M
Marc_Anthony
Guest
Salve,
I don’t think this counts as an atheism thread since I don’t want a debate, merely refutations against a particular atheistic arguement (actually there are several I’d like refuted but just one for the thread).
Keep in mind I’'m going through no crisis of faith right now and I fully believe that these issues have been resolved by the Church, which has after all existed for 2,000 years. I’d just like to see what these refutations are.
An article I was sent by a member of the site whom shall not be named gave this refutation for the modern cosmological arguement for the existence of God. It said this:
"The Cosmological arguement, modern day:
It is true that an actual infinite, if such a thing existed, would possess some very strange and counterintuitive properties; for one thing, such a set could be the same size as one of its proper subsets, which is the source of most of the “absurdities” Craig claims to have pointed out. But this does not prove that such a thing is impossible, merely that the human mind cannot adequately conceive of it. There is no law that requires reality to conform to our expectations. Most people would also find the idea that light can behave both as a particle and as a wave to be counterintuitive or absurd, but nevertheless, quantum mechanics has taught us that it is so."
(Continued)
I don’t think this counts as an atheism thread since I don’t want a debate, merely refutations against a particular atheistic arguement (actually there are several I’d like refuted but just one for the thread).
Keep in mind I’'m going through no crisis of faith right now and I fully believe that these issues have been resolved by the Church, which has after all existed for 2,000 years. I’d just like to see what these refutations are.
An article I was sent by a member of the site whom shall not be named gave this refutation for the modern cosmological arguement for the existence of God. It said this:
"The Cosmological arguement, modern day:
- An actual infinite cannot exist in reality.
- Therefore, an infinite number of events cannot have occurred before the present.
- Therefore, the universe began to exist.
- Whatever begins to exist has a cause.
- Therefore, the universe has a cause.
Craig takes this argument further by claiming that space and time came into being along with the universe, and therefore the cause of the universe must transcend both space and time. Finally, and most audaciously, he claims that the cause cannot be an impersonal natural phenomenon, because if the necessary conditions for the universe to exist had existed from eternity, the universe itself would have existed from eternity, and this is not the case; science has discovered that the universe has a finite age, beginning at the Big Bang. Therefore, Craig asserts that only a personal agent could freely will to create an effect in time.
It is true that an actual infinite, if such a thing existed, would possess some very strange and counterintuitive properties; for one thing, such a set could be the same size as one of its proper subsets, which is the source of most of the “absurdities” Craig claims to have pointed out. But this does not prove that such a thing is impossible, merely that the human mind cannot adequately conceive of it. There is no law that requires reality to conform to our expectations. Most people would also find the idea that light can behave both as a particle and as a wave to be counterintuitive or absurd, but nevertheless, quantum mechanics has taught us that it is so."
(Continued)