Capricious: Impulsive and unpredictable; determined by chance, impulse, or whim.
Will-driven is fine. If that will is perfect, it wouldn’t be capricious. Whatever God does is perfectly just, loving, etc. He wouldn’t contradict that nature, which is what capricious suggests- just one moment and unjust the next.
Fine, but that’s framed from a “God-centric” perspective; ostensibly, to
him, it’s consistent, principled, etc. The caprice is descriptive from
our perspective – this is why God is described as impassible, mysterious, unfathomable. The underlying “uncapriciousness” is established by faith in God’s nature, not in God’s passable, non-mysterious, fathomable mechanics from our standpoint. I’m happy to say that God is “will driven” and “opaque” or “mysterious” or “unfathomable” in his internal dynamics that drive that will.
Historical, physical events are/were all provable and disprovable at some level at some point (we might not be able to now), yet they’re also dogma. Something can be both. I think you mean that the Church holds it as obligatorily true and therefore not subject to debate. I may not have used the correct word. I meant that the central events in my faith either happened or they didn’t.
OK, I understand that. That’s fine. I’ve had it beaten into me over years (by Catholics, mostly) that dogma in the formal sense is not subject to any empirical or analytical review, period. If it is, it ain’t dogma, and never was. But I get the usage you are working with here, now.
The Christian cosmology only necessarily leads to Deism.
Well, I can stipulate that, and it doesn’t change the impact of my point. A “tie” on this question leaves the Christian that much farther short, if anything, as now even
deism isn’t indicated, once we agree that origins of the universe are completely opaque to us, epistemically. Getting to deism, ‘of necessity’ is a HUGE step, apologetically. You’re almost home if you can get that far. But once one understands that our universe is a zero-energy, flat universe, the very kind of structure that proceeds inevitably “for free” out of the fabric of space/time – space time completely empty of all energy and matter – as the simple product of quantum fluctuations, that “necessity” is shown to be something not necessary at all. Here you have a mathematical recipe for universes popping out of “nothing” – nothing in the physics sense: the absence of matter and energy, but within the fabric of space/time.
This doesn’t work against your statement that the creation of the universe by God is embraced as a matter of faith. If that’s how you get there, then neither Hawking’s or Krauss’ or any other physicist’s model will affect that. But for many arguments offered that posit God (just a deist god, perhaps) as a necessary actor on the scene, this all makes them crumble and fall, to the extent they bore any load at all in the first place.
One of the interesting features of this cosmology is the manifestation of a being universe being spawned right here in this universe. If it were to happen, and perhaps it is happening, the spawned universe would be perceived from the inside as just as expansive and long-lived as ours is from inside ours. But from the outside of this newly spawned universe, from
our context, it would be a shrinking black hole of fleeting duration. A blip in the quantum foam that we could hardly notice if we were looking. That’s what our physics models indicate. If some cosmologist or cleric in that “daughter universe” is thinking about what God might have created their universe, they are way off base, as all of that would be just physics in action, nature doing its thing, automatic. The cleric in the daughter universe could not
imagine how such a wondrous thing as the universe around him came to be without a creator god, as the product of a will.
Hawking’s book, I expect, will emphasize the coherence of this model as a “godless automatic universe generator”, the physics we have come to currently as the most performative. That doesn’t demonstrate anything about our universe being created, but it does dispatch the “necessity” of the arguments thought to demand creative deism.
-TS