Aron-Ra said:
Give me an example of one thing that is impossible, and explain the criteria required to determine that.
Something from nothing, common sense.
I asked you to explain your criteria for how you would determine whether you believe something to be impossible. You gave no criteria, and instead cited only "common sense". Yet your example of something impossible is something you believe actually happened! Worse, you believe even incantations can cause something to come from nothing! Obviously that's impossible too, right? But if its impossible, then how could you believe it happened? And how could such an illogical contradiction count as common sense? Are you suggesting that we decide that something is impossible based on your belief that it happened, since (as I said) you believe in impossible things?
Of course common sense allowed me to predict the example you would give. You think science believes this too, but without the excuse that magic allows them to break the laws of physics. Since nothing supernatural can be demonstrated or tested for, then its just a made up excuse which can't be used in science. But quantum physics can be tested and demonstrated to allow science a way around the laws of standard physics.
You may also be surprised to learn that big bang cosmologists do not believe in "something from nothing". They don't yet know exactly what to believe, but their best idea to date is that all matter in the universe, and the universe itself, all space and time erupted into this plane possibly from a pan-dimensional rift. All atoms are made of a few subatomic particles and a whole lot of empty space. Take away the empty space, and you've got a helluva compression in matter. Hubble's discovery of the red shift indicates that everything in the universe -on the galactic scale- is flying away from everything else at very high speeds, which of course means that if we hit STOP and REWIND, we would see all the galaxies flying toward each other at very high speeds. Seen in reverse, everything seems to be zooming into one central point, a "singularity". The discovery of cosmic background radiation by Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson was the first substantial evidence of the big bang, and it won them the Nobel prize in 1976. Just last year, another Nobel was awarded to members of their team for further discoveries refining our understanding of evidence of the big bang. (
BBC News).
String theorists cite a "mathematic eloquence" to suggest a series of dimensions, which they propose could imply an extra-planerial source for all matter in the universe. That remains to be seen, but the fact remains that science does not believe in "something from nothing". Creationists do, even though they know it is impossible.
I'll allow you to rethink your criteria and give a better explanation for how to determine whether something is impossible or merely improbable. I gave you
my criteria for that, and you rejected it without any explanation. Perhaps you should think about that too.