It is implicit in your statement.
It's not. I was responding to YOUR assertion. I wasn't making an assertion of my own.
Try to understand the difference between responding to a claim and making a claim - they are not the same thing.
If there was no time extrinsic of the universe then there is not one known thing which could have caused the universe. Nothingdidit
I'm saying that the very idea of causation is not applicable.
I don't know what the origins of the universe are nore have I claimed any possible origin.
YOU are the one pretending to know the unknown and the untestable - not me.
I'm just saying: "cause" is a problematic term to use, as the ingredients that are REQUIRED for the phenomena to even be possible
aren't present when the universe doesn't exist.
Once more: I'm not pretending to know nore am I claiming to know. I'm fine saying that I don't know. YOU here are the only one claiming to know. I'm merely responding to YOUR claim, by pointing out that your argument invokes phenomena that by definition can't exist in that state.
Don't blame me for the shortcommings of your very own claims please.
That is called ad hoc exception and would also point out you are using cause and effect to deny cause and effect. If you wish to deny cause and effect, then don't use cause and effect and good luck with that.
Please read with more attention. I didn't deny causality. I merely brought to your attention that causality is a phenomena of physics
as it applies in the universe.
Causality requires time to exist. Because causes happen
before effects.
You try to invoke this phenomena
without space-time existing.
There is no "before" time. Just like there is no "north of the north pole".
There is no reason to dismiss an extrinsic cause for the start of the universe based on cause and effect since the alternative leads to absurdities or appeals to ignorance.
There is a reason and I already gave it to you multiple times now: causality requires time to exist. No universe = no time = no causality.
And fyi: you do not know what is absurd in advance. Before Einstein, the idea that time was relative to the observer, was also absurd.
You have not made a case it is invalid. Nowhere near beyond a reasonable doubt.
Yes I did. You just ignored it.
Causality is necessarily temporal. No time = no causality.
Actually, many reasons not to.
And nothingdidit or appeals to ignorance has exactly what explanatory power?
No. "nothingdidit" is actually just a strawman, since I never said that and even explicitly denied that that is my position on the matter.
As said multiple times: my position is that I don't know.
Yawn, like dungeons and dragons has a huge body of knowledge and has explain power.
No, dungeons and dragons has no explanatory power concerning anything in reality.
The belief of scientists do not equate to fact and the so-called science is far from exact. Its not like anyone is out there claiming the laws of physics is just as valid as the origin of life theories or naturalistic evolution.
Actually, the theory of evolution is a lot more in evidence and with a lot more explanatory power then any theory in physics.
They are inferior counter explanations riddled with assumptions and problems, including math.
Yes, yes.... the entire scientific community is wrong and you, along with a handfull of fundamentalists, are correct. Uhu.
If we find the starship Enterprise on the moon, it is designed, not natural and intrinsic of the moon.
We aren't talking about spacecraft that are manufactured by definition.
My preconceived beliefs do not have anything to do with Theism.
lol
You can't have the one without the other.
The theory of evolution proves otherwise.
Life exists and we can study it. We can see and unravel the processes it is subject to, without knowing where it came from.
How it originated, does not matter to evolution theory.
At best, it predicts that
however it began, that beginning resulted in a primitive life which then started to evolve.
But HOW exactly that first life came to be, does not matter to evolution.
Purely in context of evolution, it's actually fine to assume that some god created that first life. It would be an assumption not in evidence, off course... But the point is that it wouldn't change one iota for evolution theory.
Besides, it is all taught in the same biology textbooks. They have chapters on the origin of life.
Because they are subjects of biology.
Biology is a field, not a theory.
This is a really silly argument.
It is a distinction without much of a difference.
Errrr.... what?
The origins of a thing on the one hand and the processes the thing is subject to
once it exists, seems like a pretty clear distinction.
Perhaps the comprehension problem here, is on your end.
Consider germ theory of desease....
You can study
existing germs and what their effect is on humans.
Does it really matter to that study, where the germs come from?
Wheter it has origin a or b.... the effect the
existing germs have on humans, remain the exact same, don't they?
Some for evolution...
Doesn't matter how first life came to be. Life exists and it is subject to certain processes. Nothing stops us to unravel those processes without knowing where life itself comes from.
Seems incredibly obvious. So obvious that I wonder every time how people can't comprehend it.
Obsessions with classifications. Dogmatism.
No. Instead, mere scope of explanation.
Quibbling. You know what i meant.
I know what you meant. Which is why I had to point out that I could only agree with that statement if it read "life
as we know it" instead of "all life".