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Nobuo wrote:-It is obvious that the universe has order(an object always falls back to the ground assuming it doesn't achieve escape velocity first, etc.); this order must be either incidental (as an Atheist or Mystic would maintain), illusionary (as Gnostics promote), or purposeful (as all true religion believes)
Nobuo wrote:-If the universe is orderly, that order has purpose
Nobuo wrote:and there is nothing beyond the universe (we are already assuming the order is not illusionary)
Nobuo wrote:Two things: I was worried someone might misinterpret that "that" in "if the universe is orderly..." as a "then", however if you pay close attention the logical statement is an if with three conditions and -then- a conclusion (a sentient universe). I am not assuming that the universe is necessarily sentient as evidenced in the axiom above the one you're referring to, this is the only thing I am taking on faith here but I have a one third chance of being right.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Nobuo wrote:this is the only thing I am taking on faith here but I have a one third chance of being right.
Nobuo wrote:Are you seriously suggesting Ambrose, that faith (or at least gambling spirit) never enters into the equation with religion? I'm not claiming I know that I'm right, I very might well be wrong. I am only presenting the logic which flows from the one assumption I am making, which is far less faith then is required for devotion to most religions. Even if you want to discuss pure philosophy you still need to have faith in order to believe arguments made by historical philosophers (from Plato to Heraclitus to Parmenides).
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Nobuo wrote:and there is nothing beyond the universe (we are already assuming the order is not illusionary)
If you're making an argument for/against a religion, you can't just make that assumption.
If the universe is orderly, the order has purpose, then the universe is sentient itself and can be called God.
The reason for all evil and suffering in the universe is free will and desireāif we were all intuitive (and therefore God), there would be no imperfections in the universe; God cannot interfere with the matters of free will...
Grooveman2007 wrote:By most current readings scientists predict that the universe has a radius of approximately 30 trillion light years (I might be off but stick with me) and that we are in the middle. This raises the question of weather or not light decays. Since light behaves like both a wave and a partical, it is entirerly plausable to assume that it does, thus proving the possibility of an infinite universe.
Nobuo wrote:Grooveman, I don't understand your cosmological argument; if the universe were infinite as you claim (based on faith) wouldn't this increase the divinity of it?
Secondly, a dice is a bad example of order--it is influenced by free will (us) and therefore not "God" (this is true of the atmosphere on a human inhabited planet if people were wondering about the implications this makes for CC). But yes on a macroscopic and quantum scale probability will even out--either you believe that each event is random, illusory, or not.
As far as God creating us, I already said he didn't, read carefully.
I do not take myself that seriously nor do I take this argument too seriously, so I take the fact that I'm bringing "Intelleegence" to the forum as a compliment. I am not attempting mass religious conversion here, I just thought people would be intrigued by my addition of logic to what is normally entirely faith.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Nobuo wrote:I just thought people would be intrigued by my addition of logic to what is normally entirely faith.
Nobuo wrote:I consider myself an agnostic, personally because as I have already said, Ambrose, I can't ultimately prove any of this. I find that pantheism is the most attractive possibility for the nature of reality out there, though, so I choose to believe it at the same. If you consider yourself atheist then I would very much like to hear your proof of the nonexistence of God and the purposelessness of order.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Grooveman2007 wrote:By most current readings scientists predict that the universe has a radius of approximately 30 trillion light years (I might be off but stick with me) and that we are in the middle. This raises the question of weather or not light decays. Since light behaves like both a wave and a partical, it is entirerly plausable to assume that it does, thus proving the possibility of an infinite universe.
The concept of an infinite universe violates the laws of thermodynamics, so I think that it's ridiculous to make any "assumption" of that sort.
Grooveman2007 wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Grooveman2007 wrote:By most current readings scientists predict that the universe has a radius of approximately 30 trillion light years (I might be off but stick with me) and that we are in the middle. This raises the question of weather or not light decays. Since light behaves like both a wave and a partical, it is entirerly plausable to assume that it does, thus proving the possibility of an infinite universe.
The concept of an infinite universe violates the laws of thermodynamics, so I think that it's ridiculous to make any "assumption" of that sort.
The concept of an infinite universe follows the laws of thermodynamics. The third law states "As temperature approaches absolute zero, the entropy of a system approaches a constant minimum."
In a limited universe, absolute zero must be reached once you exit the boundrys of it, since if there is nothing, there is no energy. The third law makes absolute zero impossible. A finite universe would break the third law.
The first law states "In any process, the total energy of the universe remains at large."
In no way does an infinate universe break that law. What this says is that energy can neither be created nor destroyed. An infinate universe has an infinate amount of energy, one can not add or subtract from infinity.
The second law states "The entropy of an isolated system not in equilibrium will tend to increase over time, approaching a maximum value at equilibrium."
