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Neil_Anthony
Guest
Maybe “self-caused” isn’t the right term… What I’m trying to say is that this transcendent creator has properties that make it exist of itself. If we could understand what it is, and how it works, it would be evident that it requires nothing else to bring it in to existence, and that it must exist, and always must have existed and always will exist.The latter. “Self-causation” does not make any sense to me. I say about the Universe exactly what you say about God. You dont’ say that God is “self-caused”, you say that God does not require a cause. At least that is how I read you. Maybe I am mistaken. You can enlighten me.
I don’t pretend to know what properties would lead to this existence-of-itself. I just speculate that there must be something with that property, otherwise nothing would exist at all.
I say that he can’t operate within time because he is the creator of time - at least the time dimension that we are in. I suppose his nature could include another time dimension, I’ll call it meta-time, which God meta-acts within.In and by itself there is nothing wrong with pure speculation. But if it stays at the “pure” speculation level, if it does not lead anywhere, then it becomes “empty” speculation. A metaphorical statement is useful if it leads to understanding. The trouble in your statement that is does not help at all. What do we do with “God does not really ‘act’, but performs something similar, and it seems that there would be something like a ‘before’ and an ‘after’ associated with it, but it is not really the case”? And what is wrong with assuming that there is “time” in the realm where God dwells?
One example of such a meta-act would be the creation of space-time. It wasn’t created at a point in our time, since time did not yet exist. This meta-time could be very similar to what we know as time, or different.
What do we gain my using an analogy that doesn’t get concluded with specifics? I think it allows us to know a bit about the unknowable by comparing it to something we know. This is why religions give God ridiculously human characteristics - because that’s all we really know to explain it with. It doesn’t mean that God really gets angry and jealous… its just a way to explain it to people.
Well, the thing about axioms is that you can only hope that other people agree with you on them, because I don’t think there’s a way to prove them. What do you say to someone who says that 2 + 2 equals 4 in every example he can think of, but he isn’t sure that its always true? Or someone who says that two sentences can contradict yet both be true? I really don’t know what to say to someone who, presented with the same knowledge about the universe that I have, concludes that it could be self-caused, or exist in and of itself. Unfortunately I think the debate just ends there…Indeed there are some very basic concepts which are self-evident. These are called axioms or principles. Substitute the “universe is self-caused” with the “universe is uncaused” and I see nothing problematic with that. I would agree that the ideas that “the universe is self-caused” is nonsensical.