The Cosmological Argument

  • Thread starter Thread starter wanstronian
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
But as an angel is not a real being, how can it be judged contingent or otherwise? How can you show an angel is contingent?We do need personal definitions, because the technical definition is insufficient to result in agreement. We’ve proved this, because we have yet to agree on an example.Well, we’re not going to get past stage one then. How can we start a chain of contingency when you are proposing an abstract concept as our starting point (or I should say, end point)?I completely agree, that’s how I interpreted the definition. However, your comment:

seems to be trying to redefine what ‘necessary’ is.Okay. So it is necessary before and despite any effect it may spawn. That was my understanding.I think this is where the concept of ‘infinity’ starts to cause problems. How can we prove that an infinite chain of contingent beings has to be an infinte chain of necessary beings? That’s surely a paradox, given that our definitions of ‘contingent’ and ‘necessary’ are mutually exclusive?Accept what? That contingent beings can become necessary? You’ve just rejected that notion!The point is that we don’t know this. We can’t grasp infinity. I agree that a very very very very long line of things has a beginning. But an infinite line? We just can’t say for sure. It seems logical, so as I said before, I’m happy to proceed. But we can’t know, just because it seems instinctive.It doesn’t violate the PSR. The cause is the preceding being. Invoking the PSR doesn’t prove a necessary being. Remember, the PSR is not inviolate. It’s a Principle, not a mathematical proof. We can’t possibly know its truth in all practical applications.Okay, at least we agree on the definitions of contingent and necessary, even if we can’t prove that an infinite regress is impossible.That’s an assertion on your part, on something that seems instinctive but which you can’t possible know for sure. I don’t believe you’ve ever counted to infinity, so you can’t claim knowledge about what it’s like.Yep. We’ve nailed that definition now. Interesting that the ‘necessary’ being is defined by exclusion. The SE definition doesn’t explore or define the concept explicitly. If it did, maybe more people would balk at the idea. It’s really no more logical than an infinite regress. Or at least, not sufficiently so to support the argument.Why is a necessary being not a ‘magic trick?’ Sounds like special pleading to me.I know! I was trying to clarify your stated redefinition, that I’ve quoted above.Exactly. I hope you can see how your previous comment caused confusion though.
see why i dont like this?
 
But as an angel is not a real being, how can it be judged contingent or otherwise? How can you show an angel is contingent?

how do you know an angel isnt a real being? even iif it werent youre missing the point, we dont have to agree to whether or not an angel exists. unless we are to claim its a necessary being. then it fits under the same rubric.
We do need personal definitions, because the technical definition is insufficient to result in agreement. We’ve proved this, because we have yet to agree on an example.
 
You called upon ‘God.’ It that isn’t a presupposition, I don’t know what is. If you truly believe that the** next logical step** in this argument is to baldly state that all regresses stop ‘at God’s essence’ then there is no point continuing this discussion.
which is existence, it must stop there or you hit the logical contradiction of “no-thing exists”
If there were a first being, then it would logically have to initiate the chain of beings that brought us all to this point. Do you deny that the first being must also be the first cause? And that a process must have occurred to get from there to here? Swap ‘cause’ for ‘being’ if it helps. I think you’re arguing semantics here, purely for the sake of arguing.
you mean the chain of contingent beings and the necessary being. im not arguing semantics, im using the correct terms. when you say soemthing else, i dont know what you mean.
You could, but you wouldn’t get far if you called everything by a different name. This again, is argument for its own sake. When was the last time you went to the circus to watch a bush walking around in big shoes (or should I say ‘trees’) honking a horn?
you claimed that it was arbitrary, im pointing out that defitions are by their very nature arbitrary.
As you are well aware, I am picking up on your use of the word ‘God,’ with all the baggage that this word entails. This is supremely evident from your previous post, and my response to it. I agree, God has no place in the Cosmological argument. But it was you who introduced him, not I. This feels like evasiveness to me. You have introduced a new concept then berated me for picking you up on it! What’s your motivation here? To get to the conclusion, or to draw attention away from the argument’s weaknesses by sniping at me for imagined infringements?
how do you get this from telling you that the omnimaxs arent part of the contingency argument? youre reading a whole lot into that sentence.
No? I do. Magic is just misdirection and manipulation. It most definitely exists.
thats sleight of hand, not magic.
I don’t believe in miracles, though.
great, neither do i!
Again, you state this without being able to demonstrate its truth.This is conjecture. It cannot be shown to be true, which is one reason why the Cosmo argument fails.
ive demonstrated it several times now. once again.

by definition a contingent being requires a cause to exist. they cant cause themselves. no matter how many you have, none of them, even an infinite chain of them.

ergo to claim that they came into existence with no cause violates the PSR.

if you claim the PSR isnt important, then you undercut the entire basis of science, you essentiualy say that you believe in magic.
 
see why i dont like this?
Yes, but I can’t do anything about it, it appears normally on all the systems I use. I can’t respond to your posts in just a few lines. You’re the only one who has a problem, and I’m not going to spend lots of time and/or money to investigate a problem that only seems to affect you, and for which there is no evidence that my system is even at fault. Have YOU tried a different system, or are you just sitting there assuming that it’s all my fault?

The CAF BB rendering engine is what it is - they use vBulletin, which is a good quality tool. There’s nothing I can do to change the way it works. You’ll just have to live with it, or quit. Sorry.
 
how do you know an angel isnt a real being? even iif it werent youre missing the point, we dont have to agree to whether or not an angel exists. unless we are to claim its a necessary being. then it fits under the same rubric.
No - it’s you who are missing the point. Unless we can define what constitutes ‘contingent’ in absolute, rather than subjective terms, we cannot begin the regression.
no, you simply need to agree to the regular definition. i am not interested in limiting the domain to a specific example or is it necessary. we need only tall about contingent beings, it simply doesnt matter which one you are talking about.
As above. Why won’t you agree an example? What are you afraid of?
then simply agree to the standard definition ive posted. none of this need take 10 posts, there is nothing for us to agree on, other than the standard terms. btw, what abstract concept are you talking about? im pretty much a nominalist, i dont believe in abstract concepts as existent things. so im not sure what youre refering to.
I think you do know what I’m talking about. An angel is an abstract concept to me. Hence my spider-senses started tingling when you used ‘angel’ as an example of a contingent being.

