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Forgive me for my ignorance as to how to put quotes within quotes like you guys do so well. Bear with me.
[1] I notice you were careful not to say, "A thing creating itself is not illogical." You only ask how my points prove it! I guess I need to expand a bit, since you asked, though you implied you would not ask since they were off topic. Often I say something that seems to me to bring obvious implications with it, that are somehow not obvious to others. "A thing cannot cause itself to exist" because it would first have to exist to be able to cause anything. It also "cannot spontaneously begin to exist" because beginning necessarily implies causation, if nothing else, the principle by which it began --therefore, not spontaneity.
Does that help?
[2] "A thing that exists, is either first cause, or was caused." Perhaps I should put the logical link in there, that "cannot spontaneously begin to exist" rules out Spontaneity of existence, period, by definition of the word 'spontaneous'. It is not a static word. So, other than spontaneity, do you have another option besides 'caused to exist' and 'self-existent'?
You say:
You appear to reason as follows :
P1. I don't know how something could cause itself to exist.
P2. It would be covenient for my faith if nothing could cause itself to exist.
C. Therefore, it is impossible for something to cause itself to exist.
That is not what I argue, not how I reason. I wonder how it appeared to you that way.
[3] I thought I had just explained. Chance or randomness causing anything, is self-contradictory. But furthermore, as has been said by others, 'Chance is just a placeholder for "I don't know".'
Mark said: "If God exists, God is not an opinion.[4] Are you one of those who likes the foggy notion that there are many truths?[5]
But I thought atheists are not supposed to believe there is no God, but rather to fail to believe there is a God. Here you are positing the notion that there is no actual God.[6]"
There's something to that --God does not conform. He simply is. Funny how truth is like that.
I'm glad to hear it.
So you slide out from under my point.
Mark, concerning the claim that 'it could be' the universe is eternal and cyclical: "You are describing infinite regression of cause. Difficult to imagine? Difficult to swallow. In fact, a bit indigestible. 'Repugnant', one might say."
Truth doesn't have any relationship to claims or feelings. So what. Is that your defense of infinite regression?
You are talking with Paulo here, but I can't help but jump in. He and I were talking not long ago about this habit atheists have, that often when they see their defense eroding, they quickly, lest they lose the debate, revert to something like, "Well, even if you are right about Omnipotence (or First Cause)(or even First Cause With Intent) you still have to prove that it is the Christian God!" Like, "AHA! Got you on THAT one!"
[2]
Mark Quayle said: ↑
Amoranemix 25 said:
[1] I doubt it is illogical in even one way. How are these points you present supposed to make something creating itself be illogical ?
Mark replied: My points don't make something illogical. They are or they are not illogical on their own. You have a strange way of seeing reality. (1) A thing cannot cause itself to exist. It is self-contradictory, because a non-existent thing cannot cause. It cannot spontaneously begin to exist. That is nonsense.[2] (2)A thing that exists, is either first cause, or was caused.The 'infinitesimal speck' from which the BB proceeded was mechanical fact, and on top of everything else one might say about it, bears the evidences of being acted upon or produced (created) with purpose/ design since it obviously resulted in specificity and not homogeneity.[3] There is no more reason to say specificity results by chance or randomness, than there is to say that chance or randomness can cause anything. This too is self-contradictory.
Now Amoranemix: These are three bald assertions. I would ask you to prove them if they weren't off topic.
You appear to reason as follows :
P1. I don't know how something could cause itself to exist.
P2. It would be covenient for my faith if nothing could cause itself to exist.
C. Therefore, it is impossible for something to cause itself to exist.
That argument is invalid. It seems related to the god of the gaps argument.
[3] How so ?
[1] I notice you were careful not to say, "A thing creating itself is not illogical." You only ask how my points prove it! I guess I need to expand a bit, since you asked, though you implied you would not ask since they were off topic. Often I say something that seems to me to bring obvious implications with it, that are somehow not obvious to others. "A thing cannot cause itself to exist" because it would first have to exist to be able to cause anything. It also "cannot spontaneously begin to exist" because beginning necessarily implies causation, if nothing else, the principle by which it began --therefore, not spontaneity.
Does that help?
[2] "A thing that exists, is either first cause, or was caused." Perhaps I should put the logical link in there, that "cannot spontaneously begin to exist" rules out Spontaneity of existence, period, by definition of the word 'spontaneous'. It is not a static word. So, other than spontaneity, do you have another option besides 'caused to exist' and 'self-existent'?
You say:
You appear to reason as follows :
P1. I don't know how something could cause itself to exist.
P2. It would be covenient for my faith if nothing could cause itself to exist.
C. Therefore, it is impossible for something to cause itself to exist.
That is not what I argue, not how I reason. I wonder how it appeared to you that way.
[3] I thought I had just explained. Chance or randomness causing anything, is self-contradictory. But furthermore, as has been said by others, 'Chance is just a placeholder for "I don't know".'
Mark said: "If God exists, God is not an opinion.[4] Are you one of those who likes the foggy notion that there are many truths?[5]
But I thought atheists are not supposed to believe there is no God, but rather to fail to believe there is a God. Here you are positing the notion that there is no actual God.[6]"
[4] In that case, there would be many gods. The one that exists and those people believe in. The real one would be unlikely to conform to what you will accept or to what (s)he/it has to be according to you.
There's something to that --God does not conform. He simply is. Funny how truth is like that.
[5] No.
I'm glad to hear it.
[6] There atheists who disbelieve there is any god and atheists who disbelieve in specific gods.
So you slide out from under my point.
Mark, concerning the claim that 'it could be' the universe is eternal and cyclical: "You are describing infinite regression of cause. Difficult to imagine? Difficult to swallow. In fact, a bit indigestible. 'Repugnant', one might say."
Reality does not care about your aversions.
Truth doesn't have any relationship to claims or feelings. So what. Is that your defense of infinite regression?
Matter that has continually multiplied on and on for eternity past would violate Occam's razor. As would any infinitely regressing causal loops. You can't avoid it. Therefore, a prime mover is necessary and would more accurately fit the rule of parsimony. Why? Because it puts a stop to theorizing eternally and unnecessarily regressive entities.
If I understand correctly, your argument is the following :
P1. Paulomycin's god is by definition omnipotent.
P2. An omnipotent being is necessary to explain the world.
C. Therefore Paulomycin's god exists.
I suspect omniscience is included in your definition of omnipotence.
Further you attempt to demonstrate P1.
If you were to be successful, that would still leave 2 problems. First, it leaves God's morality open. Second, when skeptics refer to the Christian god, they are usually referring to an entity equipped with plenty of religious baggage, like claims found in the Bible. Proving an omniscient, omnipotent being would thus still give no good reason to believe in Yahweh.
You are talking with Paulo here, but I can't help but jump in. He and I were talking not long ago about this habit atheists have, that often when they see their defense eroding, they quickly, lest they lose the debate, revert to something like, "Well, even if you are right about Omnipotence (or First Cause)(or even First Cause With Intent) you still have to prove that it is the Christian God!" Like, "AHA! Got you on THAT one!"
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