C
coolduude
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Yes, no, maybe? An easy question, eh? What does everyone think?
To give a dictionary definition:Depends.
What is the universe?
All observed material beings are contigent based on available evidence.
Then the answer to the poll is no.To give a dictionary definition:
1 : the whole body of things and phenomena observed or postulated (merriam-webster.com/netdict/universe)
I agree with you, but that wasn’t the question.Then the answer to the poll is no.
God is not a contigent being.
Why did you offer a definition you didn’t want used?I agree with you, but that wasn’t the question.
Is the universe a contingent being? Forget about the ‘postulated’ part of the definition. Is the universe (as in, everything observable) contingent?
I guess I didn’t realize that when it said ‘postulated’ God could be included in thatWhy did you offer a definition you didn’t want used?:confused
I agree 100% with this one!The created universe is contingent upon God who created it.
I think it would be valuable if you put forward an argument to support this, since a lot of people seem to think that energy is indestructible so therefore it is not contingent.Energy is certainly contingent.
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The capacity to be destroyed is absolutely accidental and irrelevant to the nature of it’s contingent emergence; or nessecary being.I think it would be valuable if you put forward an argument to support this, since a lot of people seem to think that energy is indestructible so therefore it is not contingent.
For example, my soul is contingent upon God as its creator, yet it is not destructible.The capacity to be destroyed is absolutely accidental and irrelevant to the nature of it’s contingent emergence; or nessecary being.
Whilst it may be generally judged and held that most things contingent are destructible; it is by no means a nessecary predicate of contingent things.
Why not?It cannot be determined whether or not the Universe is contingent.
Because to comprehend the Universe in it’s entirety is beyond human limitations.Why not?
No it’s not.Because to comprehend the Universe in it’s entirety is beyond human limitations.
Or, silliness aside, we could just accept that the Universe is a construct that we cannot fully comprehend.No it’s not.
See, we can both make unfounded and meaningless statements.
Now, silliness aside, we can determine that elements within the (material)universe are contingent; such as space – we can then determine that as this is united to the (material)universe, that as elemental aspects of the (material)universe are contingent; the totality of the (material)universe cannot be nessecary; as matter and energy are only posteriorily really distinct from the space of the (material)universe. So we can know that the (material)universe is essentially contingent; as space is a logically prior unitative predicate of the (material)universe, being predicated before mater, energy and time (general acts of the (material)universe) that the (material)universe can be taken to be contingent. As space is the (generally held) prior constituant of the (material)universe, and space is contingent then the (material)universe is contingent.
This, of course is (for the sake of easy speach, and to avoid distraction) holding that the (material)universe does not include God.
Since you are speaking for other people, I’ll play ball and say sure, I could fully comprehend the material universe, or at the very least, all discovered concepts in the material universe are known to be comprehensible to at least one human being, so the evidence is in my favor.Or, silliness aside, we could just accept that the Universe is a construct that we cannot fully comprehend.
Or perhaps you contend that you do fully comprehend it?
Okay, here’s something I’ve always wondered. Tell me, in your own words, why it takes an infinite amount of energy to seperate two Quarks.Since you are speaking for other people, I’ll play ball and say sure, I could fully comprehend the material universe, or at the very least, all discovered concepts in the material universe are known to be comprehensible to at least one human being, so the evidence is in my favor.
Tell me one concept in the material universe a human cannot comprehend.
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Simple answer; it does not.Okay, here’s something I’ve always wondered. Tell me, in your own words, why it takes an infinite amount of energy to seperate two Quarks.