pro:
If you are looking for a number to prove in nature, you can prove it with almost any example. That doesn’t actually mean anything though, except that you’re really trying hard to justify your preconceptions.
So why is that when we state what we believe it’s considered a preconception instead of a revelation, but when you state what you believe it’s considered a revelation instead of a preconception?
On a philosophical level, you already realize that the philosophy of time and space actually forms the basis of one of the rules for constructing valid syllogism, correct?
pro said:
“Look, a fish: It has gills, eyes, and scales. Each is equal in the fucntion of the fish. Therefore, there is a trinity in the fish.”
No. Because the fish also has many other things which enable it to function as a fish beyond its gills, eyes, and scales.
And if it didn’t have these additional things, then it wouldn’t be a fish, correct?
With time all that is really necessary is the three basic points of reference:
past,
present, and
future. Certainly all philosophical writings I’ve come across use these three chronological reference points as the basic framework for understanding all temporal functions.
In fact, this trinitarian set of functions can be traced philosophically back to the very basis of the syllogism. In other words, one of the rules for constructing valid syllogism is that it must contain
exactly three terms.
And,
unlike fish, the philosophy of space and time has been
central to philosophy itself from its inception-- and this philosophy is in itself the inspiration for, and central to,
early analytic philosophy as well.
pro:
The time analogy depends on you being the center of the analogy: past, present, and future depend on a you sitting here viewing them.
First of all, if this is true, then why do you say that the best of the inadequate analogies is the picture or sculpture analogy?
You’re refering to three-dimensional geometry when you refer to the picture or sculpture, are you not?
If so, then you also realize that time if simply an expansion of three-geometry from the reference point of a fourth dimension, correct?
Why is the three-dimensional geometry the best whereas the four-dimensional geometry considered the worst?
It would seem to me logical that the higher dimensions would actualy bring us closer to God’s perspective on the matter.
Furthermore, they don’t fail because they depend on a human point of view. If we want something that adequately explains a Trinitarian God, then we have to tackle this from his Trinitarian point-of-view, do we not?
Besides that, the time analogy does not necessarilly depend on us being the center of the analogy. This is simply not true according to the philosophy of space and time.
I’ve already provided many links which suggest otherwise. So if you have something that refutes 2,500 years of philosophical thought on this matter, something beside your own personal opinion on the matter, I’d be interested in reading it.
Since both science and philosophy seems to claim otherwise, I have to say, at this point in time, your casual objections don’t really cut it to be honest.