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anEvilAtheist
Guest
Without a God, either there is something or there is nothing. if there is something, I see no reason why the universe couldn’t have the natural laws that it does and have developed as current scientific theories say that it did. Now I’m not saying that science has answered every single question and there’s no more need for scientists, but cosmology, physics, and biology have good explanations for almost every aspect of why things came to be the way they did.Please expound on how the universe could look exactly as it does now, without a creator?
It gives me a headache too. Time is a very hard topic to wrap your mind around. Our intuitions are just so poorly suited to understanding it. In our lives, we see ourselves moving through time at a constant rate. It is mentally jarring when you first learn about relativity, and how some objects can move through time faster than others. The bewildering nature of time is not merely an issue with the Big Bang; we also confront it with relativity, as well as with the concept of God. I encourage you to read these articles to see how complex time can be:I really want to understand your belief system! I have been giving your perspective of the possibility of something coming from nothing a lot of thought, and frankly, it just gives me a headache.
reasonablefaith.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=5839
reasonablefaith.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=6051
So there are a variety of reasons why I just don’t trust my intuitions when it comes to which theories about time are possible and which are impossible. I have not researched this topic nearly as much as some people have. I do not think I should reject the theories of brilliant men such as Stephen Hawking as impossible unless I find a flaw in their thinking. Until I see why time having a beginning is impossible, I will continue to believe that it’s possible. By possible I do not mean that I know it could be true, I just mean that I have no good reason to reject it as impossible.
Please explain the mathematical-type reasoning that leads you to conclude that everything has a cause. If it’s simple, it should be easy for you to lay it out. Quantum physics gives us reason to seriously question whether this is true.LOL…Through the process of simple mathematical-type reasoning, man inevitably comes face to face with certain indisputable principles: Everything has a cause; nothing can bring itself into existence.
I still haven’t seen a good argument that this is so.Obviously there is a long chain of causes in the universe, but ultimately there must be a first cause.
You’re right about evolution; there are separate theories of abiogenesis that explain how life could have come from non-life (as you would expect considering that we know more about the earth’s recent past, these theories are not yet as well developed as the theory of evolution).The theory of evolution, even if it could be proved, would not explain the origin of anything; evolution simply deals with what may have happened after matter came into existence.
This presupposes that it would be possible for there to be any order whatsoever in the absence of a God. I see no reason to think that it would be impossible for some regularities to develop in the universe in the absence of a God.I am sure you will disagree, but, logically speaking, the universal order presupposes a Universal Orderer;
So without a God, you think it is impossible that there could be any time, space, matter, energy, or natural regularities/laws?! What makes you think that the state of absolute nothingness is what you would expect? I don’t think there’s any good reason to expect that without a God, there must be absolute nothingness, rather than anything at all.cosmic energy presupposes a Cosmic Energizer, and natural law presupposes a Universal Law Maker. But that’s just me.