Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie

Atheism/Existence of God Debates (Please Read OP)

Options
1270271273275276327

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 88 ✭✭Polarix


    _Redzer_ wrote: »
    So you can confidently say that matter cannot arise from nothing, yet you can say equality as confidently that god is the "unconditioned reality that all of reality depends".

    The correct answer is we don't know enough to make a statement either way.

    Exactly, but people can have a belief/non belief which way it might be.
    Just the same as some people believing that alien life exists out there somewhere, despite their being no evidence to date. Possibility is not evidence. Some people also believe that there is no alien life out there, again, they hold this position without any evidence.


  • Registered Users Posts: 107 ✭✭Penny 4 Thoughts


    robp wrote: »
    Matter just does not pop out of nothing

    Hi Robp,

    I've seen this argument made a number of times on various Christian blogs, particularly speakers such as William Craig Lane. I sympathise with the position, it seems logical to state that if you have absolutely nothing then you do not have the material to produce something since where would that come from in the first place.

    I'm curious though what do Christians believe matter is made out of if it was at some point created? When I discussed this with Christians before the answers tended to fall between the concept that the universe is made out of God, that matter is a form of what ever substance God is, the answer that God made the universe out of nothing. I can follow the first answer, it makes sense that the universe is made out of something else that existed before and and which is eternal. There is no issue then where this material came form since God is eternal and always existed. The second answer though seems to cause the same logical conflict discussed above, but it seems far more popular in modern Christianity, at least among the Christians I have talked to about it. One Christian put it to me that it is illogical for something to exist out of nothing, but God is not constrained by logic and thus this is not an issue. This in itself seems a logical paradox, if there exists anyway that matter can exist out of nothing then it is not illogical that matter can exist out of nothing.

    Can I ask what you believe in relation to where the matter God created ultimately came from?

    Thanks
    Penny :)


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    MrPudding wrote: »
    I take issue with a couple of your words. Arduous, for example. I would not say that religious moral rules are arduous.
    Yes they are arduous. they are extremely arduous and challenging. Anyone who is Christian, Jewish or Muslim can testify to that. This is widely accepted.
    MrPudding wrote: »
    I assume you are trying to run the old line that without a belief in god one cannot be a moral being? I am fine with that, to be perfectly honest. I am happy to be immoral, by your standards. I engage in sex before marriage, I use contraception, I have children, but I am not married, I think the RCC is a despicable organisation, I support gay rights and gay marriage. Does that make me immoral? Good, I am happy with that.
    MrP
    No you are completely missing the point. I am making no judments of how secular people live their lives. I was demonstrating that smacl 's arguments can give weight to theism as well as against theism as he/she was doing. I was doing that by giving a crude basis for selection for atheist beliefs.

    MrPudding wrote: »
    Says renowned physicist robp.

    MrP
    A reverse appeal to authority. Its not an opinion. Physics does not allow for matter to come from nothing. It has to be repeated over and over again as many new atheists are in denial about this.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    Hi Robp,

    I've seen this argument made a number of times on various Christian blogs, particularly speakers such as William Craig Lane. I sympathise with the position, it seems logical to state that if you have absolutely nothing then you do not have the material to produce something since where would that come from in the first place.

    I'm curious though what do Christians believe matter is made out of if it was at some point created? When I discussed this with Christians before the answers tended to fall between the concept that the universe is made out of God, that matter is a form of what ever substance God is, the answer that God made the universe out of nothing. I can follow the first answer, it makes sense that the universe is made out of something else that existed before and and which is eternal. There is no issue then where this material came form since God is eternal and always existed. The second answer though seems to cause the same logical conflict discussed above, but it seems far more popular in modern Christianity, at least among the Christians I have talked to about it. One Christian put it to me that it is illogical for something to exist out of nothing, but God is not constrained by logic and thus this is not an issue. This in itself seems a logical paradox, if there exists anyway that matter can exist out of nothing then it is not illogical that matter can exist out of nothing.

    Can I ask what you believe in relation to where the matter God created ultimately came from?

    Thanks
    Penny :)

    I would go with the first suggestion. For the matter to come from nothing it would imply the universe its self is eternal and there a great deal of evidence against this.

    I am going to post more on the where did God come from question via the work of Robert Spitzer.


    Something cannot come from nothing, except that is if it always existed. If a reality doesn’t have a beginning, if it is not conditioned in its existence, and if it is not conditioned by time, that reality does not have to have a creator—it does not have to have a cause for its existence, because it was never nothing

    There is nothing in the world of logic that requires every being to have a creator or a cause. The only beings that require a creator or a cause, are those which have a beginning, those which are dependent on something else for their existence, and those which are conditioned by time.

