Count Lucanor wrote: ↑November 28th, 2022, 10:48 am
Charlemagne wrote: ↑November 28th, 2022, 12:33 am
Count Lucanor wrote: ↑November 28th, 2022, 12:07 am
Charlemagne wrote: ↑November 27th, 2022, 9:01 pm
No, I have posited a created universe.
A created universe that is not a caused universe makes absolutely no sense. In any case, you still have not showed why it is necessarily created and why necessarily created by an intelligent being. Why wouldn't it be created by a non-intelligent being?
Charlemagne wrote: ↑November 27th, 2022, 9:01 pm
God was neither caused nor created, but is eternal. The universe is certainly not eternal.
Why would a God be necessarily eternal? And why can't the universe be eternal?
The Big Bang tells us the universe (in which everything is causally connected) was necessarily created. But time was also created with the Big Bang. Having created time, God does not exist in time. Nor does God belong to a causal world, having created causality. Therefore, it is not necessary to ask who or what caused God to exist. Nor is it necessary to ask why the universe can't be eternal.
No, the Big Bang tells us our current state of the universe had a relative beginning, but not necessarily that all that exists or ever existed had an absolute beginning. In any case (relative or absolute), to have a beginning doesn't imply, by necessity, any act of creation by an intelligent being, and you have been telling us that there's no causal connection between God and the universe, since (as you argue) causality came along with (and not prior to) the universe. Everything, even with your arguments, points to no relation between the universe and God. Your hypothetical god is no less hypothetical than the Flying Teapot.
Nope. Woefully inaccurate! Give yourself credit though Countess, the only thing you got right was that the BB's only a theory. As such, the theory posits no-thing prior to existence, hence the concept of a prime mover. You know, a thingie that has a causal properties, much like the information v. matter narratives:
a Whatever begins to exist has a cause of its existence.
b The universe began to exist.
c Therefore, the universe has a cause of its existence.
Notwithstanding all the quality-of-life stuff corresponding to self-directed, self-organized biological creatures (part of the information narrative), you must reconcile at least three things:
1. Does that define the concept of a God you think? You know, a final cause, a prime mover, a thing-in-itself that controls both the matter narratives and information narratives? Or does the concept relate to a thingie that has causal properties or power, kind of like your own metaphysical Will that causes you to do stuff?
2.Does this conclusion respond to the synthetic a priori judgment that all events must have a cause? If not, why not?
3. Is this conclusion true, false, logically necessary, or something else? If false, please feel free to explain your answers using a similar form of logico-deductive reasoning if you can!!!
“Concerning matter, we have been all wrong. What we have called matter is energy, whose vibration has been so lowered as to be perceptible to the senses. There is no matter.” "Spooky Action at a Distance"
― Albert Einstein