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Creation and Causality

DogmaHunter

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In order for me to be guilty of 'special pleading'on this I think I'd probably need to somehow disagree with you. As it stands, I just don't.

I didn't say that you were engaging in that, for the record.
I just said that attempts at force-fitting a god into it, is going to result in special pleading.
I for one, have never seen such an argument that didn't use special pleading at some point in one form or another.


I agree, in fact I wouldn't necessarily equate the Big Bang with the 'moment of creation', as tempting as that might seem(perhaps it is, but then again, perhaps it is not). There are a few models out there, none of which are currently testable, who's to say which, if any, is the correct one?


Although, in all cases, we appear to be left with an underlying inexplicability, that would seem to evade reason.

Well, we don't know in advance what is reasonable and what isn't.
I also disagree with the term "inexplicable". I'ld rather say "unexplained".

Inexplicable, is a judgement call that sounds a little to "final" for my taste. It sounds as if that means that we will never be able to explain it.

That might be the case. But then again, it also might not be.
So "unexplained" seems to be a better fit.
 
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apogee

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I didn't say that you were engaging in that, for the record.
I just said that attempts at force-fitting a god into it, is going to result in special pleading.
I for one, have never seen such an argument that didn't use special pleading at some point in one form or another.

There is no force fitting necessary, the question is not whether, or not God can be said to exist, but rather what is the ultimate nature of existence, and can it be said to be God.


Well, we don't know in advance what is reasonable and what isn't.
I also disagree with the term "inexplicable". I'ld rather say "unexplained".

Inexplicable, is a judgement call that sounds a little to "final" for my taste. It sounds as if that means that we will never be able to explain it.

That might be the case. But then again, it also might not be.
So "unexplained" seems to be a better fit.

It's more that regardless of what 'explanation' we finally decide upon, that 'explanation' itself, will be, inherently 'inexplicable'.
 
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DogmaHunter

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It's more that regardless of what 'explanation' we finally decide upon, that 'explanation' itself, will be, inherently 'inexplicable'.
To me, that's a meaningless assertion.
You can't explain the unexplained with the inexplicable.
 
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devolved

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So when the atheist says "prove it" and the Christian can't, the atheist claims victory; and when the atheist says "I don't know" the Christian claims victory.

I don't think it's as simple as that.

All of us begin with our respective axiomatic presuppositions. For example, you assume that yours is reasonable because it follow certain rules of logic, but when anyone would ask you to "prove" that the foundation for the rules of logic is valid, the only thing you can do is to either point to some pluralistic consensus, or some axiomatic necessity.

Thus, it's not the case of a Christian must prove something to you based on your philosophic model of reality. You first need to justify your model of reality in order for any side to accept that what you would consider "invalid evidence" is actually a viable conclusion.

Your model is based on "first principle" assumptions that you can't justify or provide "proof" for.

What we essentially have is two varying models that are built using different presuppositional philosophical frameworks.

The Christian position seems to be this: God created the universe (and also other realms beyond the universe) out of nothing by speaking such things into existence. I do not know of any explanation that is more specific than this.

There is not single "Christian position", just like there is no single and unified "atheist position" on this topic. The default position is "we don't know". That's why it's called a belief in God, instead of a claim of knowledge. A belief is a guess based on certain claims and lines of evidence.

Now, the debate is not about logical viability, because we first have to agree about rules of logic and context you are framing these in. You seem to be citing fallacies as though these are some sort of universal judicial decisions. These are not. Fallacy claims are not absolute. These are contextual, and only work within certain observable and repeatable variable context.

Saying that God created "something out of nothing" is a linguistic attempt to describe reality. Language is by necessity axiomatic. It's not absolute. It's not 1:1 representation of reality. It's just collection of symbols with send to communicate meaning.

Thus, when a Christian says something, there's a different semantics involved than when a scientist says something, just like when a philosopher says something, there's a different semantic meaning to the similar words that we speak. We may use the same words, but these words may not map to the same concepts.

Each of us gives individual meaning to the words.

The word "nothing" could have a wide range of meaning in this context, and it's highly unlikely that it's "abstract nothingness" that you are talking about. We don't know.

The point of that statement is not about HOW God created, but THAT God created, and it's a presupposition based on certain line of observable evidence.

The problems with this assessment are, first, that the Christian tacitly asserts that God exists for no reason and with no cause, which is the special pleading fallacy. Identifying the fallacy is already sufficient grounds to ignore the rebuttal until it is amended, but it can also be said that the second objection is inadequate.

Again, your referring to reason and cause here is problematic. You have to axiomatically presuppose the viability of both for us to have this conversation.