But to move the conversation forward, I’ll agree not to agree on an example.
of course.
Good.
thats my point, they are mutually exclusive making an infinite chain of contingent beings non-sensical from the start
No more so than a necessary being, as far as we can determine scientifically.
accept the notion that an infinite chain of contingent beings can exist.
But surely if you do this, then you concede that a necessary being is not required? If you see what I mean.
it doesnt matter, all contingent beings require a cause, other wise they are necessary beings, and the number doesnt change them.
The cause is the preceding being, ad infinitum.
if one man cannot pick up his car, 10 men, 1000 men, 10000 men, or 100000 men cannot pick up their cars. a infinite number of men unable to pick up their cars, are no more able than only 1 man to pick up his car.
This is a false analogy, we are not talking about the physics of power and leverage.
its not a numbers thing, which is why i am happy to accept an infinite chain of contingent beings for the sake of the argument.
Okay.
as in the example above. 1 contingent being cannot cause itself, nor can an inifinite number of them. no matter how many you have, they still require a necessary being to exist.
No - they only need a cause, and they have one - the preceding being.
otherwise, its back to the POOF! theory.
Instinctively, yes. Objectively and logically, no.
sure, but we call it magic when things happen for no reason. i dont believe in magic.
Okay, so your faith in the Cosmo argument is hinged upon your incredulity, your subjective beliefs and disbeliefs. Not on scientific, demonstrable knowledge of the practicalities of the subject.
it seems logical to me, and it is a big part of various logical systems as well, modal for instance.
It seems instinctive to me as well - I cannot conceive of infinity. However, nor can I conceive of a ‘necessary’ being. Where did it come from? It’s always been there? How is that any more instinctive than an infinite regress? It’s not - it’s just selection by instinctive elimination of the alternative and a lack of consideration for what a necessary being entails.
because the necessary beings non-nonexistence would entail a logical contradiction. even were there no contingent beings at all, the necessary beings non-existence would entail a logical contradiction. namely.
“no-thing exists” which is a logical contradiction and therefore as impossible as a squared circle
I’m getting confused by what you’re saying here - isn’t a necessary being’s non-nonexistence an inherent feature of itself?
 
which is existence, it must stop there or you hit the logical contradiction of “no-thing exists”
Then as I say, there’s no point continuing the conversation. To call this arbitrary backstop ‘God’s essence’ is just loaded language. Even if you concede that this is just a convenient label that you are using, and you do not infer any of the attributes generally ascribed to God, you’re still overstepping the bounds of a logical progression. Are you happy for me to label this backstop ‘Satan’s essence?’
you mean the chain of contingent beings and the necessary being. im not arguing semantics, im using the correct terms. when you say soemthing else, i dont know what you mean.
I find it very difficult to believe that you didn’t know what I meant. However, I’ve clarified now, so maybe you can answer the question?
you claimed that it was arbitrary, im pointing out that defitions are by their very nature arbitrary.
But you’re being disingenuous - you know what most people understand by God. To point out that ‘definitions are arbitrary’ does not absolve you of a responsibility to label things neutrally and accurately in a discussion such as this. Would you argue about the price of a TV by arbitrarily replacing ‘dollars’ with ‘dolphins?’
how do you get this from telling you that the omnimaxs arent part of the contingency argument? youre reading a whole lot into that sentence.
I’ve answered this in the very comment you’re responding to. To use the word ‘God’ in this argument is out of place and you know it.
thats sleight of hand, not magic.
Look it up.
great, neither do i!
That’s interesting! You don’t believe the NT then? I thought another of your great ‘proofs’ was the way it supposedly fulfilled prophecy? But you reject the miracles documented therein? How do you square away such inconsistency?
ive demonstrated it several times now. once again.
by definition a contingent being requires a cause to exist. they cant cause themselves. no matter how many you have, none of them, even an infinite chain of them.
ergo to claim that they came into existence with no cause violates the PSR.
if you claim the PSR isnt important, then you undercut the entire basis of science, you essentiualy say that you believe in magic.
No - you’re conflating ‘demonstrating’ with ‘stating.’ You cannot show that a necessary being exists. I have ‘demonstrated,’ just as comprehensively as you, that an infinite regress cannot be shown to be any less likely than a necessary being.

Please don’t put words in my mouth regarding the PSR. I didn’t say it wasn’t important, I just pointed out that it’s a principle. An instinctively logical principle, a good principle from which to proceed scientifically, but not a provably immutable one. Regardless, I’ve shown how it doesn’t even need to be violated for the Cosmo argument to be wrong.

If you have nothing more than assertion, then I suggest we leave it here. I’ve succeeded in showing that the Cosmo argument is flawed, although I hardly expect you to admit it. After all “you don’t have any quit in you.” It’s as if you think that refusal to give up automatically makes your opinion correct!!

If it makes you feel better, I’ll quit. I’ve achieved what I wanted, which was to debate a proof for God’s existence, and I’m totally satisfied that the ‘proof’ is flawed. Unless you have something new to say, I’m done.
 
No - it’s you who are missing the point. Unless we can define what constitutes ‘contingent’ in absolute, rather than subjective terms, we cannot begin the regression.

As above. Why won’t you agree an example? What are you afraid of?

I think you do know what I’m talking about. An angel is an abstract concept to me. Hence my spider-senses started tingling when you used ‘angel’ as an example of a contingent being.

