At a certain point, we're just playing word games.
It's not a game to me.
If having a cause is baked into the definition of "effect", then I'm going to have to ask you to demonstrate that the universe is an effect.
Well, even atheïsts (in the field) agree the universe had a start, for numerous reasons (i choose not to mention here, not only because i'm too lazy to look it up...)
It can't have created itself, something can not cause itself.
You don't just get to smuggle your premises into the definitions of the words you're using like that.
I'm very sorry that words do not always mean what you want them to mean.
I think I'd like to see you demonstrate that point.
Well, i'm not gonna.
I'm sorry.
It's not my expertise, it's a whole subject all together.
Maybe i'm wrong, but i assume you believe in "the Big Bang", so you should be familiar with the idea of a beginning of the universe.
Well why don't you show me where my logic breaks down? Here's the traditional structure of the Kalam Cosmological Argument:
- Everything that begins to exist has a cause;
- The universe began to exist;
Therefore:
- The universe has a cause.
- If the universe has a cause, then an uncaused, personal Creator of the universe exists, who sans the universe is beginningless, changeless, immaterial, timeless, spaceless and enormously powerful; Therefore:
- An uncaused, personal Creator of the universe exists, who sans the universe is beginningless, changeless, immaterial, timeless, spaceless and enormously powerful...
...has to exist, or at least had to have existed.
That bit in premise 1? It sets up a dichotomy beween two sets - "things that begin to exist" and "things that do not begin to exist".
We've been through this already, haven't we?
The Original Cause is singular.
I think you call it 'a singularity'.
And it sets out a condition for the former set.
No, the Thing that does not begin to exist, doesn't just set out conditions, that Thing creates by It's Will.
Will implies a person (conscious and intelligent), so in stead of "It" we say "He".
However, your claim is that the latter set contains just one object - god. If that's the case, then a simple logical reformulation can take place:
1. Everything that begins to exist has a cause -> (Because we set this up as a true dichotomy, we can replace the term with its inverse)
1. Everything except things that do not begin to exist has a cause -> (Because there is only one thing that did not begin to exist, we can generalize)
1. Everything except god has a cause
At which point your argument becomes circular and thus a meaningless tautology.
Why? How?
The Original Cause CAN NOT have a cause by definition.
If it were caused, it would not be the original cause, but an effect form the true original cause, or a secondary cause at least.
Another word for Original Cause is indeed "God", it's a synonym.
This doesn't answer the question who exactly is God, only that God is the Original Cause, because they're synonymous.
If there is a problem with my reasoning, please explain the problem, don't just hand-wave it away.
I'm not sure where you see the circle in this reasoning.
Is it perhaps too logical?
Yes, actually, this is heavily implied by quantum physics.
No, i think you have misunderstood that.
Because the quantum-matrix is not nothing, it's something, it has properties.