E
Eleve
Guest
First of all, in general relativity gravity is not a force, and it is not something that exists between massive bodies and space-time. Instead, gravity - the apparent attraction between bodies - is what is explained by the space-time curvature.The connection between massive body and the shape of space-time is gravity. It is a force that applies to space-time. The connection between the unstable nothing and the something is the instability of the nothing.
Second, and much more importantly, the “connections” you just gave are only as good as the proposed connection between God and the universe. If the connection between massive bodies and space-time is gravity, then the connection between God and the universe is his creative power. If the connection between unstable nothing and something is the instability of the nothing, then the connection between omnipotent God and the universe is the omnipotence of God. So what gives?
Is that a metaphysical necessity? What if the world were to operate according to the laws of Conway’s Game of Life? Then some cells could bring others to life without themselves changing their state.But wha does causal power mean for an immutable entity? Applying any sort of power or force entails a change. That’s the whole problem that you do not seem to graps. Whatver ‘connection’ requires a change.
Sure, in our world it may be true that the laws of physics require that everything that exerts a force undergoes a change. But presumably you don’t want your argument to be as silly as “God can’t exist because then he would violate the laws of physics.”
It’s not an assertion. I am explaining what the standard view of the theist is. But I can hardly assert that view, as I do not believe it.No, Eleve, that’s an assertion. You yourself described this connection, but unless you or some theist can show how a power can possibly apply without any change, you still have no connection whatsoever.