But to move the conversation forward, I’ll agree not to agree on an example.

Good.

No more so than a necessary being, as far as we can determine scientifically.

But surely if you do this, then you concede that a necessary being is not required? If you see what I mean.

The cause is the preceding being, ad infinitum.

This is a false analogy, we are not talking about the physics of power and leverage.

Okay.

No - they only need a cause, and they have one - the preceding being.

Instinctively, yes. Objectively and logically, no.

Okay, so your faith in the Cosmo argument is hinged upon your incredulity, your subjective beliefs and disbeliefs. Not on scientific, demonstrable knowledge of the practicalities of the subject.

It seems instinctive to me as well - I cannot conceive of infinity. However, nor can I conceive of a ‘necessary’ being. Where did it come from? It’s always been there? How is that any more instinctive than an infinite regress? It’s not - it’s just selection by instinctive elimination of the alternative and a lack of consideration for what a necessary being entails.

I’m getting confused by what you’re saying here - isn’t a necessary being’s non-nonexistence an inherent feature of itself?
this one turned out better at least.
 
But to move the conversation forward, I’ll agree not to agree on an example.
ok
No more so than a necessary being, as far as we can determine scientifically.
necessary and contingent are mutually exclusive, either one needs a cause or not. though im not sure what science has to do with it.
But surely if you do this, then you concede that a necessary being is not required? If you see what I mean.
no, i can see how this might be the first thought, but if we define a contingent being as a being needing a cause in order to exist, then it wouldnt matter how many you have, they all need a cause.
The cause is the preceding being, ad infinitum.
which makes them necessary beings. not contingent on a cause. POOF! theory, they all just appeared in a self supporting infinite string, and if they didnt appear, but always were, they are still necessary beings. violates the PSR
This is a false analogy, we are not talking about the physics of power and leverage.
its an anology meant to demonstrate why even an infinite chain of contingent beings needs a cause.
Instinctively, yes. Objectively and logically, no.
then please explain how this isnt objective and logical.
Okay, so your faith in the Cosmo argument is hinged upon your incredulity, your subjective beliefs and disbeliefs. Not on scientific, demonstrable knowledge of the practicalities of the subject.
its based on logic. not science, science doesnt have anything to do with this.
It seems instinctive to me as well - I cannot conceive of infinity. However, nor can I conceive of a ‘necessary’ being. Where did it come from? It’s always been there? How is that any more instinctive than an infinite regress? It’s not - it’s just selection by instinctive elimination of the alternative and a lack of consideration for what a necessary being entails.
instinct has nothing to do with this. i have already demonstrated that a necessary being must exist if you see contingent beings, and if not then those contingent beings are really necessary then.

as i have also demonstrated, a necessary being doesnt come from anywhere. if it did then it would be contingent. rather a necessary being must exist as the alternative “nothing exists” is a logicaql contradiction.
I’m getting confused by what you’re saying here - isn’t a necessary being’s non-nonexistence an inherent feature of itself?
🙂 had to smile, yes, it can be confusing.

a necessary being is one who cannot fail to exist.

assume for a second there is a necessary being, and only a necessary being, then say it could fail to exist, what would be left? an existent ‘nothing’ which is a logical contradiction.
 
Then as I say, there’s no point continuing the conversation. To call this arbitrary backstop ‘God’s essence’ is just loaded language. Even if you concede that this is just a convenient label that you are using, and you do not infer any of the attributes generally ascribed to God, you’re still overstepping the bounds of a logical progression. Are you happy for me to label this backstop ‘Satan’s essence?’
its not arbitrary, existence is the backstop because ‘nothing exists’ is a logical contradiction. now aquinas defines that as G-ds essence. back in his time no one doubted the existence of G-d, we can just as easlity say the essence of the necessary being, if it helps. though again, all the omnimaxes are another story.
I find it very difficult to believe that you didn’t know what I meant. However, I’ve clarified now, so maybe you can answer the question?
answer what question? the circus one? there is nothing about a word that forces it to apply to any particular object.
But you’re being disingenuous - you know what most people understand by God. To point out that ‘definitions are arbitrary’ does not absolve you of a responsibility to label things neutrally and accurately in a discussion such as this. Would you argue about the price of a TV by arbitrarily replacing ‘dollars’ with ‘dolphins?’
if we all agreed to it of course, we could say dolphins. why couldnt we? all definitions are arbitrary, language itself ius arbitrary hence all the different spoken languages. im not sure i see the point of arguing this.
I’ve answered this in the very comment you’re responding to. To use the word ‘God’ in this argument is out of place and you know it.
no, i dont know it. necessary being and G-d are interchangeable from my viewpoint. that doesnt mean that a discussion of the omnimaxs has a place in the cosmological argument.

Look it up.
That’s interesting! You don’t believe the NT then? I thought another of your great ‘proofs’ was the way it supposedly fulfilled prophecy? But you reject the miracles documented therein? How do you square away such inconsistency?
there is no inconsistency. i believe that the events in the NT happened, i just dont think there is any such things as miracles or magic. clarkes 3rd law.