If energy is infinate, then it will always increase its entropy, but at the same time, the matter around the energy is also infinate. The infinate energy would disperse itself throughout the equally infinate matter, reaching an equilibrium.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:I believe that blind faith should be avoided as much as possible.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:I'm not an atheist, I'm a Catholic.
Nobuo wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:I believe that blind faith should be avoided as much as possible.OnlyAmbrose wrote:I'm not an atheist, I'm a Catholic.
Needless to say I don't quite understand. Do you believe that God is anthropomorphic? Do you believe that Jesus was alive forever, incarnated as a being both perfect and imperfect at the same time? Do you believe that we all go to heaven, regardless of whether we discover infinite truth during our lifetime? This seems like faith to me.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Grooveman2007 wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Grooveman2007 wrote:By most current readings scientists predict that the universe has a radius of approximately 30 trillion light years (I might be off but stick with me) and that we are in the middle. This raises the question of weather or not light decays. Since light behaves like both a wave and a partical, it is entirerly plausable to assume that it does, thus proving the possibility of an infinite universe.
The concept of an infinite universe violates the laws of thermodynamics, so I think that it's ridiculous to make any "assumption" of that sort.
The concept of an infinite universe follows the laws of thermodynamics. The third law states "As temperature approaches absolute zero, the entropy of a system approaches a constant minimum."
In a limited universe, absolute zero must be reached once you exit the boundrys of it, since if there is nothing, there is no energy. The third law makes absolute zero impossible. A finite universe would break the third law.
The first law states "In any process, the total energy of the universe remains at large."
In no way does an infinate universe break that law. What this says is that energy can neither be created nor destroyed. An infinate universe has an infinate amount of energy, one can not add or subtract from infinity.
The second law states "The entropy of an isolated system not in equilibrium will tend to increase over time, approaching a maximum value at equilibrium."
If energy is infinate, then it will always increase its entropy, but at the same time, the matter around the energy is also infinate. The infinate energy would disperse itself throughout the equally infinate matter, reaching an equilibrium.
Your knowledge of thermodynamics is clearly superior to mine, so I'll concede the point. But I'm having a little trouble regarding the concept of infinite matter.
Though firstly I'd like to point out that because an infinite universe is "possible" doesn't make it likely. Now, back to my point.
If matter and energy is expanding from one point, and if all the matter of the universe is infinite, then are you saying that an infinite amount of matter existed at one point? The Big Bang theory suggests that the space in which the matter of the universe fit in at one point was measurable. I fail to see how an infinite amount of matter can exist in a measurable point.
Grooveman2007 wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Grooveman2007 wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Grooveman2007 wrote:By most current readings scientists predict that the universe has a radius of approximately 30 trillion light years (I might be off but stick with me) and that we are in the middle. This raises the question of weather or not light decays. Since light behaves like both a wave and a partical, it is entirerly plausable to assume that it does, thus proving the possibility of an infinite universe.
The concept of an infinite universe violates the laws of thermodynamics, so I think that it's ridiculous to make any "assumption" of that sort.
The concept of an infinite universe follows the laws of thermodynamics. The third law states "As temperature approaches absolute zero, the entropy of a system approaches a constant minimum."
In a limited universe, absolute zero must be reached once you exit the boundrys of it, since if there is nothing, there is no energy. The third law makes absolute zero impossible. A finite universe would break the third law.
The first law states "In any process, the total energy of the universe remains at large."
In no way does an infinate universe break that law. What this says is that energy can neither be created nor destroyed. An infinate universe has an infinate amount of energy, one can not add or subtract from infinity.
The second law states "The entropy of an isolated system not in equilibrium will tend to increase over time, approaching a maximum value at equilibrium."
If energy is infinate, then it will always increase its entropy, but at the same time, the matter around the energy is also infinate. The infinate energy would disperse itself throughout the equally infinate matter, reaching an equilibrium.
Your knowledge of thermodynamics is clearly superior to mine, so I'll concede the point. But I'm having a little trouble regarding the concept of infinite matter.
Though firstly I'd like to point out that because an infinite universe is "possible" doesn't make it likely. Now, back to my point.
If matter and energy is expanding from one point, and if all the matter of the universe is infinite, then are you saying that an infinite amount of matter existed at one point? The Big Bang theory suggests that the space in which the matter of the universe fit in at one point was measurable. I fail to see how an infinite amount of matter can exist in a measurable point.
Theory is not law, if a finite universe breaks the third law of thermodynamics, then we should trust the proven law over theory. Then again, how would it ever be possible to prove or disprove an infinate universe. We can't see further than 30 trillion light years, and if we were to "set sail" in one direction in hopes of finding an end and we never reached it, it could be claimed that the universe is just bigger than assumed. So, this is all an exercise in academic futility.
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