    God is defined as not having a beginning, that is not dependent on anything for its existence, and that is not conditioned by time, as what is eternal does not need a cause.

    How do know the universe was not eternal? Tthere is an increasing amount of evidence from physics, the philosophy of mathematics, and metaphysics that imply and even require that the universe has a beginning e.g. Borde-Vilenkin-Guth 2003 theorem, entropy, the Borde-Vilenkin 1993 theorem, etc. These questions don’t come up with respect to God because there must be at least one thing—that does not have a beginning, is not dependent on anything for its existence, and is not conditioned by time.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,788 ✭✭✭MrPudding


    robp wrote: »
    Yes they are arduous. they are extremely arduous and challenging. Anyone who is Christian, Jewish or Muslim can testify to that. This is widely accepted.
    But their main feature is pointlessness, and that kind of wipes out the arduousness of it. The non-silly things, like not murdering, not stealing etc, do you consider those arduous? I know I don't. So I guess that you are talking about things like not playing with your bits and not having sex before marriage? What, exactly, is wrong with these things? Why should we not do them?

    I would suggest that if they are rejected it is less to do with how arduous they are, and more to do with the fact that they appear to be without foundation.
    robp wrote: »
    No you are completely missing the point. I was demonstrating that smacl 's arguments can give weight to for theism as well as against theism. I was doing that by giving a crude basis for selection for atheist beliefs.
    I don't think many, if any, atheists are atheist for this reason. It is kind of stupid. You are effectively saying that atheist chose to be atheists not because they reject the evidence for gods, but because they want to masturbate and have sex without getting married. The issue with this is that to arrive at atheism by this route the atheist must believe that god exists, but ignore that belief in order to have an easy life. The logical extension of this is that this same person must believe that the restrictions they are ignoring, in order to have an easy life, mean that they are jeopardising their immortal soul, just to have a bit of fun... How does that make any sense? I would suggest that very few people come to atheism by this route, it's kind of stupid. I think the more likely scenario is mine, I looked at the evidence for gods and found it to be lacking. As a result I decided I was an atheist, an agnostic atheist with anti-theist tendencies to be more accurate. I came to this position not to have an easy life, but because it seems to me to be the correct position, given the evidence currently available. By a happy coincidence, I can also masturbate as much as I want, within the strictures of criminal law and what society deems to be acceptable, and I can have sex before marriage and use contraception if I choose to. I can also, quite happily, choose to support my fellow human beings that do not share my attraction for the opposite sex, but prefer their own, without threat of displeasing some idiot in a silly hat or the god he claims to speak for. All in all, it's win win.

    robp wrote: »
    A reverse appeal to authority. Its not an opinion. Physics does not allow for matter to come from nothing. By the way this is not a particularly central proof of God for theists but it has to be repeated over and over again as many new atheists are in denial about this.
    So, if you were sitting in the canteen at work, describing a problem you had, let say some kind of medical problem which had you quite worried and one of your colleagues, one without any background in medicine, offered you some advice, the veracity of which you doubted, if you said to him you would see what you doctor said, would that be an appeal to authority?

    Don't get me wrong, I love logical fallacies, but that does not take away from the fact that if you want to know what is wrong with you, medically, you go to the doctor, and if you want to discuss the origin of the universe you talk to someone that knows a little about physics, and not someone who's entire life in invested in the scientists being wrong.

    MrP


  • Advertisement
  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    MrPudding wrote: »
    But their main feature is pointlessness, and that kind of wipes out the arduousness of it. The non-silly things, like not murdering, not stealing etc, do you consider those arduous? I know I don't. So I guess that you are talking about things like not playing with your bits and not having sex before marriage? What, exactly, is wrong with these things? Why should we not do them?

    I would suggest that if they are rejected it is less to do with how arduous they are, and more to do with the fact that they appear to be without foundation.
    Not at all. Your whole argument seems to revolve around that leading a moral life is pretty easy. Its simply not. There are conflicts all around us that present challenges in secular and religious morality. Should I give up meat? Should I support social welfare reform? Should I give to charities when I am uncertain about where the money goes. Is giving a few a bob to charity really living for the poor as Francis calls out to us to do. How as a Christian can I live out God's plan and not my selfish desires. There is a lot more the Christianity morality then masturbation and causal sex.
    MrPudding wrote: »
    So, if you were sitting in the canteen at work, describing a problem you had, let say some kind of medical problem which had you quite worried and one of your colleagues, one without any background in medicine, offered you some advice, the veracity of which you doubted, if you said to him you would see what you doctor said, would that be an appeal to authority?[/B]
    Its pretty easy to check this stuff. We don't need to rest upon someone's degree.

