Why not?
I know what?
Both. They're both equally valid objections to the same argument.
The argument from first cause says that everything must have a cause, except God for some reason. That's special pleading. It also assumes that the universe must have a cause with no reason for doing so.
Neither excludes the other; they're both just pointing out different problems with the argument.
Why can't I accept that anything finite can actually exist?
Well I see no difference between a space-time bubble(the known universe) and any other finite form, say a banana.
They are both finite, if finite, presumably they have a beginning and an end, both spatially and temporally(I am viewing the space time bubble from outside the bubble(subjectively)).
Or do they not have a beginning or end?
Now lets consider for sake of argument that nothing exists, there is no existence of anything. Fine no paradox, but I have evidence that something does exist, I am holding a banana in my hand.
How did that banana arise?
Could it have popped out of a state of total non existence of anything?
Or does it have no beginning or end?
You may have misunderstood my position regarding first cause, that is not my position. I threw the first cause argument out at the age of about ten.
I recollect an occasion at about that same time, I was about nine or ten. I went on a school trip to Birmingham university, my local font of knowledge. We had been told that we were to attend a lecture by a well renowned professor of physics and we should each think of a question to ask him.
Now I was already a budding philosopher and I already had my question, a question I had been asking folk for sometime.
During the lecture, the group of children I was in were wispering to each other asking who had a question to ask at the end, no one did, apart from me. When I told them what it was, they all said no! no! you cant ask that.
When the time came, they were trying to hold me down. I nearly faltered, being a shy child I didn't want to stand up amongst hundreds of school children and ask a question of this high and mighty professor, not least if it was a silly question, as I was being told.
Something inside me impelled me to stand up, I new this was my one chance to ask my question to some one who might be able to enlighten me as to the answer.
I stood up with my hand in the air, suddenly everyone looked round, the professor looked up at me and asked me for my question. So I said it,
"what is beyond the universe?", there was silence and gasps around me.
The professor realising there was a silence, said, "well we just don't know, its a good question though, thankyou for asking". I was treated as a fool and mocked for a few days after that.
Now I'm asking it again, because I still do not have an answer from a physicist.
Any answers?