thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,551
What's logical about Logical Deism? It makes absolutely no sense that there is any logic involved with belief in a god.
thaiboxerken said:What's logical about Logical Deism? It makes absolutely no sense that there is any logic involved with belief in a god.
MagsToastedSandwich said:Nope, I agree with TBK here. Belief in a god is not a position arrived at through the use of logic. Please explain to me how this thread is shot down easily? Using logic, of course?
I would say that since there is no evidence of god, one can logically conclude that such a thing does not exist, despite the assertions of millions upon millions of people.
UndercoverElephant said:
OK...maybe shot down is the wrong term. The point is that atheism is no more logical than theism/deism is. Abscence of evidence is not evidence of abscence. There is no direct evidence of God except for the existence of a Universe whose ultimate origin is itself inexplicable. Therefore agnosticism (or pantheism) is the only truly logical position to take.
...snip....
Is positing a Creator-intelligence really any more illogical than positing that it just popped into existence out of nothing with no explanation?
UndercoverElephant said:
...snip....
engineered-looking cosmos popped into existence.
...snip...
By the way aren't you being inconsistent here? You seem to have decided, with no evidence, that the origin of the universe is inexplicable. Surely since you believe that “absence of evidence is not evidence of absence” you should be "agnostic" about whether the universe’s ultimate origin is explicable or not?
Darat said:
What do you think this universe was engineered for?
UndercoverElephant said:Darat :
......
"how does something come from nothing" is absolutely impossible. Why? If you have NOTHING AT ALL, the how does anything follow it? Nothing can come from Nothing. And yet clearly something exists. This is a bit of a problem isn't it?
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Originally posted by Yahzi - some time ago
Randfan:
Since nobody answered your question, I will try.
There is a number called the Planck constant. Distances or times shorter than this cannot be measured.
Imagine a pair of particles (one positive and one negative) suddenly springing into being from nothing, and then recombining, anhilating themselves and leaving nothing behind. If they do this in less time than the Planck limit, then no one could have possibly noticed their existance. Hence, they might be doing it all the time.
(The astute reader will ask - what about the energy released when the particles combine? The answer is, that energy pays back the universe for the energy borrowed to create the particles in the first place. Lucky for us the two energies are exactly equal, otherwise Bad Things would happen.)
Now lets turn to black holes. Once something gets too close to a black hole (past the event horizion), it falls in. Suppose that one of these ephemeral particle pairs suddenly appears really close to a black hole - and one of the particles falls in!
Now his partner is like, wtf? He can't recombine and disapear, so he is stuck: he stays here, after the Planck limit expires, and now the poor bastich is Real. Stuck in the real world.
So now you have matter appearing from nothing at all. Wait a second, you ask: who pays back the universe for the energy borrowed to make that real particle? Hawking claims it's the black hole, and thus black holes slowly evaporate. Sort of like cosmic recycling.
In the original big bang, when the first two particles popped into being from nothing, there was no space-time. So the two particles occupied an infintely small space. Which means infinite pressure (try squeezing something into nothing!) And infinite pressure means a humonguous explosion. And after that, it was way too late for the little guys to get together again.
Nowdays there is some space and time, so the temporary particles don't have infinite pressure.
But just like the twin gods of Zorastorism, sooner or later those two primal particles will find each other, recombine, and the whole universe will then snuff out instantly. Only for it all to happen again later (well later is hard to define since without a universe there is no time.)
[Ok, I made the last paragraph up. But the rest is real physics.]
I sympathise with Franko. I just wish he would iron out the contradictions in his stated position. I can guess at some of his reasons for being unclear though.
UndercoverElephant said:Darat :
Well, I would point out that I am the sole person on this forum who has ever actually attempted to explain the the origin of the Universe from first principles, and trying to get people to accept that explanation was like pulling teeth, because it depends on things like self-existing mathematics, the objective existence of Infinity and the primacy of consciousness.
UndercoverElephant said:
But unless you are willing to accept things like these then answering the question "how does something come from nothing" is absolutely impossible. Why? If you have NOTHING AT ALL, the how does anything follow it? Nothing can come from Nothing. And yet clearly something exists. This is a bit of a problem isn't it?
...snip....
UndercoverElephant said:
Then you're making the same error that TBK is accusing Franko of. We live in a Universe that is arguably fine-tuned for the existence of life. We may have no direct objective evidence of the existence of God/Gods but neither do we have any objective explanation as to how this engineered-looking cosmos popped into existence.
Is positing a Creator-intelligence really any more illogical than positing that it just popped into existence out of nothing with no explanation?
UndercoverElephant said:
I said it was arguable that it appears engineered for the existence of life. However, I have gone to great lengths to provide a rebuttal to the argument from cosmic design - indeed the whole of my metaphysics was provoked by an attempt to provide a rebuttal, and yet it has been fiercely contested by the atheists here because they don't like the implications. They don't like the argument from cosmic design. They don't like the rebuttal either.
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How do you know that something coming from nothing is impossible?