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Bakmoon
Guest
Baring that, would it be possible?No, as long as the cause is the prime mover.
Baring that, would it be possible?No, as long as the cause is the prime mover.
Aquinas would say that a temporally infinite regress is logically possible (though he thought it incompatible with Christian revelation). What he objected to, philosophically, was an infinite number of agents acting at the same time.We may be using these terms diferently. When I am using the term infinite regress here, I am talking about an eternal universe, such as a big bang preceded by a big crunch preceded by a big bang preceded by a big crunch ad infinitem, each caused by an event before it.
Are you arguing that such a scenario is not possible?
Cool! I’ve always felt the biggest diference between Madhyamika and Orthodox Theravadin doctrine is terminology and wording style. Soto zen is similar in method too!My theory is Mahayana, specifically Madhyamika. My practice is mostly Theravadin, with a little Soto Zen mixed in. I have tried some of the Tibetan forms, but visualisation never worked well for me so I went for the simpler meditations instead.
rossum
Maybe, but then, there could be one anywhere, any time, any place if that could happen all of its own accord. But that’s not possible either.Baring that, would it be possible?
I was responding to Bakmoon’s use of the term, which seemed to be responding to you. I wasn’t sure if you had used it or not. It’s a term that I generally try to avoid–if I catch myself in time–precisely for this reason.Ok, as long as it’s not used in a temporal sense in any way.
Right. I was speaking of positive attributes.Yes, and no. There are things God must logically be. He can’t be dictated to by a higher power or factor or rule in any way, or the infinite regress shows up again.
Can you demonstrate this?Maybe, but then, there could be one anywhere, any time, any place if that could happen all of its own accord. But that’s not possible either.
Ok. I understand.I was responding to Bakmoon’s use of the term, which seemed to be responding to you. I wasn’t sure if you had used it or not. It’s a term that I generally try to avoid–if I catch myself in time–precisely for this reason.
Right. I was speaking of positive attributes.
Edwin
We went through this before. Let me find the post…It’s several places but the one that seems to have the most in one post is #150.Can you demonstrate this?
Here it is.I am familiar with thought-experiments. But the idea behind a thought-experiment is to pose a situation that does not actually obtain, in order to explore a point-and then to return to the situation that does actually obtain (the world) in order to discuss it. On the other hand, you are proposing a situation that does not obtain, but expecting to accept what you get as reality just like that–extended to the world–when it does not obtain in the world (because at the very least the universe does have things). See the difference?
There are several very famous thought experiments in philosophy like the “brain in a vat” experiment. But no philosopher is going to claim that he really doesn’t have legs or fingers when he leaves the campus. It’s an experiment.
To make the argument you apparently want to make, you would have to say something like, “Imagine a universe with nothing, no God, nothing.” Nihilism. Nihilism pure and simple, even definitional, and that’s all you could say about that scenario. That’s it. Which does not obtain as soon as you come out of the thought experiment because the world has things–causes and phenomena that we’ve been talking about all along–and that clearly exist. There’s no real conclusion, and it’s not even a good experiment. It’s kind of a pointless exercise if you want to know the truth. That’s the reality of nihilism as a philosophical view, and philosophers are well-acquainted with that. It’s not a new discovery. It’s the null case, sort of like dividing by zero–it doesn’t get you anywhere.
You could posit a universe with no God, nothing at all in it, and an observer. Which would either be an assertion contrary to fact, or a contradiction. You can’t have something and not have something at the same time. Remember P + not P is a contradiction. So that doesn’t get you anywhere either.
Or you can propose a scenario that has no God and some things. Then, you get an infinite regress, and that’s what we’ve been talking about.
Thank you, yes. There has to be a primary base case or there is no explanation at all.Maybe a math analogy will show why an infinite regress can’t exist. Suppose we can correctly compute an event and we know what it is, say F(200); We also know that to compute Fwe have to know F(n-1), say F
= 4F(n-1) + 3, In order for F(200) to be computable we have to have at least one k such that F(k) is known and smaller than 200. If we had no base case, F(200) is not an event that can be computed. That is because is there is no base case and it regressed forever, F(200) should not be computable, but we already know it is. The base case HAS to exist.
In the same sense causality HAS to have a first cause, otherwise no event would exist. Clearly events exist and they depend on prior events.
But I’m not positing infinite regress as an explanation for why things are the way they are. I’m just proposing it as a physical model of the universe as an infinite string of events. Is this physically impossible?Here it is.
More on the infinite regress in #125 & #127.
Basically the infinite regress is about the need to have an explanation for the things that actually do occur. We don’t need a justification THAT they occur. They do. We’re not blind to that. What we need to explain is why some do and some don’t.
And without more than a huge set of causes trailing off into the distance with no real explanations for them but a previous cause which needs an explanation which has no real explanation but a previous cause…etc etc…
All of these things don’t cause themselves.
The “infinite string of events” IS the infinite regress. And there are all kinds of problems with it.But I’m not positing infinite regress as an explanation for why things are the way they are. I’m just proposing it as a physical model of the universe as an infinite string of events. Is this physically impossible?
And even if it were, the theist position fares no better because the ultimate description for why some things happen and others don’t is because God made the rules of the universe This is inadequate because it only explains how these rules came to be (namely by the will of God.) It says nothing in regards to why one particular set of rules were chosen over another.
Also, it posits the existence of God which is unexplained. In both of these ways, the reason why some things happen and others don’t is ultimately unexplained.
An infinite regress is a logical impossibly, let alone a physical impossibility. I would think that reality is constrained by what is logically possible.But I’m not positing infinite regress as an explanation for why things are the way they are. I’m just proposing it as a physical model of the universe as an infinite string of events. Is this physically impossible?
