Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Quantum waffle.
Again, this is not an argument, but an unsupported assertion. You are saying that a primal cause must have free will, because otherwise it could not be a primal cause. This is circular.
Isn't it pointless to discuss energy outside the context of the universe?
Once again, you are assigning free will to a primal cause, rather than giving any logical reason why a primal cause must have free will.
Sure it is, you just have to assume that the primal cause must have free will, then stick your fingers in your ears and hum loudly.
It doesn't have a cause- if it had a cause, it wouldn't be a primal cause, now would it?
So this is the root of all this confusion- you are assuming that free will is a primal cause- not that a primal cause must have free will. Again, this is an assertion without support.
Not quite true. See General Relativity.
Try to listen to what you're saying. How can there logically be a time before time began? If indeed time had a beginning, you cannot look beyond that and ask what caused it, or what was there before. There would be no "before".
Perhaps for you. I require more than dogmatic assertions for me to accept your ideas as true.
I'm still waiting for you to apply reason to the concept of primal cause. Once you stop gracing us with absurdities such as "time before time", and "the cause of the first cause", and stop making assumptions and presenting them as logical deductions, we can start making progress in this discussion.
My italics. Another assumption you make without support, because it fits your presuppositions about primal cause.
An invalid argument, because it is not accepted as axiomatic that effects are necessarily contained within their cause, or that causes must endure as long as their effects do.
It is possible that the universe has undergone an infinite number of expansion/collapse cycles extending an infinite time in the past. There would therefore be no first cause, and your assertion that this scenario is impossible is completely
unsupported.
Edited for formatting
lifegazer said:
A primal-cause exhibits free-will. It has to, otherwise it cannot be the primal-cause of the effects it produces.
Again, this is not an argument, but an unsupported assertion. You are saying that a primal cause must have free will, because otherwise it could not be a primal cause. This is circular.
We're discussing the [potential] energy of a primal-cause here.
Isn't it pointless to discuss energy outside the context of the universe?
The flow of this energy (the yields of this energy), are determined by the primal-cause itself (being the sole cause of the effects).
Hence, the primal-cause has free-will, meaning that it has free (indeterminable) energy to act however it likes.
Once again, you are assigning free will to a primal cause, rather than giving any logical reason why a primal cause must have free will.
My post headed "quantum waffle", posted earlier today, explains how philosophy could have predicted the essential indeterminism of nature's energy/being long before science ever did. The existence of a God would necessitate that this be true.
Quantum mechanics is actually a proof that the energy of existence proceeds from a source with absolute free-will. Really, it is.
Sure it is, you just have to assume that the primal cause must have free will, then stick your fingers in your ears and hum loudly.
If you take away free-will from a primal-cause, then what else causes it to produce the effects it creates?
It doesn't have a cause- if it had a cause, it wouldn't be a primal cause, now would it?
Without free-will, you automatically transfer responsibility for the creation of the effects from the primal-cause to something else beyond its control. Reason cannot accept that something can be a primal-cause if it doesn't have absolute sovereignity over the effects that it produces. Taking away free-will takes away that sovereignity.
So this is the root of all this confusion- you are assuming that free will is a primal cause- not that a primal cause must have free will. Again, this is an assertion without support.
Time = change.
Not quite true. See General Relativity.
Something can exist before change (time) is
effected. Indeed, clearly, this must be the case: for change to occur, something must exist from whence it can occur.
Try to listen to what you're saying. How can there logically be a time before time began? If indeed time had a beginning, you cannot look beyond that and ask what caused it, or what was there before. There would be no "before".
I already did it in a manner which should suffice:
Perhaps for you. I require more than dogmatic assertions for me to accept your ideas as true.
If we apply reason to the term "primal cause"
I'm still waiting for you to apply reason to the concept of primal cause. Once you stop gracing us with absurdities such as "time before time", and "the cause of the first cause", and stop making assumptions and presenting them as logical deductions, we can start making progress in this discussion.
It's just a matter of deduction. A primal-cause has no external needs = no external abode = is not finite in nature = is essentially boundless.
My italics. Another assumption you make without support, because it fits your presuppositions about primal cause.
A primal-cause creates everything within it... thus we have an omnipresent cause. Being the sole cause of all effects, a primal-cause is also omnipotent.
An invalid argument, because it is not accepted as axiomatic that effects are necessarily contained within their cause, or that causes must endure as long as their effects do.
"There can be no yield or effect that is dependent upon the culmination of an infinite number of other effects that have no origin. This post, for example, cannot be the yield of an infinite number of past effects without an origin. Something must have instigated the primal-act of events which culminated with this post. Therefore, there is a primal-cause.
Please counter.
It is possible that the universe has undergone an infinite number of expansion/collapse cycles extending an infinite time in the past. There would therefore be no first cause, and your assertion that this scenario is impossible is completely
unsupported.
Edited for formatting