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NowAgnostic
Guest
Where did I say it did? I put 6 forward as a hypothetical subspace of all logically possible universes. I can define 6 anyway I wish. Of course by definition 6, as I defined it, does not contain a temporally necessary being since all beings in those universes are temporally contingent.Well, (6) doesn’t entail the proposition that a temporally necessary being doesn’t exist.
Read again. I showed that existence of something, plus the possibility of universes where all temporally contingent beings were at some point not in existence, did not entail the existence of a temporally necessary being by examining the subspaces of logically possible universes.I’m afraid I’m not sure where you think the refutation of MTW took place above.
(6) would not be possible then. Only temporally contingent beings exist there.If we say that time is temporally necessary, then (6) is possible, but of course, I admit that would somewhat obscure the nature of the temporally necessary being.
It isn’t question-begging when you are refuting an argument to use one of its premises or a conclusion of one of its premises. Assuming the argument is sound, its premises must be true, so one is certainly allowed to use a conclusion of one the premises in the refutation. If the conclusion refutes the argument, it’s invalid.If we say it’s not possible that all temporally contingent beings fail to exist at the same time, then it’s still a matter of question-begging. One needs to already assume the impossibility of this in order to support the conclusion that (6) is necessarily false.
I guess I can’t make you see how silly the MTW really is. It’s arguing (in S5)
- If a temporally necessary being does not exist, then it is impossible that all temporally contingent beings were at one point not in existence.
- But it is possible that all temporally contingent beings were at one point not in existence.
- Therefore, a temporally necessary being exists.