If you watch West World, they are making a hidden statement about it in the show intro animation. Robotic hands are playing the piano, and it looks like the robot is causing the piano to play. But then robot removes the hands, and the piano keeps on playing on its own. So, what we assumed to be a causal relationship turns out to be not causal at all. Piano and hands just move together to make it look like so.

Thus, you assume causality, because you perceive something simultaneously happening. But there's no conclusive means to prove causality. It's an assumption that your brain seems to connect based on patterns, and we can agree on certain causal relationships, but we don't need to agree that everything is causal and everything plays by the same causal rules. It's your assumption, and perhaps we can all agree to assume something, but that agreement is pragmatic and not based on some ontological validity.

The same with reason. You are assuming that there MUST BE a reason for everything that exists from your assumption about causality. But it's a foundational model that you formulate and you have to justify it. And I can assure you that you can only justify it so far before you run into the very same logical fallacies that you seem to think must be valid in any context.

We have not, and presumably cannot, observe nothingness, so there are no empirical grounds to say what can or cannot occur. Further, we know that nothingness entails a complete lack of rules or governing principles, so the governing principle "something cannot come from nothing" cannot apply to nothingness by definition.

Well, how do we know that nothingness entails and what it does not entail? Nothingness is a word that refers to absence, and we have to agree on your own subjective meaning of that word prior to us using it.

You may point to dictionary for some proof of words meaning, but linguistic meaning is not a static phenomenon. The only "true" meaning of the word labels is that which one we can agree on in any particular instance we use it.

If you say "nothing" means X, and I say nothing means Y ... and we do so axiomatically, then there can be no further conversation. We simply talk past each other insisting that our axioms are valid.


However, this is not how causality works. An agent performing the causal influence is only half of what we would call an event that involves causality. There must also be a thing that is acted on; otherwise there is no effect. Billiard balls are often used as an example of causality, but a billiard ball flying through empty space devoid of interaction is not causing anything to occur. Another billiard ball is required for causality to have meaning because there is no cause without something that gets effected.

Again, you don't know how causality works in any given situation. You are making a baseline assumption that you don't seem needs to be defended.

1) You can make a good claim of contextual causality as a pragmatic axiomatic assumption. If we see something that consistently repeating as a causal result, then there's a good pragmatic necessity to assume that A caused B.

2) When you are talking about non-repeating, or extremely complex phenomenon, causality is very difficult to infer, or even presume at all.

In terms of the transcendent reality, we can only philosophically infer what it may be like using the language of our reality. That's why the term is "God created something from nothing". It's a loose metaphor, but the point of that metaphor is not a scientific explanation. It's a philosophical point that God is the "ultimate source". Is there a source beyond God? That would be another level of discussion.

Absent creation, when the sum total of all existence was just the Christian God, what was available for God to act upon? Did God act on himself? Then we are all made of the stuff of God, and I don't think Christians take this position. Did God act on the universe before the universe even existed? How does that make sense? Did God act on nothingness? Nothingness is not a thing that can be acted on, and "acting on nothingness" is the same as acting on nothing, which is the same as doing nothing, which is the same as not causing anything to occur. God himself, nothing, and the universe itself seem to be the only conceivable choices of what we can even discuss as candidates for what God acted on, and none of them work.

Again, you are attempting to evaluate God in context of your own semantic model in which it naturally doesn't fit. When you axiomatically define meaning of certain words, OF COURSE you basically define God out of possibility with these axioms.

You would have to first justify your model prior to us having this conversation on some viable grounds. If you can't, then what are we talking about here? Your presuppositions? Why would that be more valid than presuppositions of other people? Because it seems like so to you :)?

It's because the Christian's explanation for the origin of the universe is necessarily worse. The Christian cannot account for God's existence (because God exists for no reason and with no cause), then insists that God is necessary for creation to occur, yet cannot explain, even given God's unlimited power, exactly why God is necessary for the process or what God did.

It's sort of like demanding to explain how can quantum entanglement do what it does? We don't know. At the level of "derivative concepts" we can only make only so many assumptions, because the model lacks data.

These assumptions exists on fringes of presumed causal relationships, and these don't and can't explain the reality behind these entities. These models are derivative to begin with. That's the FRINGE of our understanding. It's difficult to guess what's behind the guess, because there are no constrains for us to hold on to.

Again, it's a philosophical model. For you to claim that it's "worse" what are you comparing it to? You are comparing it to your own model, and I'm asking you to justify that model prior to having this discussion. It's sort of like jumping on physics forum and asking to justify the "Many Universes" explanation, or various explanations behind quantum phenomenon. We never observe either our Universe, or quantum phenomenon except in some derivative manner. We assume that these things are as we imagine these to be.

So the Christian has an extra assumption which explains nothing, and assumptions that explain nothing are supposed to be dropped.

