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The universe with no need of God

Davian

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How dishonest...combining 2 of my posts to attempt to make them appear as one.
You did that in post #97, and I simply used the multi-quote toggle built into the site software to maintain the posts as they appeared. I do expect an apology.
I will ask 1 more time for you to post your evidence....
My evidence? Hardly.

Is google broken in your part of the internet?
 
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Moral Orel

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So what you are proposing is a modified form of the Steady State Theory.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steady_State_theory
Steady State theory
Nope. Not that. I was intentionally vague because there isn't a solid answer. Maybe something like Hawking's singularity model, maybe something more akin to a multiverse. Either way, matter and energy don't need to pop into existence. Either it was all there, in one tiny ball, or the multiverse pumped it's energy into our universe through a single point.

Again, I'm being intentionally vague because no one has the absolute answer yet. Just pointing out that there are plenty of ways that energy and matter can be eternal and simply get moved around. And that's all the "Big Bang" is. All the matter and energy moving out from that one point. Maybe it was always there, maybe it came from a multiverse scenario, maybe it poofed into existence. Personally, inflation theory has me convinced, and it predicts a multiverse. So that is my opinion as to what is most likely, but we're far from gathering enough evidence and data to pin anything down.
 
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Nihilist Virus

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You did that in post #97, and I simply used the multi-quote toggle built into the site software to maintain the posts as they appeared. I do expect an apology.

My evidence? Hardly.

Is google broken in your part of the internet?

Post #97 has been redacted... hmmmm...

By the way, if you want to see a clear picture of the way he behaves when cornered, just read his responses to one of my other threads:

http://www.christianforums.com/threads/is-god-above-the-law-or-not.7929367/

Unless, of course, they get redacted or edited.
 
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cloudyday2

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Hmmm. I was googling Christian pantheism and came upon this statement from CARM. This seems to be an example of what is described in the OP. CARM uses a double standard. Here is the quote from CARM:
https://carm.org/questions/about-philosophy/what-pantheism
 
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Nihilist Virus

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I think it's time to declare victory. The Christians have scored zero points and in fact they do not even know what game they are playing. Even the most genuine attempts to address my argument have come in the form of "Where did space, time, matter, and energy come from?" or "The universe is fine-tuned, therefore there exists an intelligent agent." These responses indicate that the ones putting them forth did not even understand the most basic condition laid out in the OP.

Some propose that infinitely many universes exist and that, in fact, every single possible state of our universe is actualized in some other universe. Let's call this Proposition X. I do not think Proposition X is impossible, but I don't believe it's actually true either. Regardless, Proposition X is sufficient, but not necessary, for us to find ourselves where we are now.

So these Christians are (mostly incorrectly) pointing out questions and then claiming that they can answer these questions if only we grant them the existence of an omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent, disembodied mind who exists for no reason and with no cause and whose very existence cannot even be questioned. And they see no problem whatsoever in terms of debate etiquette with this assumption. But then if an atheist says that they, too, can solve the problems of fine-tuning or creation of matter ex nihilo if only they are granted that Proposition X holds for no reason and with no cause, the Christian finds this assumption to be such an overwhelming intellectual liability that they simply cannot even progress in the conversation until the assumption is verified.

The Christian simply cannot and will not hold his own beliefs to the same level of scrutiny that he holds other claims to. And it's not even close. It's actually more like their starting position is that they assume their own position is true and impossible to be shown otherwise, and that their opponent's position is false and impossible to be shown otherwise. Such a person is completely unreasonable and it is impossible to have a fruitful discussion.

Those who are actually reasonable and are keeping score will see that the Christian and the atheist both simply don't know why we're here, why there is something rather than nothing, why the universe is the way it is, and etc. And admission of that is what atheism actually is. Hence I claim victory.
 
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Root of Jesse

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I didn't know anyone was keeping score. But all you've done is propose theories, or propose already-proposed theories, and we have our 'theories' which are visible. So it's my theory is more believable than your theory.

I don't play games, folks. But I can see how you, our atheist bretheren, think it's all a game. Go ahead, then, claim you're victory, if you think that will make you bigger than you are...I don't really care.
 
