N
niceatheist
Guest
This is where you and I diverge. I actually do not see the need for a Prime Mover at all. It could very well be turtles all the way down (metaphorically). And I can’t imagine why “parts” makes any difference. If the universe, at the moment of the Big Bang was largely a homogeneous superheated goo where physical particles and energy as we know them didn’t exist, prior to the expansion and cooling allowing quantum effects to introduce heterogeneous features, not to mention the breaking of the assumed symmetry that existed between all the fundamental phyiscal interactions, then there are no “parts”. In this line of conjecture, “parts” (as in discrete types of matter, energy and even the physical interactions between them) are a product of the evolution of the universe after the Big Bang.
But that even presumes there is a beginning, as such. After all, when physicists and cosmologists talk about the Universe, they’re talking about those regions that we can observe; the Observable Universe. While that may be finite in time and size, that’s like looking at a bay in the ocean and declaring that’s all the ocean that there is.
So to repeat myself, I don’t accept the need of a Prime Mover, nor do I buy into Aristotelian views of motion and whatever else is dredged up to try ringfence God from the logical conclusion that if the Universe needs a Prime Mover, then so does God.
I could be wrong, of course. Since we really can’t push back any further than the first instances after the Big Bang, there’s no way to probe any of this conjecture. There are models, currently unsupportable by any data, that talk about a metaverse and “branes” which encapsulate individual universes, but these again only push the question back. My view is the single inherent problem in all of this is that humans are just very bad at fully conceiving of infinity. What if existence, whether that be the Observable Universe, or some even larger entity, truly is infinite; without beginning, self-caused, or even not caused at all?
Is there some reason to even expect that causality would apply to such a region? That seems a bit of a bias; that just because the region we live in obeys causality, that that must apply to other regions; or that it always applied even to this region.
But that even presumes there is a beginning, as such. After all, when physicists and cosmologists talk about the Universe, they’re talking about those regions that we can observe; the Observable Universe. While that may be finite in time and size, that’s like looking at a bay in the ocean and declaring that’s all the ocean that there is.
So to repeat myself, I don’t accept the need of a Prime Mover, nor do I buy into Aristotelian views of motion and whatever else is dredged up to try ringfence God from the logical conclusion that if the Universe needs a Prime Mover, then so does God.
I could be wrong, of course. Since we really can’t push back any further than the first instances after the Big Bang, there’s no way to probe any of this conjecture. There are models, currently unsupportable by any data, that talk about a metaverse and “branes” which encapsulate individual universes, but these again only push the question back. My view is the single inherent problem in all of this is that humans are just very bad at fully conceiving of infinity. What if existence, whether that be the Observable Universe, or some even larger entity, truly is infinite; without beginning, self-caused, or even not caused at all?
Is there some reason to even expect that causality would apply to such a region? That seems a bit of a bias; that just because the region we live in obeys causality, that that must apply to other regions; or that it always applied even to this region.