tell me whether or not the following vectors form a basis. <1,1,0>, <2,2,0>, <0,0,1>. That should literally take you 10 seconds if you know what you say you know.
The proof Man needs gods. Joshua can't explain why the Big Bang happened. Even as we debate others are trying to find out. Experiments to prove big bang theory.As Vilenkin (a scientist) said, even inflation models had a beginning. Why are we going back to try to disprove what even most atheistic scientists agree with, that the universe had a beginning? You guys pick like one or two atheists scientist who say that the universe could have always existed, and they only cite theoretical models and not one iota of scientific evidence. The ones who believe that the universe probably did have a beginning can cite not only theoretical models, but also scientific evidences and logic.
I would have to remind myself of how they represent vectors before I could answer your question.
The rest of your post does nothing. If all we've seen in this universe is efficient and material causes, that in no way proves that the immaterial does not exist. That's like saying that because you've never seen a horse, horses don't exist. You are a priori ruling out the existence of an immaterial being because it hasn't materialized for you yet. You are in effect a materialist and there's no point in denying it.I´m glad I had pre-emptively explained that, how and why I don´t, and what my point actually was . Please reread the explanation and address the rest of the post.
wait a minute...are we going to go off into another rabbit trail? Let's stay on topic. Present your paper (in a readable format) and we'll see if you actually proved the KCA to be wrong.<1,1,0>, <2,2,0>, <0,0,1> = vectors
What's wrong with this cartoon?
There's only one guy holding a book about god. There should be approx 100 all holding different books, clay tables, cave drawings ect. All saying something different.
Proving if a god exists, no one on Earth has a clue what he's about.
Nope.He talks the talk... But can he walk the walk?
No I do remember vectors, and I excelled in that subject. But that is not the subject at hand. I should point out here that you have made a truth claim, that you have proved the KCA to be wrong. The onus is on you right now to provide your proof. I'll await your genius.If you had a 4.0 GPA and took those classes, this is something that should easily ring a bell. Especially in physics. We're essentially having a debate about how the universe started or didn't start. You claim a specific god did it, cite scientific papers, and claim to know physics. But when I ask you a very simple question regarding something you claim you are good at, you can't even remember what a vector was (or represented as you put it)? Come on.
If it's not the subject at hand then why are you constantly touting your supposed credentials? They simply aren't relevant.No I do remember vectors, and I excelled in that subject. But that is not the subject at hand. I should point out here that you have made a truth claim, that you have proved the KCA to be wrong. The onus is on you right now to provide your proof. I'll await your genius.
These survey results indicate that most professional philosophers are atheists, so presumably most philosophers don't find the KCA convincing, if they've heard of it.
wow. so much to unpack here.
things that begin to exist:
a car (cause was the manufacturer)
a baby (cause was mommy and daddy)
a tree (cause was a seed that was nurtured)
a song (cause was the songwriter)
an idea (cause was the thinker)
the reformation (cause was people like Luther)
the character Tom Sawyer (cause the author Mark Twain)
note that not all of the causes above are material.
I'll call your bluff. Tell me whether or not the following vectors form a basis. <1,1,0>, <2,2,0>, <0,0,1>. That should literally take you 10 seconds if you know what you say you know.
thanks for the bluff. I'll not hesitate to explain then that I took every college physics course available and had a 4.0 average in those classes. I've also read multiple books on relativity, particle physics, I remember reading about Schrodinger's cat, Young's dual slit experiments, etc. and a few on quantum physics. I'll also admit that I'm much older now than when I first took those classes. So yes, even though it might take me a few minutes to remind myself about vectors, that does not mean I am unfamiliar with the concepts. Taking less than 10 seconds only proves that I might have taken the course yesterday, or that I read that stuff everyday, which I don't anymore.
So now for your bluff.
The coordinate format looks familiar to me. I would have to remind myself of how they represent vectors before I could answer your question.
No I do remember vectors, and I excelled in that subject.
wait a minute...are we going to go off into another rabbit trail? Let's stay on topic. Present your paper (in a readable format) and we'll see if you actually proved the KCA to be wrong.
Hi, Comp-Sci dropout over here. I saw those coordinates and immediate could immediately tell you the answer, and the class that covered it was one I barely passed over two years ago. The idea that someone who claims to have studied physics and passed with flying colors doesn't know the answer is kind of stunning.
<1,1,0><2,2,0><0,0,1> is not a basis of R^3, because no combination of these vectors can give you <1,0,0> or <0,1,0> or any multiple thereof. Alternatively, you could prove this by pointing out that two of the vectors are linearly dependent and as such are effectively the same vector, and that as a result you're trying to fill 3 dimensions with two vectors, which isn't going to work. That fact alone moves this problem from "really basic" to "incredibly trivial for anyone who knows anything about vectors and mathematics".
Indeed, and that wasn´t my point. My point was:The rest of your post does nothing. If all we've seen in this universe is efficient and material causes, that in no way proves that the immaterial does not exist.
No, it´s not - because that´s not what I say (even though I see how it would be more convenient for you if that were my claim).That's like saying that because you've never seen a horse, horses don't exist.
You don´t get to tell me what my positions are, sorry.You are a priori ruling out the existence of an immaterial being because it hasn't materialized for you yet. You are in effect a materialist and there's no point in denying it.
This is the internet. The men are men, the women are men, and the 14-year-old girls are FBI agents.
That kinda is what it boils down to, though. How do you people want to know I'm not a woman, or a man, or a very precocious 13-year-old? If you're not willing to timestamp your diploma here (which I wouldn't recommend, pseudonymity has its advantages), you're left with only one thing as a basis for your claims to expertise: the knowledge you show in the public forum.Just LOL'd. Ha.
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