“any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”

there is no magic, and ‘miracle’ is just the word people use to describe events that they cant account for given their current state of knowledge. but as the march of science shows, everytime we say something is a miracle or magic, we were wrong, there is always an explanation even if we dont understand the process involved in the event that mystifies us.
No - you’re conflating ‘demonstrating’ with ‘stating.’ You cannot show that a necessary being exists. I have ‘demonstrated,’ just as comprehensively as you, that an infinite regress cannot be shown to be any less likely than a necessary being.
i have given reasons to support my contention, you have only stated a contention, which is what i mean in that i have demonstrated my postion

i have demonstrated that a necessary being must exist, because its non existence entails a logical contradiction. ‘nothing exists’ is a logical contradiction.

i have demonstrated that an infinite chain of contingent beings that comes into existence self supporting is a violation of the PSR.
Regardless, I’ve shown how it doesn’t even need to be violated for the Cosmo argument to be wrong.
maybe i just missed it, how have you demonstrated this?
If you have nothing more than assertion, then I suggest we leave it here. I’ve succeeded in showing that the Cosmo argument is flawed, although I hardly expect you to admit it. After all “you don’t have any quit in you.” It’s as if you think that refusal to give up automatically makes your opinion correct!!
If it makes you feel better, I’ll quit. I’ve achieved what I wanted, which was to debate a proof for God’s existence, and I’m totally satisfied that the ‘proof’ is flawed. Unless you have something new to say, I’m done.
you have stated it several times, but you havent shown how this is so, and thats the problem with the infinite regress argument, it boils down to the assertion that an infinite chain of contingent beings is possible. yet its easily refuted.

if you wish to quit thats fine, i noticed its taking you days to answer which tells me that you are unfamiliar wiht the arguments. but lets not pretend that you know the argument is flawed, you havent been able to defend it, which isnt unusual. most people cant.

not even the most famous atheist of the last century, bertrand russell. who lost the infinite regression argument to Father Copleston in their last debate 70 years ago.
 
necessary and contingent are mutually exclusive, either one needs a cause or not. though im not sure what science has to do with it.
Indeed. I never suggested otherwise. I just pointed out that a necessary being is no more “non-sensical” in and of itself, than an infinite chain of contingent beings.
no, i can see how this might be the first thought, but if we define a contingent being as a being needing a cause in order to exist, then it wouldnt matter how many you have, they all need a cause.
And they all have one - the preceding being.
which makes them necessary beings. not contingent on a cause.
No, it makes them contingent on their predecessor.
POOF! theory, they all just appeared in a self supporting infinite string, and if they didnt appear, but always were, they are still necessary beings. violates the PSR
As opposed to a necessary being - where did it come from? Just as much ‘POOF! theory’ as an infinite regress. But we’re going around in circles here, and actually missing the point. The point is that there is no conclusive evidence that the “necessary being” hypothesis is any more true than the “infinite regress” hypothesis. Without such evidence, the argument fails.
then please explain how this isnt objective and logical.
I have already, a few posts ago. An infinite regress seems instinctively unlikely. We can’t imagine infinity. We can’t count to it, we are unable to conceptualise it.

We are able to conceptualise a necessary being, because all it takes is to imagine a being. But just because we are able to imagine a single being, but not an infinite number of beings, that doesn’t make it any more likely. There are as many problems with the idea of a necessary being as there with an infinity of contingent ones. This ultimately reduces to the argument from ignorance, or incredulity.
its based on logic. not science, science doesnt have anything to do with this.
Whatever - it’s only based on logic because you reject one option and are left with the other. If you actually consider what you are left with, you have just as many questions to answer. Where did the necessary being come from? When did it start to exist? And so on.
instinct has nothing to do with this. i have already demonstrated that a necessary being must exist if you see contingent beings, and if not then those contingent beings are really necessary then.
No, you haven’t demonstrated this at all. You’ve just stated and restated it.
as i have also demonstrated, a necessary being doesnt come from anywhere. if it did then it would be contingent. rather a necessary being must exist as the alternative “nothing exists” is a logicaql contradiction.

🙂 had to smile, yes, it can be confusing.

a necessary being is one who cannot fail to exist.
I understand that - it’s not a difficult concept.
assume for a second there is a necessary being, and only a necessary being, then say it could fail to exist, what would be left? an existent ‘nothing’ which is a logical contradiction.
But surely a being having non-non-existence must have existence? Surely the absence of non-existence is existence. So how is that a logical contradiction for a necessary being?
 
its not arbitrary, existence is the backstop because ‘nothing exists’ is a logical contradiction. now aquinas defines that as G-ds essence. back in his time no one doubted the existence of G-d, we can just as easlity say the essence of the necessary being, if it helps. though again, all the omnimaxes are another story.
So because Aquinas said that (although he didn’t state it as bluntly as that), and because people believed in God back then, you see no problem with asserting that the backstop is God? How do you claim to be able to debate when your colours are so brazenly nailed to the mast? You can’t see past your own presuppositions to argue this objectively!
answer what question? the circus one? there is nothing about a word that forces it to apply to any particular object.

if we all agreed to it of course, we could say dolphins. why couldnt we? all definitions are arbitrary, language itself ius arbitrary hence all the different spoken languages. im not sure i see the point of arguing this.
The point is that you are taking a word that commonly describes a deity with certain attributes, and applying it to an entity for whom all but one of those attributes are unnecessary. You are implicitly giving more meaning to the first cause than can be derived from the premisses of the argument.
no, i dont know it. necessary being and G-d are interchangeable from my viewpoint. that doesnt mean that a discussion of the omnimaxs has a place in the cosmological argument.
No, it doesn’t. But as you are aware, the omnimaxes are traditionally attributed to God. By invoking his name here you commit the loaded language fallacy

Let’s turn this around. What attributes do you apply to God?
Look it up.
Look what up?
there is no inconsistency. i believe that the events in the NT happened, i just dont think there is any such things as miracles or magic. clarkes 3rd law.

