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... San Francisco's atheist blogger Greta Christian retorts, in her May 4 Atheist Meme of the Day,
"'Everything has to have a cause, therefore there must be a God' is a terrible argument for religion. If everything has to have a cause -- what caused God? And if God either always existed or came into being out of nothing -- why can't that be true for the universe?"
In short, "everything" refers to "everything which needs a cause". The "uncaused cause" is not physical, therefore needing no cause. Daniel Dennett in "Breaking the Spell" conjures the straw man reply that God is self-caused. God cannot "come into being" or he is not God, leaving the alternative that he always existed and is the necessary being from which all contingent being derives its being. The physical universe has not always existed but has a definite beginning, as explained below by physicist Brian Greene ...
"Everything which needs a cause"
Honestly, Maryann, where are you getting this nonsense ? What grounds do you have for using that term as if it referenced anything in reality ? It's made up. It was adopted from Aristotle as nothing more than a get-out-of-jail-free card for your god. How do you expect to get any respect for your so-called logical column if you insist on throwing in invented nonsense like that right off the bat ?The "uncaused cause" ...
Oh, it's not, is it ? How do you know ? Who told you ? Then, how do you imagine it "created" the physical world ? Magic ? The only examples we have ever experienced of interactions with our physical world are with other physical objects/forces. We have NEVER experienced a non-physical object/force; we have zero grounds for even imagining such might exist. Much less for the preposterous claim that, if such existed, it could interact with our physical world.... is not physical ...
So you say. Again, you totally ignore that - if you assert "no cause" as a privilege for your side - you are being hypocritical and illogical to then claim, as you later do, that "somebody got the ball rolling". Remind me, how do you, Maryann, determine which concepts fall into the category of "need somebody to get the ball rolling" and which don't ? Are we supposed to believe, just based on your unsupported word, that the "somebody" who (you think) got our ball rolling does not itself need a "somebody" to get it rolling ?... therefore needing no cause.
It's a sad little lie that Dennett conjures a straw man, and a quote-mine to boot. Here's the quote:Daniel Dennett in "Breaking the Spell" conjures the straw man reply that God is self-caused.
Why not ? Who says ? Against some law, is it, for god to come into being ? What law ?God cannot "come into being ..."
Damn fine logic you've got there. Either god matches your made-up condition, or god isn't god. Well, as an empty syllogism, yes, you're probably right. Either god matches the made-up definition of god, or by definition, god isn't god after all. But you, Maryann, have yet to advance your case for the actual existence of an entity matching your made-up definition by one iota here.... or he is not God, ...
... leaving the alternative that he always existed ...
My, my, you're really pulling in every crackpot philosophical concept you've ever heard of, aren't you. Please provide a scrap of evidence that there is any such thing as a "necessary being" named god. But for full credit, provide evidence that your particular "necessary being" is also the entity from which our real world actually "derives its being". Don't be afraid to admit that you can't do it. Far smarter people than you have admitted that it's an indefensible - or at best, an unfounded but not dis-proven - concept. We're certainly not going to take your unsupported assertion for it.... and is the necessary being from which all contingent being derives its being.
Is that a fact ? Who says so ? What's their justification for saying so ? We know what YOUR justification is - you have to believe the universe has not always existed in order to prop up your unfounded belief that it needed a "cause" and the even-more unfounded belief that the "cause" of the universe was your preferred god. And we know you don't understand the relevant science, so you aren't competent to judge whether a particular cosmology model even allows for the possibility of god, much less supports the actual existence of god - but don't let that stop youThe physical universe has not always existed ...
which you don't understand in a scientific sense, but as I just said, you are willing to grasp at any straw if it appears to match your already-chosen belief in god.... but has a definite beginning ...
and with that, we're back to demonstrating that you shamelessly snatch any quote that you hope supports your theistic claim, even when you have to deliberately distort the words quoted.... as explained below by physicist Brian Greene ...
Shrunk wrote:Speaking of strawmen, our Maryann seems very pleased with herself for how she performed in this fictional debate with a couple chaps named "Harris" and "Dawkins."
BTW, it's a bit rich for a proponent of the Kalam Cosmological Argument ("Everything that begins to exist has a cause. So God didn't begin to exist, because he is the cause of everything that exists. Therefore, God exists because everything that begins to exist needs a cause, and God is that cause.") to accuse others of making "circular arguments".
No of course you don't have time, sweetie, you being such an important philosopher and all that. You just have time to crap in the bed and leave it for someone else to clean up after you.Ichthus77 wrote:Again, I'm sorry, but I don't have time to answer the really long reply. Hopefully you'll have enough fun w/ this one. And remember to submit something to the Philosophers' Carnival, and tip your waitress.
and now we've proved it !
Ichthus77 wrote:1. The universe (the whole of all physical "being") has a beginning, even in the cyclic model (Greene, Fabric of the Cosmos).
2. In order for "doing" to happen, there must be a "being" who does the "doing".
3. All doings of any particular being are done by that particular being "after" that particular being "is" (after it is "being").
4. "Becoming" is a doing.
5. Because of 3, the universe (see 1) cannot "become" until it already "is", therefore
6. (Because of 2), some other "being" than the universe (see 1) made the universe (see 1) "become" in the first place.
Now. It does not follow from this that this "some other being" has no beginning (or that it does). We can't study it like we can study the physical universe, because it is not part of the physical universe (though it can be immanent in it).
However--it does follow that there IS some other being than the physical universe, something supernatural. And, if it has a beginning, it will have a cause (a being which makes it become) other than itself.
This is a new premise, and is unsupported by your previous arguments.The theist conclusion is that there is only one supernatural being, and it is uncaused--eternal (a personal God).
The atheist conclusion must be (in this case) that there is an infinite regress of those caused supernatural (personal or nonpersonal un-god) beings.
But, that isn't the atheist conclusion. The atheist conclusion is a self-bootstrapping universe (a circular argument).
Ichthus77 wrote:and now we've proved it !
Both the atheist and theist conclusions require faith (but the self-bootstrapping atheist conclusion--that one requires blind faith--in the teeth of counter-evidence). I doubt that'll make you feel any better, though. 'Night.
P.S. I don't have time 'cause I have a job and a family (and a lack of clones).
Ichthus77 wrote:
P.S. I don't have time 'cause I have a job and a family (and a lack of clones).
Ichthus77 wrote:Both the atheist and theist conclusions require faith (but the self-bootstrapping atheist conclusion--that one requires blind faith--in the teeth of counter-evidence).
(but the self-bootstrapping atheist conclusion--that one requires blind faith--in the teeth of counter-evidence).
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