    MrPudding wrote: »
    Don't get me wrong, I love logical fallacies, but that does not take away from the fact that if you want to know what is wrong with you, medically, you go to the doctor, and if you want to discuss the origin of the universe you talk to someone that knows a little about physics, and not someone who's entire life in invested in the scientists being wrong.
    Have I ? That is the first I heard about it. I might not be a physicist but I do consider myself a scientist.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,555 ✭✭✭antiskeptic


    I'm curious though what do Christians believe matter is made out of if it was at some point created?

    Energy? Physics tells us that M = E/Csquared and that energy can't be created or destroyed (which all sounds very eternally existent) but merely converted from one form to another


  • Registered Users Posts: 107 ✭✭Penny 4 Thoughts


    robp wrote: »
    I would go with the first suggestion.

    Thanks for answering the question. So if Christianity is true we are in essence fashioned out of the material that God is composed of, for want of a better term. There is something rather poetic about that, similar to the secular notion that we are all star dust :)


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,255 ✭✭✭tommy2bad


    Thanks for answering the question. So if Christianity is true we are in essence fashioned out of the material that God is composed of, for want of a better term. There is something rather poetic about that, similar to the secular notion that we are all star dust :)

    Well the secular notion that we are stardust is in fact true, the idea that we are made from 'god stuff' is not, it's not even a Christian notion.
    I'm not 100% sure that science tell us that the universe came from nothing, no I'll rephrase that I'm not sure that science makes any claim about what existed or didn't exist before the universe existed.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    tommy2bad wrote: »
    I'm not sure that science makes any claim about what existed or didn't exist before the universe existed.
    There is huge interest in studying pre-Big Bang existence. It is inevitable that it is really hard to find direct pre-Big Bang evidence but it is not impossible to study and to create models. Many pre-Big Bang scenarios have been suggested but they are very unlikely. Maybe one day we will be able to prove a pre-Big Bang existence but an eternal universe is conclusively improbable for scientific reasons.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 2,247 ✭✭✭pauldla


    robp wrote: »
    There is huge interest in studying pre-Big Bang existence. It is inevitable that it is really hard to find direct pre-Big Bang evidence but it is not impossible to study and to create models. Many pre-Big Bang scenarios have been suggested but they are very unlikely. Maybe one day we will be able to prove a pre-Big Bang existence but an eternal universe is conclusively improbable for scientific reasons.

    Sorry, I'm confused by the term 'conclusively improbable'. Could you explain it, please?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    pauldla wrote: »
    Sorry, I'm confused by the term 'conclusively improbable'. Could you explain it, please?
    I was just trying to say it doesn't make sense. An eternal universe doesn't make sense.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    robp wrote: »
    I was just trying to say it doesn't make sense. An eternal universe doesn't make sense.

    That is just to our current understanding though is it not ? And hasn't that always been the case since we first walked upright ?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    marienbad wrote: »
    That is just to our current understanding though is it not ? And hasn't that always been the case since we first walked upright ?

    There are good mathematical reasons for an eternal universe not to be possible.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    robp wrote: »
    There are good mathematical reasons for an eternal universe not to be possible.

    That is not answering my point though . Is there good mathematical reasons for the existence of god ?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    marienbad wrote: »
    That is not answering my point though.

    Sure. I didn't really answer your question. I can give the example of Aristotle, Galileo and Newton as people who saw the universe as eternal. I think (but not certain) it was a popular idea until Einstein revised this. So its not true that people have always assumed the universe is finite.
    marienbad wrote: »
    That is not answering my point though . Is there good mathematical reasons for the existence of god ?
    Yes. There is indirect mathematical evidence of God.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    robp wrote: »
    Sure. I didn't really answer your question. I can give the example of Aristotle, Galileo and Newton as people who saw the universe as eternal. I think (but not certain) it was a popular idea until Einstein revised this. So its not true that people have always assumed the universe is finite.

    Yes. There is indirect mathematical evidence of God.

    But overall though going back to the dawn of time we always attributed what we didn't know to God and as we increased our knowledge we realized we were wrong 100 % of the time .