“any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”

there is no magic, and ‘miracle’ is just the word people use to describe events that they cant account for given their current state of knowledge. but as the march of science shows, everytime we say something is a miracle or magic, we were wrong, there is always an explanation even if we dont understand the process involved in the event that mystifies us.
Yes! We agree on something! There are no such things as miracles. There is a natural explanation for everything, we may just not know what it is. Of course, it does beg the question - where did Jesus get all this technology from, that eludes us 2,000 years later? But that’s another thread…

(We don’t agree on the definition of magic, which is well-defined in the dictionary. You have a different, isolated definition. It’s wrong, but I understand what you mean so let’s not pursue it further.)
i have given reasons to support my contention, you have only stated a contention, which is what i mean in that i have demonstrated my postion
There’s a difference between you rejecting my reasons, and my not having given them. I have made my rationale quite clear.
i have demonstrated that a necessary being must exist, because its non existence entails a logical contradiction. ‘nothing exists’ is a logical contradiction.
No - you’ve provided reasons, and I have shown you why they are poor reasons. You haven’t demonstrated anything.
i have demonstrated that an infinite chain of contingent beings that comes into existence self supporting is a violation of the PSR.
You are illustrating my point exactly - you cannot comprehend infinity so you are saying that an infinite chain ‘coming into being’ is self-supporting. But an infinite chain of being wouldn’t just ‘come into being.’ Or would it? Nobody knows. That’s the point - that we don’t know enough to make a conclusive claim one way or the other.
maybe i just missed it, how have you demonstrated this?
Post #17:
It doesn’t violate the PSR. The cause is the preceding being. Invoking the PSR doesn’t prove a necessary being.
you have stated it several times, but you havent shown how this is so, and thats the problem with the infinite regress argument, it boils down to the assertion that an infinite chain of contingent beings is possible. yet its easily refuted.

if you wish to quit thats fine, i noticed its taking you days to answer which tells me that you are unfamiliar wiht the arguments. but lets not pretend that you know the argument is flawed, you havent been able to defend it, which isnt unusual. most people cant.
I’m taking days to respond because I’m very busy. So your assumptions are wrong. If you’d bothered to do some research before judging my attendance record, you’d notice that I haven’t been posting elsewhere either.

The argument is flawed; it’s been exposed countless times and I’ve just done it again. As I said upthread, I don’t need to prove that the conclusion is wrong, I just need to show that it’s not necessarily right. This I have categorically done. Your refusal to accept the many refutations of the argument doesn’t actually mean that the refutations are invalid. You’re just so sure you’re right, you’ve lost the ability to examine the argument independently.
not even the most famous atheist of the last century, bertrand russell. who lost the infinite regression argument to Father Copleston in their last debate 70 years ago.
Ha! You’re showing your bias here! You’ve clearly interpreted, “Yes, it is very difficult. What do you say – shall we pass on to some other issue?” to mean, “You’re right and I’m wrong. Silly old me.” This interpretation illustrates nicely your idea of what consitutes “winning” an argument!
 
Indeed. I never suggested otherwise. I just pointed out that a necessary being is no more “non-sensical” in and of itself, than an infinite chain of contingent beings.
again, a necessary beings non-existence would be impossible because it entails a logical contradiction. that is completely sensical, its not even much of a question in logical systems using ‘necessary’.

whereas

an infinite chain of contigent beings, would always have to exist, and could not fail to exist. making them necessary beings.

not contingent beings. because a contingent being cannot fail to exist, and if any of your contingent beings did not exist at any point, than they can fail to exist without a logical contradiction.

do you not see the problem here?

there is no such thing as an infinite chaing oc contingent beings, because they meet the definition of a necessary being.

thats before we even get to the problem that contingent beings require a cause, even an infinite pile of them.

otherwise its the POOF! theory.
As opposed to a necessary being - where did it come from? Just as much ‘POOF! theory’ as an infinite regress.
no, a necessary being doesnt come from anywhere. how many times do i need to explain this? a necessary being must exist, must always exist because their non-existence entails a logical contradiction.
But we’re going around in circles here, and actually missing the point. The point is that there is no conclusive evidence that the “necessary being” hypothesis is any more true than the “infinite regress” hypothesis. Without such evidence, the argument fails.
i keep demonstrating the evidence, and you keep dodging it, as usual.
We are able to conceptualise a necessary being, because all it takes is to imagine a being. But just because we are able to imagine a single being, but not an infinite number of beings, that doesn’t make it any more likely. There are as many problems with the idea of a necessary being as there with an infinity of contingent ones. This ultimately reduces to the argument from ignorance, or incredulity.
i dont have a problem “conceptualizing” an infinite chain, it fails on 2 other counts,

first, there is no quality, or at least none you have been able to demonstrate, by which an infinite chain of beings can come into existence, without a necessary being. other than a violation of the PSR with a POOF! theory. if you accept that t POOF! theory is possible, you undercut the scientific method, and essentially agree to a universe of magic.

second, what you are calling an ingfinite chain of contingent beings, is actually necessary beings.

either way the infinite regress of contingent beings fails.
No, you haven’t demonstrated this at all. You’ve just stated and restated it.
i have, i demonstrated at the top of this post yet again.

**again, a necessary beings non-existence would be impossible because it entails a logical contradiction. **that is completely sensical, its not even much of a question in logical systems using ‘necessary’.
But surely a being having non-non-existence must have existence? Surely the absence of non-existence is existence. So how is that a logical contradiction for a necessary being?
im not sure what your sentence here means, but the bolded is answered in 2 ways.
  1. contingent beings exist
  2. an existent nothing is a logical contradiction.
 
again, a necessary beings non-existence would be impossible because it entails a logical contradiction. that is completely sensical, its not even much of a question in logical systems using ‘necessary’.
I have never disputed this.
whereas

an infinite chain of contigent beings, would always have to exist, and could not fail to exist. making them necessary beings.
But by a different definition to the one we have already agreed. In this case, they would be necessary by dint of having had infinite children. Not the same definition of ‘necessary’ as stated in the SE.
not contingent beings. because a contingent being cannot fail to exist, and if any of your contingent beings did not exist at any point, than they can fail to exist without a logical contradiction.
You’re confusing yourself here: “a contingent being cannot fail to exist?” I thought that the whole point of a contingent being is that it doesn’t have to exist?