And even if it were, the theist position fares no better because the ultimate description for why some things happen and others don’t is because God made the rules of the universe This is inadequate because it only explains how these rules came to be (namely by the will of God.) It says nothing in regards to why one particular set of rules were chosen over another.
Also, it posits the existence of God which is unexplained. In both of these ways, the reason why some things happen and others don’t is ultimately unexplained.
I just said I’m not using the model as a means of explaining the way things are, only as a model of the universe as a whole. And I just demonstrated that the theistic model ultimately has the same explanatory value anyways. Could you respond to what I wrote rather than what you thought I wrote?The “infinite string of events” IS the infinite regress. And there are all kinds of problems with it.
a) how do you know it’s really infinite?
b) if it can be infinite (no explanation given), what else can be infinite?
c) if it can be brought into existence with no more explanation than that, what else could be brought into existence just as easily?
Your explanation isn’t an explanation. It’s only a partial observation that you see things happening. Big deal. We all do.
Your method would have NO way for rules to come into existence except by happenstance. Anything could be a rule. Anything. OR nothing. And yet, that’s not how things work, is it?
Not only that, your method only tells you WHAT is a rule. It says absolutely nothing about WHY it’s a rule.
Seriously, Bakmoon, if you can suggest that cows have horns because you think that’s an infinite property of cows because of some kind of infinite string of events that have no explanatory power, I have no idea why you find God incredible. You’re choking on a grape while swallowing an watermelon whole.
I responded to your first question directly. You asked,I just said I’m not using the model as a means of explaining the way things are, only as a model of the universe as a whole. And I just demonstrated that the theistic model ultimately has the same explanatory value anyways. Could you respond to what I wrote rather than what you thought I wrote?
The answer is no, unless you are willing to say that anything at all could happen and you can have no explanations whatsoever for anything that happens. You can only relate that things do happen, to the degree that you’ve experienced them, not why. That method has no explanatory power because it always depends on a more remote cause for explanation which depends on a more remote cause, that depends on a more remote cause, etc etc etc. ad infinitum.I’m just proposing it as a physical model of the universe as an infinite string of events. Is this physically impossible?
The theist position doesn’t have to deal with the infinite regress, at least. That’s a huge benefit. As such, it has explanatory power as to what things can exist and what can’t, even if you don’t like the explanations that it offers.And even if it were, the theist position fares no better because the ultimate description for why some things happen and others don’t is because God made the rules of the universe This is inadequate because it only explains how these rules came to be (namely by the will of God.) It says nothing in regards to why one particular set of rules were chosen over another.
Your system has no explanatory power whatsoever either about what things exist or what things don’t exist. None.Also, it posits the existence of God which is unexplained. In both of these ways, the reason why some things happen and others don’t is ultimately unexplained.
I responded to your first question directly. You asked,
The answer is no, unless you are willing to say that anything at all could happen and you can have no explanations whatsoever for anything that happens. You can only relate that things do happen, to the degree that you’ve experienced them, not why. That method has no explanatory power because it always depends on a more remote cause for explanation which depends on a more remote cause, that depends on a more remote cause, etc etc etc. ad infinitum.
The theist position doesn’t have to deal with the infinite regress, at least. That’s a huge benefit. As such, it has explanatory power as to what things can exist and what can’t, even if you don’t like the explanations that it offers.
Your system has no explanatory power whatsoever either about what things exist or what things don’t exist. None.
Remember that we agree that N is not the case. If N is not the case, what is? HINT: It’s not a taxonomy of stuff stretching into the past that brought itself into existence and can’t explain anything.
- Can you prove that in a hypothetical universe without a prime mover and is an infinitely long series of events would by necessity mean that anything could happen in this universe? All you have done so far is assert that an infinite regress is unable to explain why some things happen and others don’t, but this isn’t the same thing.
- Why is it a benefit? And no it doesn’t explain what can and cannot exist. If the prime mover decides what can and cannot occur, this still does not tell us what can and cannot occur and why the prime mover has decided to set up the rules the way he has. The rules on what can and cannot happen are still ultimately unexplained, and therefore the explanatory power of the theists model is the same as that of the infinite regress.
- You are engaging in circular reasoning here again. You are saying that it is not an infinite regress, but that is the whole issue that is being discussed, why an infinite regress is physically impossible.
How do you know if you have all the events at A**********? Maybe there is an A**********+1. You have no way of accounting for that. And of course, there’s always the possibility of one more you haven’t seen yet. You’re going to infinity across the system as well as back and forth across the system, you should realize here.
- OK.
You observe A happening, which is supposedly explained by remote B, which is supposedly explained by remote C, and so on to infinity.
You observe A* happening which is supposedly explained by remote B*, which is supposedly explained by remote C*, and so on to infinity.
You observe A* happening which is supposedly explained by remote B*, which is supposedly explained by remote C*, and so on to infinity.
Each of these things A (with stars) is a new and novel animal, event or being.
Not only that, but your chain of letters is infinitely long so you never really end up hearing the explanation at A(infinity) which explains everything. Yes, all teh previous ones depend on it, and you will never know. There is NO EXPLANATION, even after all of THAT.
And still A (star infinity +1) could show up and be a ravaging monster and you wouldnt have any right to be surprised. Your system does not account for that.
- If there is a prime mover and he creates things, you at least have an explanation why some things are in existence and some are not. That’s rather basic. Not only that, but the things that are in existence follow a logical pattern and you can know the explanation straight up. God created it because he wanted it. You may not find that very satisfying but it beats no explanation whatsoever for whatever happens which is what your view has. The universe actually turns out to be an orderly place and people can know things. This is huge for the deistic religions and gives them great advantages because it’s true.
- Your third point makes no sense to me. You have an infinite regress and a very aggressive one at that. Did you see the definitions on the U of California website?