    So how is this any different ? Is it not more reasonable to assume that as we have always been wrong attributing something to God we are wrong now also and our knowledge just needs to catch up ?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    marienbad wrote: »
    But overall though going back to the dawn of time we always attributed what we didn't know to God and as we increased our knowledge we realized we were wrong 100 % of the time.
    Your are not qualifying that statement. Its a pure assumption. there is a lot things we don't know about past worldviews. Even in with traditional societies that survived until the early 20th cen there are crucial gaps missing in our knowledge of their traditional belief systems, and we are almost completely clueless about beliefs at the 'dawn of time'.

    I can think of many cases were God is not the fall back explanation in traditional societies. In fact a monotheistic God/creator God is often the last thing to be blamed.

    marienbad wrote: »
    So how is this any different ? Is it not more reasonable to assume that as we have always been wrong attributing something to God we are wrong now also and our knowledge just needs to catch up ?
    Its a false assumption. Look at medical medicine. People used naturalistic explanations (e.g. Miasma or Humour theory ) even though they really did not understand the science of the human body.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    robp wrote: »
    Your are not qualifying that statement. Its a pure assumption. there is a lot things we don't know about past worldviews. Even in with traditional societies that survived until the early 20th cen there are crucial gaps missing in our knowledge of their traditional belief systems, and we are almost completely clueless about beliefs at the 'dawn of time'.

    I can think of many cases were God is not the fall back explanation in traditional societies. In fact a monotheistic God/creator God is often the last thing to be blamed.


    Its a false assumption. Look at medical medicine. People used naturalistic explanations (e.g. Miasma or Humour theory ) even though they really did not understand the science of the human body.

    I meant 'dawn of time' just as a figure of speech . But we do know enough of what people attributed to God from all the texts and scriptures available to us . And as our knowledge increased through the centuries we found in every case that it was our lack of knowledge that explained why we believed that God did this that or the other.

    Not once has the God explanation stood us to scrutiny as our knowledge advanced. And in this particular discussion the limits of our knowledge is 'what happened before the big bang' and again you are reaching for the God did it explanation . I am just asking as this has never held through in our recorded history why would it be so now ?

    Is'nt the more reasonable explanation that our current knowledge isn't up to it ,but as always we will understand it in time , but new questions will arise to baffle us.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    marienbad wrote: »
    I meant 'dawn of time' just as a figure of speech . But we do know enough of what people attributed to God from all the texts and scriptures available to us . And as our knowledge increased through the centuries we found in every case that it was our lack of knowledge that explained why we believed that God did this that or the other.

    Not once has the God explanation stood us to scrutiny as our knowledge advanced. And in this particular discussion the limits of our knowledge is 'what happened before the big bang' and again you are reaching for the God did it explanation . I am just asking as this has never held through in our recorded history why would it be so now ?

    Is'nt the more reasonable explanation that our current knowledge isn't up to it ,but as always we will understand it in time , but new questions will arise to baffle us.
    A nice bit of tautology there. This is what you claim but you will have a hard proving it as its a flawed conclusion.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    robp wrote: »
    A nice bit of tautology there. This is what you claim but you will have a hard proving it as its a flawed conclusion.

    Can you elaborate on that please.

    Can you give me any instance in our history where phenomena we attributed to God turned out not to have a scientific explanation ?

    Have we not always just pushed our ignorance ahead of us only to have it debunked as our knowledge progressed ?

    And if so why is this question any different ?


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,255 ✭✭✭tommy2bad


    I'm gona watch this play out between Marien and Robp as it an interesting idea. We have always been wrong about what God is before so it's likely we are wrong this time too.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,338 ✭✭✭nozzferrahhtoo


    Thank you. I've opened a thread in the A&A forum for your attention.

    If you say so. Have you anything to add on the subject of this thread, or are we pretty much agreed that you have no arguments, evidence, data or reasoning to offer to substantiation the claim that a non human intelligent intentional agent is responsible for the creation and/or subsequent maintenance of our universe?
    robp wrote: »
    As a theist I find the trust that atheists put in dismissing theism is irrational.

    Except it isnt. There is nothing at all irrational about dismissing unsubstantiated claims as unsubstantiated. And that is all we are doing. We are not "dismissing" theism so much as we are pointing out that the assertions of theism (such as the existence of god) are just that: Assertions. And assertions that are entirely unsubstantiated in even the tiniest way at this time.
    robp wrote: »
    Matter just does not pop out of nothing

    More assertion from you. How do you know it does not? Can you substantiate this positive claim you have just made? Actually we observe particles popping in and out of existence all the time, so your assertion appears to be wrong on the face of it. I would recommend you watch the video "A universe from nothing" from Laurence Krauss on You Tube for more details on this.