But to return to the point I was making - just because an infinite chain of contingent beings sounds instinctively unlikely, does that really excuse the critical thinker from actually considering the impact of the concept of a necessary being? It’s as I said in my first post - this ‘necessary being’ is snuck in by virtue of the apparent absurdity of the alternative. But when you think about it, the necessary-ness of any being is equally incomprehensible, and should not be blindly selected as the only answer without due examination.
do you not see the problem here?

there is no such thing as an infinite chaing oc contingent beings, because they meet the definition of a necessary being.
No - they meet a different definition of necessary being - one whereby they are necessary only because they have spawned children. We have already agreed that this is not the definition of necessary being that we’re working to.
thats before we even get to the problem that contingent beings require a cause, even an infinite pile of them.
Yes, the cause is the preceding being.
otherwise its the POOF! theory.
Just like the POOF! theory that simply states that a necessary being can’t fail to exist, without any consideration of what such a statement entails. We have two problems here: we can understand contingency but we can’t comprehend infinity; we can comprehend an existent being but we can’t comprehend how it can’t fail to exist. There are logical problems with both concepts, but you are refusing to consider those associated with the necessary being.
no, a necessary being doesnt come from anywhere. how many times do i need to explain this? a necessary being must exist, must always exist because their non-existence entails a logical contradiction.
You’ve explained nothing, you’ve just asserted that this is what a necessary being is. You’re at great pains to explain why infinite contingency is impossible, but you don’t bat an eyelid when you assert that this necessary being just exists.
i keep demonstrating the evidence, and you keep dodging it, as usual.
If you’re going to start hurling false accusations at me again, let’s forget this. I took a chance that you would be able to debate rationally, but as always, just because I point out the flaws in your arguments, you take a stance that I’m ‘dodging.’ I’m not dodging anything, and never have. What I am doing, is pointing out the flaws in your argument. That’s all.
i dont have a problem “conceptualizing” an infinite chain, it fails on 2 other counts,

first, there is no quality, or at least none you have been able to demonstrate, by which an infinite chain of beings can come into existence, without a necessary being. other than a violation of the PSR with a POOF! theory. if you accept that t POOF! theory is possible, you undercut the scientific method, and essentially agree to a universe of magic.

second, what you are calling an ingfinite chain of contingent beings, is actually necessary beings.
Yes, you’ve said both these things before, and I have shown how we cannot be certain one way or the other. Hence the ‘proof’ fails.
either way the infinite regress of contingent beings fails.
No more so than a ‘necessary’ being.
i have, i demonstrated at the top of this post yet again.

**again, a necessary beings non-existence would be impossible because it entails a logical contradiction. **that is completely sensical, its not even much of a question in logical systems using ‘necessary’.
Sorry - you haven’t demonstrated it at all. You’ve used logic predicated on unprovable assertions that are outside our ability to confirm.
im not sure what your sentence here means, but the bolded is answered in 2 ways.
  1. contingent beings exist
  2. an existent nothing is a logical contradiction.
Indeed. You stated that a non-nonexistent necessary being is a logical contradiction. The absence of non-existence is surely existence. This is hardly a logical contradiction for a necessary being. I think this is just a misunderstanding due to a typo on your part. Let’s leave it.

I assume you’ll reply to the next part of my post soon?
 
I have never disputed this.

But by a different definition to the one we have already agreed. In this case, they would be necessary by dint of having had infinite children. Not the same definition of ‘necessary’ as stated in the SE.

You’re confusing yourself here: “a contingent being cannot fail to exist?” I thought that the whole point of a contingent being is that it doesn’t have to exist?

But to return to the point I was making - just because an infinite chain of contingent beings sounds instinctively unlikely, does that really excuse the critical thinker from actually considering the impact of the concept of a necessary being? It’s as I said in my first post - this ‘necessary being’ is snuck in by virtue of the apparent absurdity of the alternative. But when you think about it, the necessary-ness of any being is equally incomprehensible, and should not be blindly selected as the only answer without due examination.

No - they meet a different definition of necessary being - one whereby they are necessary only because they have spawned children. We have already agreed that this is not the definition of necessary being that we’re working to.

Yes, the cause is the preceding being.

Just like the POOF! theory that simply states that a necessary being can’t fail to exist, without any consideration of what such a statement entails. We have two problems here: we can understand contingency but we can’t comprehend infinity; we can comprehend an existent being but we can’t comprehend how it can’t fail to exist. There are logical problems with both concepts, but you are refusing to consider those associated with the necessary being.

You’ve explained nothing, you’ve just asserted that this is what a necessary being is. You’re at great pains to explain why infinite contingency is impossible, but you don’t bat an eyelid when you assert that this necessary being just exists.

If you’re going to start hurling false accusations at me again, let’s forget this. I took a chance that you would be able to debate rationally, but as always, just because I point out the flaws in your arguments, you take a stance that I’m ‘dodging.’ I’m not dodging anything, and never have. What I am doing, is pointing out the flaws in your argument. That’s all.

Yes, you’ve said both these things before, and I have shown how we cannot be certain one way or the other. Hence the ‘proof’ fails.

No more so than a ‘necessary’ being.

Sorry - you haven’t demonstrated it at all. You’ve used logic predicated on unprovable assertions that are outside our ability to confirm.

Indeed. You stated that a non-nonexistent necessary being is a logical contradiction. The absence of non-existence is surely existence. This is hardly a logical contradiction for a necessary being. I think this is just a misunderstanding due to a typo on your part. Let’s leave it.

