Infinity is a mathematical concept and those who argue for a universe which is infinite spatio temporally, the same yesterday today and tomorrow need to somehow get from infinity being a mathematical concept to a physical reality. A problem some multiverse proposers share. The problem remains ''How can an actual infinity be observed and measured.'' I understand the jury is still out on whether an actual infinity is possible Gauss and Poincare thought not Cantor did.
This is a philosophical argument, not a scientific proof, so I don't need to measure infinity - I'm not positing a position, I'm highlighting the failings of the Cosmological argument, I'm showing the theoretical validity of the alternative that the argument is trying to discredit.
I thought we were talking about an infinite universe not an all powerful creator. If the universe is infinite then we are talking about the day to day because as I understand it the universe is in many respects the same today as yesterday and tomorrow or to put it mathematically the set represents the infinity.
None of us, on a day-to-day basis, are dealing with the entirety of existence, and so to fall back to 'common sense' impressions is to rely on cognitive biases and shortcuts that haven't been developed to operate at that scale, which is why they're misleading.
If what you say is true that there should be no intellectual shortcuts for talking about the entirety of existence then that goes against Hillside equating God creating the universe and Thor making thunder so this paragraph has been somewhat of a win/win for me.
Hillside is making his own points - we may have disagreements on some elements, agreements on others, but his argument stands or falls by the points he makes, not the points I make, and vice versa.
This nothing of yours sounds suspiciously like a something to me.
That's the current paradigm of 'nothing' - it's entirely possible that the classical contention of 'nothing' doesn't actually exist.
Nothing IS a balancing point? Nothing is split? Into matter and anti-matter. Unwarranted definition of the concept of nothing there.
No, that's the reality of nothing - if you're stuck in a pre-quantum, purely positive energy/matter understanding of physics then you may struggle to accept that. Do you accept that antimatter is a thing? If equal parts anti-matter and matter coincide they eliminate each other and you are left with... That process works in reverse, too.
That is plainly unfair. The article acknowledges in it's version of the Kalam that the first cause or first observer could be impersonal. Craig Lane certainly does make an argument for a personal cause why would he need to do this if he was not aware of the impersonal alternative?
I'm not sure how that's a criticism of the point that I made, I'm fully aware that Craig includes that point in his formulation. In this summary of Craig's position whomever is writing cites the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory and misunderstands the nature of the posited 'observer' in the formulation.
Again with all claims of an infinite universe how are you going to observe and measure this?
Again, for the purposes of this, I don't need to - I just to establish that it's viable, because this formulation of the cosmological argument is attempting a false dichotomy; establishing that even one of the possible alternatives is viable means that the logic fails to flow to support the claim.
A natural cause of the universe? External to it? That just extends the universe....
Right? The limitations of our universe that are highlighted by observation (an apparent start point, the inception of time) lead to the conclusion that it's finite in at least one direction, but that doesn't preclude it being part of something larger. The counterpoint here, a deity external to the universe, already relies on something extra-universal being viable; why should that be a deity but not an alternate physics?
besides the kalam argument as made in the article does recognise that the external creator is either personal or impersonal.
But, critically, fails to provide any support for that idea; it's focussed on attempting to invalid other possibilities, but unless it can identify all the possible alternative explanations, it's always going to fail. It's not a proof of anything, even if it worked, it's merely a revertion to 'we don't know for sure'.
I agree science is currently not remitted for an external creator.
Our current science is limited by practicality rather than ideology to events within the universe; there is no reason to presume that limitation is absolute, nor that anything is beyond science's remit. If there is an external creator, that is a cause that has measurable effects which can therefore be tested.
That you are bent on it being impersonal is due to a commitment to a belief rather than where the argument takes us.
This argument isn't intended to show that there isn't a personal deity, it's to show that this particular formation of an argument intended to show that there is is invalid.
O.