    It is double wrong however due to the assumption built into it. Why is nothing the default and matter has to be explained? Why is "something" not default?
    Polarix wrote: »
    Just the same as some people believing that alien life exists out there somewhere

    I would not say it is "just" the same. There is one subtle but important difference. Us. The fact we know life exists in this universe (us) lends at least a small level of credence to the idea that there might be other such life. Not massive credence mind you, but not none either.

    Contrast this to the claim there is a god. This is supported by nothing at all, in any way, anywhere, that I have been made aware of. There simply is no arguments, evidence, data or reasoning on offer (much less on this thread) to substantiate this claim even a little bit that there is such an entity.

    So no I would not say "Just the same" at all here. I see differences.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,247 ✭✭✭pauldla


    robp wrote: »
    I was just trying to say it doesn't make sense. An eternal universe doesn't make sense.

    Then why not just say that it doesn't make sense to you? 'An eternal universe is conclusively improbable for scientific reasons' sounds weighty, but on closer inspection I don't see any merit in it at all. 'Conclusively improbable', to me, sounds as scientific as a 'definite maybe'. To elaborate, we are told that vast majority of our cosmos is comprised of dark energy and dark matter, of which we know not a great deal at all. If this is indeed the case, how can we then talk 'conclusively' about the 'improbability' of an eternal universe 'for scientific reasons'? To me, it seems that the most that we can safely say is that we don't know if the universe is eternal, but we're still looking into it.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    marienbad wrote: »
    Can you elaborate on that please.

    Can you give me any instance in our history where phenomena we attributed to God turned out not to have a scientific explanation ?

    Have we not always just pushed our ignorance ahead of us only to have it debunked as our knowledge progressed ?

    And if so why is this question any different ?
    hmm existence..

    Lets take the example of a medieval person sick with the Black Death. This particular medieval person believes in providence. They believe the black death is a divine punishment. So its the kind of person in the God of the Gaps theory you refer to. But why do you assume that they have do not believe the disease arises by a naturalistic mechanism which in turn caused by God? if this is the case then their belief is the same as typical modern day Christians. The only difference being most modern Christian don't accept providence. This antidote reveals that the notion of a retreating God of the Gaps is based on an untested generalisation about how people explain things.


    More assertion from you. How do you know it does not? Can you substantiate this positive claim you have just made? Actually we observe particles popping in and out of existence all the time, so your assertion appears to be wrong on the face of it. I would recommend you watch the video "A universe from nothing" from Laurence Krauss on You Tube for more details on this.
    The nothingness you refer to is a quantum state. Its a low energy field with dimensions subject to constants. Its very little but it is unequivocally incorrect to claim its nothing. Nothing has to be the default as the universe cannot have existed for ever.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    robp wrote: »
    hmm existence..

    Lets take the example of a medieval person sick with the Black Death. This particular medieval person believes in providence. They believe the black death is a divine punishment. So its the kind of person in the God of the Gaps theory you refer to. But why do you assume that they have do not believe the disease arises by a naturalistic mechanism which in turn caused by God? if this is the case then their belief is the same as typical modern day Christians. The only difference being most modern Christian don't accept providence. This antidote reveals that the notion of a retreating God of the Gaps is based on an untested generalisation about how people explain things.



    The nothingness you refer to is a quantum state. Its a low energy field with dimensions subject to constants. Its very little but it is unequivocally incorrect to claim its nothing. Nothing has to be the default as the universe cannot have existed for ever.

    You are still not answering my question , it makes to difference how they explain the Black Death, some may have got it right some may have got it wrong .But it is not what I am asking.

    Is their any instance in recorded history where any phenomena previously attributed to God has stood the test of our advancing knowledge ?

    Now the frontier of our knowledge is what happened before the big bang and I am simply asking based on our track record why this should be any different ?


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    marienbad wrote: »
    Is their any instance in recorded history where any phenomena previously attributed to God has stood the test of our advancing knowledge ?

    Its an problematic question for several reasons.

    i) untestable phenomena. Many of things that are reported cannot be tested. Many are historical events that no scientific achievements can shed light on so its very hard to prove it ether way. Take Fatima for example, there is no way to prove or disprove it as it is a historical event which we can not go back to.

    ii)Disagreement on the claimed phenomena amongst theists. Since the beginning of Christianity many Christians have believed naturalistic explanations can explain the phenomena we see around us but many do not. Many see supernatural processes much more closely at play. In your God of the of Gaps theory you are referring to people in general, but how can you define that when there is little agreement. Its not reasonable to project beliefs of less educated religious and their potential errors on more educated religious.