I assume you’ll reply to the next part of my post soon?
all your posts lately have been spaced appropriately, what have you changed?
 
by a different definition to the one we have already agreed. In this case, they would be necessary by dint of having had infinite children. Not the same definition of ‘necessary’ as stated in the SE.
not by dint of having children, but by necessarily existing. they could not fail to exist
You’re confusing yourself here: “a contingent being cannot fail to exist?” I thought that the whole point of a contingent being is that it doesn’t have to exist?
your right, i made a mistake it should read necessary being
…just because an infinite chain of contingent beings sounds instinctively unlikely, does that really excuse the critical thinker from actually considering the impact of the concept of a necessary being? It’s as I said in my first post - this ‘necessary being’ is snuck in by virtue of the apparent absurdity of the alternative. But when you think about it, the necessary-ness of any being is equally incomprehensible, and should not be blindly selected as the only answer without due examination.
a necessary being isnt snuck in by virtue of the opposite being an absurdity but by being a ‘logical contradiction’ a ‘squared circle’ so to speak.
No - they meet a different definition of necessary being - one whereby they are necessary only because they have spawned children. We have already agreed that this is not the definition of necessary being that we’re working to.
there is no different definition of necessary being, i do not know where i agreed to this. just post what your etalking about.
Yes, the cause is the preceding being.
a contingent being doesnt exist until it is caused, no matter how many of them you have, im not sure if you dont understand this or if you are intentionally ignoring it. you must first claim they exist en masse, or that they come into being as links in a chain.

if they exist en masse, then its a POOF! theory. a violation of the PSR. if thats the case you undercut science and all intellectual inquiry as things wouldnt need a cause. you would be a believer in magic and safely dismissable. i dont think you want to go there.

if they come into being in any order, then to come from potential to actual requires a cause. a necessary being. then the argument holds and i make nmy point. and i dont think you want to go there.

so its either magic or its caused.
Just like the POOF! theory that simply states that a necessary being can’t fail to exist, without any consideration of what such a statement entails.
it entails a logical contradiction, back to the ‘squared circle’.
We have two problems here: we can understand contingency but we can’t comprehend infinity; we can comprehend an existent being but we can’t comprehend how it can’t fail to exist. There are logical problems with both concepts, but you are refusing to consider those associated with the necessary being.
we dont need to comprehend infinity, unless your saying there is some mechanism that allows an infinite number of contingent beings to self causate. if so demonstrate said mechanism.

and there is no logical problem with the idea of ‘logical contradictions’ being impossible. surely you know a squared circle is impossible right? you know what a logical contradiction means dont you?
You’ve explained nothing, you’ve just asserted that this is what a necessary being is. You’re at great pains to explain why infinite contingency is impossible, but you don’t bat an eyelid when you assert that this necessary being just exists.
i keep explaining it. let me explain it yet again

necessary being is one whose non-existence implies a logical contradiction. a logical contradiction is an impossibility, like a ‘squared circle’ meaning that a necessary beings non-existence is an impossibility. which is why a necessary being must ‘just exist’.

do you understand how we are defining a necessary being? is there a part of this that isnt clear? if so, be very specific as to what that part is and i will endeavor to explain further.
… I point out the flaws in your arguments, you take a stance that I’m ‘dodging.’ I’m not dodging anything, and never have. What I am doing, is pointing out the flaws in your argument. That’s all.
the dodging part is when i answer what you think are flaws. but then you simply repeat that they are flaws without seriously adressing what i said. like above where i have to keep repeating ‘logical contradiction’ at you. when the first time it was said, you should have gotten why that makes a being ‘necessary’ instead you just keep ignoring a logical contradiction as an impossibility. for instance, the next 2 statements below
Yes, you’ve said both these things before, and I have shown how we cannot be certain one way or the other. Hence the ‘proof’ fails.
here you simply assert we cant be ‘certain’, without evidence. you do not actually address the refutations of an ‘infinite chain of contingent beings.’
No more so than a ‘necessary’ being.
here, you again ignore why a necessary being must exist, and simply assert that a ‘necessary being’ must fail. without addressing the logical contradiction that makes the non-existence of a necessary being impossible
Sorry - you haven’t demonstrated it at all. You’ve used logic predicated on unprovable assertions that are outside our ability to confirm.
then, very specifically, which assertions are unproven? and what do yuo mean by our ability to confirm?
I assume you’ll reply to the next part of my post soon?
im not sure what your refering too. post it again, and i will tackle it.
 