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cloudyday2

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It looks like a tie to me
Atheists can't explain how it all started under atheism, but they have other reasons for believing atheism - atheism is closer to the methodological naturalism that has worked so well for scientists. Similarly, Christians can't explain how God got started, but they have other reasons for believing in Christianity - conversion experiences, answered prayers, etc.
 
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Davian

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It looks like a tie to me
Atheists can't explain how it all started under atheism,
Atheism is a theological position on the existence of deities, not astrophysics.
but they have other reasons for believing atheism
The position of "I am not convinced" is not a belief, and does not require reasons to hold it.
- atheism is closer to the methodological naturalism that has worked so well for scientists.
Methodological naturalism is not a theological position. You are comparing apples to orange crates.
Similarly, Christians can't explain how God got started,
Or deal with the infinite regress problem (just how long did this eternal "god" wait prior to creating the universe?).
but they have other reasons for believing in Christianity - conversion experiences, answered prayers, etc.
Nothing that cannot be said for just about any other religion.
 
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cloudyday2

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The position of "I am not convinced" is not a belief, and does not require reasons to hold it.
The beliefs are the propositions (e.g. "pigs fly", "turkeys fly", ...). A proposition exists in our brains as a possibility until we either falsify it or forget it. Ideally when we make decisions, we consider all propositions along with the confidence we have in each proposition, so we can calculate the decision with the highest expected return.

So "I am not convinced" actually means "I have such a low confidence in that proposition that it is unlikely to affect my decisions." There must be a reason for having this low confidence - just as there must be a reason for having a high confidence. There are always going to be reasons. If nothing else, the reason could be the source of the proposition. Did the proposition come from a book written by a famous thinker or did it come from some anonymous person like myself?
 
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Davian

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I do not see the source of the proposition to be an issue, if it can be presented in a coherent fashion.

The proposition may simply be incoherent, hence the theological position of ignosticism.
 
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Hawkins

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The universe doesn't need the existence of humans either, humans for a fact exist though.

What's the point?
 
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The universe doesn't need the existence of humans either, humans for a fact exist though.

What's the point?

No one has ever claimed that humans caused the universe to exist.

The vast majority of Christians and theists in general claim that God caused the universe to exist.

Your "confusion" appears to be deliberate and I can only assume you have no way of refuting my argument.
 
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Hawkins

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The point is, necessity has nothing to do with what actually happened.

You don't have an valid argument here.

"You don't need to ride on a bus" has nothing to do with "whether you actually ride on a bus."

Similarly, if your opinion is that it's not a necessity for God to create anything, it has nothing to do with whether God has actually created anything.
 
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You didn't read the whole thing. In fact it sounds like you read only the title. First I showed that God is no better an explanation for the t=0 event than anything else, and then I showed he could not have caused it in my refutation of the Kalam Cosmological Argument.
 
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Oncedeceived

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I have to disagree, atheism is not closer to the methodological naturalism. I believe that without the a priori view of Christianity that the universe is comprehensible and ordered is necessary for the scientific method to work.
 
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cloudyday2

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I have to disagree, atheism is not closer to the methodological naturalism. I believe that without the a priori view of Christianity that the universe is comprehensible and ordered is necessary for the scientific method to work.
I can't understand what you're saying. I wonder if there is a typo? Or maybe I am just not getting it for some reason.
 
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Davian

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I have to disagree, atheism is not closer to the methodological naturalism. I believe that without the a priori view of Christianity that the universe is comprehensible and ordered is necessary for the scientific method to work.
I can't understand what you're saying. I wonder if there is a typo? Or maybe I am just not getting it for some reason.
Allow me to attempt a translation.

"I believe that without the presupposition that the universe was spoken into existence, along with two people and some animals, and later, in a manner contrary to the modern understanding of genetics, the planet was flooded and repopulated using a tiny group of individuals and animals that survived in an unbuildable boat, and later the god that spoke everything into existence and flooded the Earth sacrifices Himself to Himself to change a rule He made Himself, in order to convince Himself to forgive a small portion of humanity for the crimes of those two original people who some Christians don't even believe existed as real people, you cannot see the universe as comprehensible and ordered as is necessary for the scientific method to work."

Does that not make sense, or what?
 
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