.
Para 2 By whose authority is philosophy excluded from studying and making judgements about the physical world?
You misunderstand. It isn’t excluded from it, philosophers can talk about the real world all they like, but it makes no sense to complain that physicists cannot reach our universe from a philosophical concept which could not have preceded the universe.
We don’t expect physicists to tell us whether or not god could make a rock so heavy he couldn’t lift it. In the same way we shouldn’t expect them to tell us how the universe could come from an impossible condition.
That isn’t a failing of physics, it’s just not a question which is relevant to physics.
And it does seem that some scientists are concerned about the orgins of the universe,
Of course, because that IS a question for physicists.
Krauss seems to have been ( R.I.P. )
Are you saying Lawrence Krauss is dead? I hadn’t heard, I’ve just been looking around the internet and can’t find and news about this.
Para. 3 Simply stating that the material universe cannot explain its own existence by the very fact that it is physical. It is not simply a " bald fact. "
No, it is a bald assertion. For example rejecting the possibility of the universe being cyclical without justification. Or being caused by nothing etc.
And even if we grant, for the sake of argument, that it existed eternally, it would still have to have had an eternal creation in time from nothing.
??? Are you saying that even things which have existed eternally require something to create them? If so why?
Para 4. The universe and every thing in it is contingent, it may be or it may not be,
How do you know that?
but since it is, it must have a cause outside of itself.
And how do you get to here from there? Especially the “outside itself” part. This again seems to be bald assertion.
Also, everything in the universe has a limited existence, it is limited in itself and every thing in it is limited in existence.
How do you know that?
That which is limited in existence must have its existence caused by that which has existence to give. That is some of the evidence.
And how do you know this? Why do you think things need some existence giver and what evidence are you talking about?
This just seems to be a string of unsupported assertions.
Para 5 How can you reject it and believe what Krauss has written? You are contradicting yourself.
Firstly I don’t “believe” Lawrence Krauss’ model of the universe. I don’t have sufficient evidence to believe it to be true. But he has demonstrated that it is possible.
Secondly there is nothing in the model which requires some derivative of matter to have existed eternally. So although I acknowledge that it’s possible that some derivative of matter existed eternally I still reject the assumption that such a thing is true.
Para 6 Oh, I agee. Nothing does nothing. The point is that the material universe did not make itself, even if it existed eternally. It would still have had to have been created from nothing and only God can do that.
Now that depends, if you are talking about a physicists nothing then Lawrence Krauss has demonstrated that you don’t need a god to get from there to here.
If you are talking about a philosophers nothing then that couldn’t exist for a god to do anything to it.
Either way it appears your assertion is incorrect.
Para 6 Nope, there was none, God is timeless, he is always ** Now **.
How do you know that?
Para 7 All correct except the physicist’s " nothing " ( not all physicists mind you just a few ideologues ). I it is not nothing. Krauss’ universe had no absolute beginning, it was being eternally created.
No, there is no eternal “before” the start. You start with a physicists nothing - no matter, no energy, no time etc. and you get to a universe from there. There is no need for some eternal creation process in the non-existent time period.
I know you believe that, as of course all those who held those other creation myths believe that THEIR story isn’t a myth but an explanation of what happened. Those people of course would consider YOUR story a myth.
But if you want to cast aspersions I would certainly call Krauss’ a myth, a clever one designed to entrap those who regard themselves or wish to be regarded as sophisticated.
It’s not a myth, it’s a model. It may or may not be true, but it is possible. So far we don’t have any way to test it to find out if it is true, until we can do that we cannot be justified in believing it to be true.
Para 9 Nonesense, it is nothing but highly imaginative science fiction. It did not happen and could not have. But the children follow any pied piper, if he is clever enough and promises liberation.
Ok, if you have established that it’s impossible then demonstrate this to be the case, get your material peer reviewed and published. You could be in line for a Nobel prize.
Para 10 Abiogenesis has been disproven I believe.
Incorrect, we have demonstrated it is possible. We don’t yet know how it actually happened, but we know some ways it COULD have happened. Because we have demonstrated them in a lab.
And of course, even if true, it would have occurred from a previously existing matter. But this is not what we are talking about when speaking of the appearance of the universe or its very existence.
Of course, I was just using abiogenesis as an example where we have ways I which something COULD have happened but don’t know which DID happen. We are in the same position regarding the origin of the universe. That was the point.