P
pocaracas
Guest
Hey man, I just noticed your username… hehe… it’s awesome! 

The keys may be out of the reach of the lamp’s light, but… do the keys exist at all? Why am I looking for keys at all?
… I figured that, since you are accustomed to attributing credibility where little is due, you’d keep that tradition alive! [j/k]
If you want, we can go through all the formidable works defending theism > you present me a summed up version and I try to poke holes in it. Deal?
I can start by pointing out that, while classical physics is pretty much deterministic and thus subject to causal effects (and this is what would be available to most, if not all, of those great thinkers), Quantum physics is more probabilistic than deterministic… the probabilities can be determined, given enough statistics, but that doesn’t change the random nature of fundamental physics.
Dialing back the clock of the Universe, we arrive at a state of extremely high density of sub-nuclear particles (quarks and gluons). We have no way to replicate those conditions here on Earth… perhaps a subset can the mimicked at CERN, but that’s it… At the start of the Universe, we have a state of things that is probabilistic in nature and non-measurable except through some very indirect means (like the cosmic microwave background)… and it’s also not established that it’s random probabilistic nature can be considered causal; our minds would like to make it so, but you always need some approximations, some assumptions for that.
So, given this barrier of unknown, what have those formidable thinkers given us?
So, you bring forth… what?.. some variant of the unknown prime mover? The unknown thing that must have started all causality? The unknown thing that keeps space-time together and orderly?In that case. No. Nothing that “informs my reasoning” is taken on that kind of faith.
Hehe… I like this analogy (like all analogies, it’s faulty at some stage, but it’s fun)…Perhaps, the only difference is that you, like the drunk searching for keys under a lamp post, can claim, “The light is better over here!” Sure, but are the keys actually to be found there?
The keys may be out of the reach of the lamp’s light, but… do the keys exist at all? Why am I looking for keys at all?
I can think of a number of theists, present and past, who have written formidable works defending theism. The mere fact that you strike a posture on an Internet forum doesn’t, in itself, provide you with instant credibility.
If you want, we can go through all the formidable works defending theism > you present me a summed up version and I try to poke holes in it. Deal?
I can start by pointing out that, while classical physics is pretty much deterministic and thus subject to causal effects (and this is what would be available to most, if not all, of those great thinkers), Quantum physics is more probabilistic than deterministic… the probabilities can be determined, given enough statistics, but that doesn’t change the random nature of fundamental physics.
Dialing back the clock of the Universe, we arrive at a state of extremely high density of sub-nuclear particles (quarks and gluons). We have no way to replicate those conditions here on Earth… perhaps a subset can the mimicked at CERN, but that’s it… At the start of the Universe, we have a state of things that is probabilistic in nature and non-measurable except through some very indirect means (like the cosmic microwave background)… and it’s also not established that it’s random probabilistic nature can be considered causal; our minds would like to make it so, but you always need some approximations, some assumptions for that.
So, given this barrier of unknown, what have those formidable thinkers given us?