Why would the "extra assumption" be inferior explanation as to "less assumptions". You first need to justify THAT ASSUMPTION that you are making here, and you need to show that it's valid in every context of its application before you rush in and apply to everything.
 
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devolved

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We are ignorant concerning the origins of the big bang. We all are.
Acknowledging that ignorance (and working hard to overcome it by rational means) is always better then to just pretend to solve it by appealing to undetectable entities and special pleading.

Well, you are assuming that people pretend, and you are invoking a special pleading from your own subjective understanding of what's always better.

How can you know that it's always better. What is the rational for such absolute? Even context of actual pretending there are plentiful scenarios in which saying "I don't know" will be pragmatically inferior than unknowingly invoking some model that actually match reality. I'm not saying that IS the case with Christianity. I'm simply pointing out that you are operating by assumptions that are not as obvious as you think these are.
 
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HitchSlap

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Well, you are assuming that people pretend, and you are invoking a special pleading from your own subjective understanding of what's always better.

How can you know that it's always better. What is the rational for such absolute? Even context of actual pretending there are plentiful scenarios in which saying "I don't know" will be pragmatically inferior than unknowingly invoking some model that actually match reality. I'm not saying that IS the case with Christianity. I'm simply pointing out that you are operating by assumptions that are not as obvious as you think these are.
Good grief... muddying the water doesn't make your faith based claims any more savvy. Atheists make one less assumption than theists. If you want us to accept your claims of deities, then evidence is needed.
 
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devolved

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Good grief... muddying the water doesn't make your faith based claims any more savvy. Atheists make one less assumption than theists. If you want us to accept your claims of deities, then evidence is needed.

Labeling something as "faith" or "water-muddying" is a poor debate tactic, especially when you fail to show how your claims are not doing the very same thing that you claim I'm doing.

Saying that Atheist are making one less assumption doesn't make Atheists claims more valid. You'd have to demonstrate that making "one less assumption" is better in the scope of this particular argument. I understand that you don't find a theistic model less compelling in the scope of your own model of reality, but your model of reality is just that - your model of reality. It's not valid in scope of my model.

You can build your own assumption about reality, but all assumptions in scope of our agreement tend to be accepted in context of pragmatic necessity. What is "necessary" is purely subjective and is based on a longer string of axiomatic presuppositions that are bricks for certain model.

You may say that "evidence is needed for any assumption to be justifiable", but of itself this statement is an axiomatic assumption, and as such it is accepted without any evidence as a faith-driven philosophical brick.

Thus, you are merely playing a word game here when you subjectively label "faith-based claims" as those that you happen to exclude from the model that you presuppose is valid :). Your model is built using axiomatic faith-bricks that you can't provide providential support for. All you can point to is consensus, and consensus does not mean validity.

So, how about you first provide justification for standards by which you exclude theistic model as viable?
 
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HitchSlap

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Labeling something as "faith" or "water-muddying" is a poor debate tactic, especially when you fail to show how your claims are not doing the very same thing that you claim I'm doing.

Saying that Atheist are making one less assumption doesn't make Atheists claims more valid. You'd have to demonstrate that making "one less assumption" is better in the scope of this particular argument. I understand that you don't find a theistic model less compelling in the scope of your own model of reality, but your model of reality is just that - your model of reality. It's not valid in scope of my model.

You can build your own assumption about reality, but all assumptions in scope of our agreement tend to be accepted in context of pragmatic necessity. What is "necessary" is purely subjective and is based on a longer string of axiomatic presuppositions that are bricks for certain model.

You may say that "evidence is needed for any assumption to be justifiable", but of itself this statement is an axiomatic assumption, and as such it is accepted without any evidence as a faith-driven philosophical brick.

Thus, you are merely playing a word game here when you subjectively label "faith-based claims" as those that you happen to exclude from the model that you presuppose is valid :). Your model is built using axiomatic faith-bricks that you can't provide providential support for. All you can point to is consensus, and consensus does not mean validity.

So, how about you first provide justification for standards by which you exclude theistic model as viable?
Assuming deities exist, specifically a deity that knows your name and the number of hairs on your body cannot be justified with evidence. I make no claim this deity exists. It's incumbent on you to demonstrate this. Sorry, but you don't get to claim all views are on equal footing so as to accommodate untenable positions.

As for my model of reality, I make three basal assumptions:

1. Reality exists.
2. We can know some things about reality.
3. Independently verifiable, falsifiable models with predictive capabilities work better than those without.

So, again, you want us to accept your god/s exists, put up or ...
 
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The7thColporteur

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So, it's your claim that god himself said, "I AM." How do you know this?
It is not my claim. It is God's claim. Let's be sure to make sure we understand who is making the claim. God is.
 
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HitchSlap

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It is not my claim. It is God's claim. Let's be sure to make sure we understand who is making the claim. God is.
But this isn't exactly the truth, is it? You know just as well as I, that god didn't write the bible.
 
