by MeDeFe on Mon Mar 24, 2008 4:58 am
Really, how that guy became a professor for philosophy is beyond me, unless you left something out.
1. intelligible - understandable, in the way that you can "get your mind around it", but where is the prerequisite of an explanation? Personally I'm quite happy to let, say, gravity go on and be something that comes with matter and just is. There are degrees of understanding as well, it's not a 1/0 issue.
And understandable in what way? In the way it works? That would in this case be the physical laws and whatnot. In 'where it all came from'? I'm not convinced knowing exactly down to the last detail how the universe started (or if it ever did) is necessary to understand the basic workings of the universe. (See 1/0 issue)
2. has just fallen flat on its face because there's a third option of partial understanding, but I'm not done yet, even if we allow for only his two options and disregard 3. that "We cannot ever fully understand the unvierse and where it came from" is not all that irrational and nicely allows a person to get on with other stuff than posting on an internet forum.
4. is correct under my previously stated premises
5. I'll accept these, mostly because I can't be bothered to think of any other.
6. Why do there have to be initial physical conditions outside of the universe? In a thread some time ago someone pointed out that there is evidence that a physical constant (I think something to do with electrons) has changed over the last 15B years. That shouldn't be possible since it's supposedly a constant, but if it is possible I really see no reason why there can't be initial conditions inside this universe at one point that simply don't occur nowadays and which started off the universe we see. A proto-universe so to speak, we've had that discussion as well, with time not yet an established dimension and suchlike, remember? He makes the scientific explanation look very simple, but hides the fact that C and L can take on some vastly complex forms.
7. The universe is dependent on something that is uncertain or will happen in the future? Pardon me, we, humanity, might be a little uncertain about whether and how the universe began, but that does in no way imply that the universe is uncertain about this, no matter what the explanation is. And if it should somehow turn out the universe is infinite, in age or extension either would suffice I think, then we'll be a huge step towards essential explanations, the universe then simply has to exist because there's no alternative.
8. And where did this Person come from? We're back to the old question of who created the creator, and that's one you cannot get out of. A creator outside of the universe "must" exist only if you can prove that nothing else can have caused it. And Tom Morris has shown nothing of the sort so far.
9. And now we give it a name, hey, let's call it Bob. And we ascribe attributes to it, "power" and "wisdom". Now really, the origins of the universe we largely see today might have required some large-scale border conditions, but "wisdom"?
This step is completely unnecessary and serves no other end than to introduce the term 'God' into the line of reasoning.
10. the conclusion has been shown not to follow, because the premises are flawed on several levels, thank you for your time.
And just in case you go and drag up names of famous scientists who mentioned "god", whatever they understood by that, some time. I'm not going to get too far into this, in most cases you have no idea what they meant by "god" and didn't mean, the same goes for me, admittedly, but just because someone mentions god does not mean they mean the god you believe in, or even a personal god at all.
The rest is metaphysical gibberish. Sorry, but that's what I see it as, it has not at all been shown that a creator is necessary, even if a creator were necessary it has not been shown that this being created every last detail and not just set things in motion. Even if you presuppose a creator it is not at all certain the we didn't just happen to evolve.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.