P
pnewton
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Hope is a virtue, not a loophole.
Sure. So if we believe that a state where nothing exists cannot be actualized (i.e. there would be a logical contradiction in doing so), then there is no surprise that something must exist. Something must exist because “a state of absolute nonexistence” cannot exist, no need to invoke God.It may very well be true that our Universe resulted from the events Hawking describes. That doesn’t change the fact that, in order for those events to have taken place, something must exist.
Interesting, thoughtful posts. Thanks for these.Strictly speaking, science can’t prove that Thor doesn’t exist. But what it can do is eliminate the need FOR Thor as an explanation for thunder and lightning.
Having read a number of Hawking’s essays over the years, his views on God could be pretty briefly summed up as:
Those who insist God exists, go by faith, and trust in the testimony of the witnesses to Christ’s Resurrection.Beat me to it. God is no more provable then disprovable. Yet Catholics and others insist God exists. So what is any different about Hawking’s statement?
I agree with this. May he rest in peace.He had just as much right to his beliefs as we do
Something that must exist does not change, it is not in a continuous state of becoming, it does not move from potentiality to actuality. That which is existentially necessary is pure actuality, because it cannot lack reality; it is the source of all reality. Anything that is changing is a contingent being.Sure. So if we believe that a state where nothing exists cannot be actualized (i.e. there would be a logical contradiction in doing so), then there is no surprise that something must exist. Something must exist because “a state of absolute nonexistence” cannot exist, no need to invoke God.
Where do you take that from?omething that must exist does not change, it is not in a continuous state of becoming, it does not move from potentiality to actuality.
Where do you take that from?That which is existentially necessary is pure actuality, because it cannot lack reality; it is the source of all reality.
Not necessary.Anything that is changing is a contingent being.
Actually, yes, necessarily.
Can you prove that there are no lions in the room that you are presently in?Atheists say you can’t prove a negative.
How do you define contingent?Actually, yes, necessarily.
If something is capable of change, that means that there are influences, either external or internal, that are at play on it. That means that its form / state does not exist out of necessity, which means that it is a contingent being.
To whom is this being proven?Can you prove that there are no lions in the room that you are presently in?
(Wow… google definitions do not paste well on this forum >_>)
- subject to chance.
- occurring or existing only if (certain other circumstances) are the case; dependent on.
Oh. I’m just saying that the idea that we can’t prove a negative may need to be revisitedTo whom is this being proven?
Well, there is a sense in which science doesn’t set out to “prove” anything in the sense that it could definitively say it has reached the most precise and most accurate explanation that will ever be possible.Oh. I’m just saying that the idea that we can’t prove a negative may need to be revisited
Because it’s form is dictated by forces external to itself. Something only changes in response to stimuli. Even a change which isSo you consider the second meaning in here? If so, why something which is changing exists due to another thing?