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I can leave it as an interesting observation.
" a critical examination, observation, or evaluation : trial; specifically : the procedure of submitting a statement to such conditions or operations as will lead to its proof or disproof or to its acceptance or rejection <a test of a statistical hypothesis> (2) : a basis for evaluation" - Merriam Webster.
The specifics of the test would depend on how he defines "God". Where has the OP gone, anyway?
Do you find your participation in these forums to be therapeutic?
If the universe had a beginning, either there is an eternal multiverse or succession of universes, or God created it. To say it just happened without a cause I see as highly irrational, but for sake of argument I'll pretend it is possible.
As I see it, if the past is finite then the universe may simply be uncreated. It has a beginning, but it didn't have the sort of beginning in which it pops into existence out of nothing. At t=0 something very simple and uncreated existed, and it was in the nature of that entity to change, starting what we think of as time. That change led to what we see today.
There is nothing irrational about that, and it doesn't involve any special pleading for God.
eudaimonia,
Mark
Interesting thing is that your exact sentence is how a person could describe God as the cause
Except it's special pleading when we consider it God, and not when we consider it the universe itself doing something so very mysterious, unverifiable, and counter to anything we've ever seen.
It's special pleading when only God is capable of being uncreated. If you allow that logical possibility to a natural entity as well, there is no special pleading.
What subtext? You misrepresented what I wrote.Yeah, just an interesting observation with no subtext at all, right?
The specifics of the test would depend on how he defines "God". He may define "God" as "a warm fuzzy feeling when I think of kittens". What can be done with that?Ok, so I'm taking that to mean the non-scientific usage. Given this, why on earth would you use "test" and "hypothesis", which both indicate the scientifically rigorous definition? This is a recurring tendency in your (and others') posts. God should be capable of being "tested", which opens up the question "why?" and implicit scientism (therefore self-negating statement implicit this standard, that all things capable of being considered true can be tested) IF you mean "test" in the scientific sense; BUT you don't clarify your use of test (except after being rigorously pressed for it, as here), which opens ambiguity to your listener, who doesn't know if you mean it scientifically or (as the definition you chose above indicates) just generally, i.e., "something is testable if it can be proven true, not falsifiable."
Was google broken at your house, that you could not look up the word?All of which could have been resolved very easily if you just defined your term when I asked for it rather than assuming I have some evil motive or just stalling arbitrarily. Thanks for defining it.
No, I meant, it appears he has abandoned the thread. Do you do this in real life, read a whole bunch extra into whatever others say (incorrectly)?The OP is in the same place. Or are you saying you've never, ever had an argument with a person that differs in content than what the OP explicitly states?
Daaaaavviiaaaannnn.
I was just 'yanking your chain'.Lol, you'll have to define therapeutic, because I don't know what you're getting at here too. Do you mean I get some edification from these forums? Not when you make certain comments we've discussed before; partially when I'm able to push you for more details (in the sense that catching your reasoning is like a subtle scavenger hunt where I'm stimulated by all the searching).
How much intelligence and power are required to create a universe? How did you determine this?Wish I had internet at home, this is the most active thread I've started yet looks like.
From this argument, I define God simply as an eternal being with the intelligence, volition, and power necessary to create a universe.
Indeed. You seemed to have glossed over the part where and how you determined that this "God" that you imagined is the Christian "God".Note that I did not title the thread "why I am a Christian".
I do not know what 'timeless' exactly means, but it does leave me wondering how a 'timeless being' could get around to doing anything.A timeless being with a will can have the desire to create, which provides a cause for time beginning.
To declare something impossible, you would have to understand it very well.Timeless matter seems to me to be impossible, doesn't matter rely on motion to exist?
How do you know that the rules of causation, as we observe them within the cosmos, apply prior to its instantiation?If there is motion, there is time. Causation, at least physical causation, requires time, so any material first cause of the universe must already be in time, thus there cannot be a material first cause. That's how I see it anyway, these are hard concepts to wrap one's mind around.
Word salad.If there is a multiverse that is not eternal, I would say the same arguments apply and God would be the best explanation for it. I could also toy with the idea that God is the multiverse. i.e. that the multiverse is conscious.
Including gods? If they are "too far away in time and space to test definitively", why should we care about them?Can this be tested? scientifically, I think all the options for the origin of the universe are in the same boat, too far away in time and space to test definitively.
How would a miracle (whatever that is) validate your "God" as a creator of the universe? What is a miracle?Of course, God can be tested in other ways, such as if you're lucky enough to witness a miracle.
If this "God" is interacting with human activities, there should be evidence of this. What evidence do you have for your "God" doing this?But it seems God generally follows the Prime Directive (Star Trek), so those are rare. I've only seen one or two small ones. There are some good reasons God might follow the Prime Directive, such encouraging our growth and scientific development as a species.
Yes, true.
My notion is simply more parsimonious because I don't posit anything supernatural to explain the natural.
It's special pleading when only God is capable of being uncreated. If you allow that logical possibility to a natural entity as well, there is no special pleading.
eudaimonia,
Mark
What subtext? You misrepresented what I wrote.
The specifics of the test would depend on how he defines "God". He may define "God" as "a warm fuzzy feeling when I think of kittens". What can be done with that?
Was google broken at your house, that you could not look up the word?
No, I meant, it appears he has abandoned the thread. Do you do this in real life, read a whole bunch extra into whatever others say (incorrectly)?
I was just 'yanking your chain'.![]()
Parsimony is one thing, but treating matter as having the properties of God
by giving it a characteristic strangely like consciousness
or at least opposite of its tendencies given inertia and causality is another thing. Parsimony is about the least complicated answer.
Imputing deity-like characteristics onto matter and saying it's more parsimonious to believe matter can do things like this isn't parsimony.
Interesting thing is that your exact sentence is how a person could describe God as the cause: "At t=0 something very simple and uncreated existed, and it was in the nature of that entity to change, starting what we think of as time." Except it's special pleading when we consider it God, and not when we consider it the universe itself doing something so very mysterious, unverifiable, and counter to anything we've ever seen.
LOL! We don't even know what God is supposed to be composed of! Godonium? Godomantite? Whatever properties theologians speak of are simply quick and dirty fixes to various philosophical questions anyway.
Why shouldn't there be an uncreated aspect to the universe? That's certainly better than inventing an additional entity, "God", with unknown powers of creation to solve the problem.
I'm not suggesting that the Cosmic Egg (what I call whatever existed at t=0) is in any way conscious. Self-existence (being uncreated) is nothing like consciousness, even though theologians might want their conceptual god-construct to have that property.
No, parsimony in the sense I mean here is about explanation without creating unnecessary entities. God is an unnecessary entity to explain the existence of the universe. If God can be uncreated, why not the universe?
God is the inevitable, inevitability of inevitability that is inevitable.
Why do you think I believe in Him?
, contains a contradiction I believe. 'at time t=0 means before time began: the cosmic egg existed timelessly. To exist timelessly is to exist changelessly. So the sentence quoted can be rephrased, 'A changeless object existed, whose nature was to change. So the object had the properties of changelessness and change. A logical contradiction, thus the statement is false and there could not have been a 'cosmic egg.'at time t=0 something simple existed, and it was the nature of it to change
The cosmic egg theory, , contains a contradiction I believe. 'at time t=0 means before time began: the cosmic egg existed timelessly. To exist timelessly is to exist changelessly. So the sentence quoted can be rephrased, 'A changeless object existed, whose nature was to change. So the object had the properties of changelessness and change. A logical contradiction, thus the statement is false and there could not have been a 'cosmic egg.'