I’m not singling out thinkers of any stripe, but merely pointing out the historical and cultural propensity to assign magical causes to events for which we presently lack explanatory knowledge. Lightning gods, volcano gods, succubi, etc.
I also think it’s worth pointing out that from a cosmological perspective the big bang is just another event for which we presently lack an explanation. In that sense it is no different from fire, volcanoes, hurricanes, famines, and other events that were encountered by our ancestors. Some people want to assign a magical cause to the big bang yet not to the tree that gets blown down in a storm. An event is an event. That falling tree isn’t something separate from the big bang.
Crow:
What you are doing now is throwing the entire kitchen sink into your argument, the purpose of which is, I guess, to divert the apologist with a blinding assortment of questions. Each of the physical events you cite as examples has causes that are known and mostly expected, and even some chance causes. They are all, as mentioned,
physical events. Events which are connected to motion, i.e., coming to be and passing away.
Even though matter does not quit the cosmos, it can and does change form and that resultant form can be unusable heat energy. So, the Laws of Thermodynamics are not broken; the equilibrium is maintained, yet, the energy is lost to re-use by the cosmos. Eventual entropy is the passing away of the cosmos or, universe. At that point, the equilibrium will be decidedly different. There will be matter, but, no energy. The universe is a closed system. Where can the stuff of the universe go? There aren’t any windows or doors.
We can only look back, with our technologies, to the Planck era. We don’t know what took place on the front side of it, considering the concept of
a priori to mean
quantified place, rather than time. However, we can speculate and we can use logic. Speculation produces all sorts of scientific hypotheses. Logic produces only one possible outcome since we are already here, in this universe, and not in any speculative universe. Regarding that which is physical, we KNOW that that which is not in being already cannot bring itself into being. (I didn’t use the word, “exist”, because I remembered your dislike of the word!)
Really, I don’t care what dawn-of-man primitive man might have thought. I know that there are honest ignorants alive today. Honestly ignorant early men might have “believed in” fire gods, etc., but they didn’t necessarily turn into the Jews and Christians of Mesopotamia. There were primitive people elsewhere in the world and most of them remained paganistic.
The Yahweh of Christianity, Judaism and Islam, is a revealed God, with probably the lengthiest tradition of any of the seven or eight early religions of man having a single
founder. The occurrences of real religions on earth are not the stuff of stories about believers in witchcraft, and the fire god, and moon god worshipers suddenly becoming Jews, Christians and Islamics. Nor did they suddenly turn into Hindus and Buddhists.
The Jews certainly didn’t need a magician god. Nor did Christians and Islamics. If you believe that those people were simply looking for magic tricks and found them, there’s nothing more that I can say. With all due respect, please read some history.
jd