    I would argue the biggest questions which religious people ask today are no different to the questions they asked right through history. I do not sense any theological retreat from ordinary life into astrophysics.
    marienbad wrote: »
    Now the frontier of our knowledge is what happened before the big bang and I am simply asking based on our track record why this should be any different ?
    Its fundamentally flawed to pick something considered impossible e.g. an eternal universe and to label it a frontier of science on a whim.

    A more credible frontier would be understanding gravitational waves or say creating lab grown organs. Somewhere there is a basis to start from.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,463 ✭✭✭marienbad


    robp wrote: »
    Its an problematic question for several reasons.

    i) untestable phenomena. Many of things that are reported cannot be tested. Many are historical events that no scientific achievements can shed light on so its very hard to prove it ether way. Take Fatima for example, there is no way to prove or disprove it as it is a historical event which we can not go back to.

    ii)Disagreement on the claimed phenomena amongst theists. Since the beginning of Christianity many Christians have believed naturalistic explanations can explain the phenomena we see around us but many do not. Many see supernatural processes much more closely at play. In your God of the of Gaps theory you are referring to people in general, but how can you define that when there is little agreement. Its not reasonable to project beliefs of less educated religious and their potential errors on more educated religious.

    I would argue the biggest questions which religious people ask today are no different to the questions they asked right through history. I do not sense any theological retreat from ordinary life into astrophysics.

    Its fundamentally flawed to pick something considered impossible e.g. an eternal universe and to label it a frontier of science on a whim.

    A more credible frontier would be understanding gravitational waves or say creating lab grown organs. Somewhere there is a basis to start from.

    Then pick any frontier you like , it still doesn't affect the question I am asking you.

    Is there any phenomena in recorded history previously attributed to God that in fact was just our own ignorance as subsequently shown by the advancement of our knowledge .

    Why would this be any different in the case of- pick any example you like- this time round ?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,019 ✭✭✭nagirrac


    All the scientific evidence we have supports the view that our observed space time universe had a beginning. That is not to say that an eternal universe is "impossible", it is entirely possible as Sean Carroll has proposed, however there is no scientific evidence to support it.

    It is really important to separate philosophy from science. Unless we can observe something, make predictions about how it should behave, and devise experiments to test these predictions, it ain't science. Science is based on observation and experiment, and as we have neither for eternal universes, multiverses, etc. they should be correctly viewed as speculation. Scientists are as entitled as anyone to speculate on philosophical questions, but imo it is a mistake to invoke highly speculative "science" to make a philosophical argument. Krauss' book on "nothing" for example is a philosophical argument against the ideas of theism based on the highly speculative work of Viliken and Guth.

    Personally I think (based on the evidence that I am aware of) that our observed space time universe had a beginning, but emerged from an eternal universe outside our window of observation. The most fascinating area of investigation I have seen recently is the discovery of the amplituhedron, a "jewel like geometric figure that dramatically simplifies calculations of particle interactions". The implications of this discovery are that what we have thought of as fundamental in nature such as locality and space time itself may not be fundamental at all, but are rather human constructs that do not exist in nature, or are illusionary. Our brains may be creating a much bigger delusion than any religious delusions we scoff at. Now that this object has been observed, it will be interesting to see where it leads and what experiments can be ran to investigate it further.

    Whatever about wrapping our heads around what happened before the big bang, it will be an entirely different challenge if we have to abandon our model of our space time universe and replace it with a model that is based on our universe arising out of pure geometry. If God exists, then it suggests he/she is a mathematician, or more precisely a geometer.

    https://www.simonsfoundation.org/quanta/20130917-a-jewel-at-the-heart-of-quantum-physics/


  • Advertisement
  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,934 ✭✭✭robp


    nagirrac wrote: »
    Mostly that is a very interesting and reasonable post.

    Though just to hit on one point
    nagirrac wrote: »
    All the scientific evidence we have supports the view that our observed space time universe had a beginning. That is not to say that an eternal universe is "impossible", it is entirely possible as Sean Carroll has proposed, however there is no scientific evidence to support it.
    I hate to use the word impossible for anything but there is good reasons against it, principally that it ultimately breaks the laws of thermodynamics. To explain an eternal universe you need a whole new set of (100% hypothetical) laws of physics. Of course believing such laws could have existed requires quite a leap of faith.


This discussion has been closed.
Advertisement