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devolved

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Assuming deities exist, specifically a deity that knows your name and the number of hairs on your body cannot be justified with evidence. I make no claim this deity exists. It's incumbent on you to demonstrate this. Sorry, but you don't get to claim all views are on equal footing so as to accommodate untenable positions.

Well... Nothing can be justified with evidence, because justifications work on basis of assumptions that you set as bases for developing methods for evaluating any given evidence. Likewise , Theism is not monolithic in its model of God.

As for my model of reality, I make three basal assumptions:

1. Reality exists.
2. We can know some things about reality.
3. Independently verifiable, falsifiable models with predictive capabilities work better than those without.

We can agree that reality exist... Because that's how we define it.

#2 depends on how you define "know"

#3 is self-negating. It's not stand alone. It doesn't naturally flow from #1 and #2. You have several in-between assumptions you are jumping. It's neither independently- verifiable. And it's not falsifiable.

In such, you are assuming a framework that you set as standard by which you assume whether some model viable or not.

So, again, you want us to accept your god/s exists, put up or ...

I'm not asking you to do anything. You are asking for evidence that would convince you that my model is viable. I'm trying to show you that you can't justify your basal assumptions by which you set standards of what would be an viable model of reality.
 
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HitchSlap

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Do you admit then, that god didn't "write" anything, and the bible was written by men claiming to speak on behalf of a god, and that that all that exist are copies of copies of copies of...

Again, you want me to accept your claim of god/s, then put up. It's pretty simple really.
 
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devolved

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Do you admit then, that god didn't "write" anything, and the bible was written by men claiming to speak on behalf of a god, and that that all that exist are copies of copies of copies of...

Again, you are trying to intepret Christian jargon using your model and lexicon. I can assure you that in doing so it does not map to anything other than your perception of Christianity. Christianity is not monolithic. It's a philosophical framework driven by certain model reality and principles that flow from that model.

Judeo-Christian theology holds that God is not something we can easily describe. It's a state of being that we can relate to using certain metaphors that can communicate relevant attributes we can understand.

Thus in our understanding God "not something or somebody". God is LIKE something or somebody we can understand in context of ideals of our human reality.

Did God write Bible? No. That's not a monolithic Christia assumption. Bible is a narrative that exemplifies certain ideals... And it existed as oral tradition prior it being written down by people. What's meant by ispiration is that it contains narrative that exemplifies reality of what God is like in context of reality of Biblical authors.

Of course it's a copy of a copy of a copy... It doesn't diminish it's viability to inform us of certain model of reality.

Again, I'm not asking you to accept anything. I'm merely pointing out that you your basal assumptions are self-negating, and yet you are proposing these as basis by which you accept or reject evidence. In such you erroneously conclude that your assumptions adequately filter our Christian model as irrational. While I would join you in criticism of certain models of Theism and Judeo-Christian Theism. I'm not sure how you can justifiably dismiss all of them based on self-negating assumptions that you make.
 
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HitchSlap

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Again, you are trying to intepret Christian jargon using your model and lexicon. I can assure you that in doing so it does not map to anything other than your perception of Christianity. Christianity is not monolithic. It's a philosophical framework driven by certain model reality and principles that flow from that model.

Judeo-Christian theology holds that God is not something we can easily describe. It's a state of being that we can relate to using certain metaphors that can communicate relevant attributes we can understand.

Thus in our understanding God "not something or somebody". God is LIKE something or somebody we can understand in context of ideals of our human reality.

Did God write Bible? No. That's not a monolithic Christia assumption. Bible is a narrative that exemplifies certain ideals... And it existed as oral tradition prior it being written down by people. What's meant by ispiration is that it contains narrative that exemplifies reality of what God is like in context of reality of Biblical authors.

Of course it's a copy of a copy of a copy... It doesn't diminish it's viability to inform us of certain model of reality.

Again, I'm not asking you to accept anything. I'm merely pointing out that you your basal assumptions are self-negating, and yet you are proposing these as basis by which you accept or reject evidence. In such you erroneously conclude that your assumptions adequately filter our Christian model as irrational. While I would join you in criticism of certain models of Theism and Judeo-Christian Theism. I'm not sure how you can justifiably dismiss all of them based on self-negating assumptions that you make.
So we can both agree that god didn’t say anything, and you were merely being hyperbolic in your enthusiasm of your personal faith in a god. As for your Bible having “viability to be form us of certain model of reality,” nothing could be farther from the truth. Again, I’ll chalk this up to hyperbole and zealousness. Anything and everything we’ve ever learned about the nature of reality has been through the scientific method and observational rigor.

Again, believe what you need to in order to protect your faith, for its in the gray area you describe that it can only exist.
 
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