not by dint of having children, but by necessarily existing. they could not fail to exist
Why not? They’re contingent beings! The definition of a contingent being is that it doesn’t have to exist!
your right, i made a mistake it should read necessary being
Okay.
a necessary being isnt snuck in by virtue of the opposite being an absurdity but by being a ‘logical contradiction’ a ‘squared circle’ so to speak.
Why is it a logical contradiction? It’s contrary to the ‘infinite regress’ hypothesis, true. But the argument doesn’t explore the consequences of a necessary being, it just implies that an infinite regress is impossible, then blithely says, “so it must be a necessary being.” No critical thought is given to the possibility of a necessary being; where it comes from, when did it start to exist etc. It’s just stated as a fact. That’s what I mean by it being ‘snuck in.’
there is no different definition of necessary being, i do not know where i agreed to this. just post what your etalking about.
Then you have a short memory. Re-read post #17 and you’ll see that you stated
contingent beings cannot become, necessary. if they at some point could not exist, then, they are not and can never be necessary. because it was possible for them not to exist.
Now you are saying that an infinite chain of contingent beings ‘meets the definition of a necessary being.’ But you haven’t explained why. I have conjectured that each contingent being is contingent on its predecessor. You haven’t explained why that can’t be true, other than by resorting to an (understandable, but not necessarily correct) implicit rejection of infinity.
a contingent being doesnt exist until it is caused, no matter how many of them you have, im not sure if you dont understand this or if you are intentionally ignoring it. you must first claim they exist en masse, or that they come into being as links in a chain.
Yes, and as I keep saying, each being is contingent on its predecessor. I’m not intentionally ignoring anything, I’m just saying something you disagree with. There’s a big difference.
if they exist en masse, then its a POOF! theory. a violation of the PSR. if thats the case you undercut science and all intellectual inquiry as things wouldnt need a cause. you would be a believer in magic and safely dismissable. i dont think you want to go there.
It’s no more of a POOF! theory than a necessary being POOF!ing into existence. The point I have made, is that we can’t be sure either way. Neither option is within our ability to understand. So you take your choice - you’ve taken one that supports your underlying belief, I’m just pointing out that this choice is no more logical when subjected to scrutiny, than the alternative. And I’ve explained why.
if they come into being in any order, then to come from potential to actual requires a cause. a necessary being. then the argument holds and i make nmy point. and i dont think you want to go there.
so its either magic or its caused.
Well, it looks like we’ll have to agree to disagree. Big surprise!
it entails a logical contradiction, back to the ‘squared circle’.
Disagree, for reasons I have given many times in this thread.
we dont need to comprehend infinity, unless your saying there is some mechanism that allows an infinite number of contingent beings to self causate. if so demonstrate said mechanism.
I can’t. I’m not trying to. All I need to do is show that the argument doesn’t reach its conclusion without some deception/assumption. I’ve done that, therefore the argument fails.
and there is no logical problem with the idea of ‘logical contradictions’ being impossible. surely you know a squared circle is impossible right? you know what a logical contradiction means dont you?
Of course I do, there’s no need to resort to insult. The problem here is that you don’t agree with what I say, not that what I say is wrong. The conclusion reached by the argument may be right, but it isn’t right by virtue of its premisses and construction. Therefore, as an argument, it fails.
i keep explaining it. let me explain it yet again
necessary being is one whose non-existence implies a logical contradiction. a logical contradiction is an impossibility, like a ‘squared circle’ meaning that a necessary beings non-existence is an impossibility. which is why a necessary being must ‘just exist’.
do you understand how we are defining a necessary being? is there a part of this that isnt clear? if so, be very specific as to what that part is and i will endeavor to explain further.
I understand it very well. This is not a complex argument (which is why I had to smile when you intimated I had to think for days before responding!). The definition of a necessary being is clear. That doesn’t mean that its actuality is any more comprehensible or demonstrable, than an infinite regress. As I keep saying, we can’t demonstrate that either is wrong or right - we just don’t have the knowledge.
 
the dodging part is when i answer what you think are flaws. but then you simply repeat that they are flaws without seriously adressing what i said. like above where i have to keep repeating ‘logical contradiction’ at you. when the first time it was said, you should have gotten why that makes a being ‘necessary’ instead you just keep ignoring a logical contradiction as an impossibility. for instance, the next 2 statements below

here you simply assert we cant be ‘certain’, without evidence. you do not actually address the refutations of an ‘infinite chain of contingent beings.’
Er, no - as I said, I have shown why we can’t be certain.
here, you again ignore why a necessary being must exist, and simply assert that a ‘necessary being’ must fail. without addressing the logical contradiction that makes the non-existence of a necessary being impossible
I have conjectured an alternative to a necessary being, which is no less demonstrable than a necessary being. A definition of a necessary being does not mean that it exists. Otherwise, I could equally define a necessary pile of money in my bank account and go on a spending spree.
then, very specifically, which assertions are unproven? and what do yuo mean by our ability to confirm?
The assertion that a necessary being exists.
im not sure what your refering too. post it again, and i will tackle it.
I posted #29 and #30 - you only responded to #29

However, this first post, #29, after just one back-and-forth, has been split into two, so it’s getting unmanageable.

Let’s move on - we’re clearly not going to agree here. If you want to maintain your apparent stance that a recognition of impasse is equivalent to an admission of defeat, you’re welcome to such delusion!

I want to be clear though - I’m not denying that a necessary being exists; I’m not asserting that an infinite regress is true. I’m demonstrating that we can’t know for definite, either way. This lack of knowledge is enough to cast sufficient doubt on the argument.

However, the purpose of this thread, spawned from the ‘Searching for the truth’ thread, was to pursue, as you put it, the “logical exposition of the necessity of G-d.” Let’s assume that I’ve accepted your defense of the Cosmological argument - I’m keen to see how you get from a necessary being/first cause (the terms are interchanged in the SE whose argument we have been discussing) to God. I really hope you’re not going to invoke the ontological argument though…
 
Why not? They’re contingent beings! The definition of a contingent being is that it doesn’t have to exist!
Okay.
Why is it a logical contradiction? It’s contrary to the ‘infinite regress’ hypothesis, true. But the argument doesn’t explore the consequences of a necessary being, it just implies that an infinite regress is impossible, then blithely says, “so it must be a necessary being.” No critical thought is given to the possibility of a necessary being; where it comes from, when did it start to exist etc. It’s just stated as a fact. That’s what I mean by it being ‘snuck in.’
Then you have a short memory. Re-read post #17 and you’ll see that you stated
Now you are saying that an infinite chain of contingent beings ‘meets the definition of a necessary being.’ But you haven’t explained why. I have conjectured that each contingent being is contingent on its predecessor. You haven’t explained why that can’t be true, other than by resorting to an (understandable, but not necessarily correct) implicit rejection of infinity.
Yes, and as I keep saying, each being is contingent on its predecessor. I’m not intentionally ignoring anything, I’m just saying something you disagree with. There’s a big difference.
It’s no more of a POOF! theory than a necessary being POOF!ing into existence. The point I have made, is that we can’t be sure either way. Neither option is within our ability to understand. So you take your choice - you’ve taken one that supports your underlying belief, I’m just pointing out that this choice is no more logical when subjected to scrutiny, than the alternative. And I’ve explained why.
Well, it looks like we’ll have to agree to disagree. Big surprise!
Disagree, for reasons I have given many times in this thread.
I can’t. I’m not trying to. All I need to do is show that the argument doesn’t reach its conclusion without some deception/assumption. I’ve done that, therefore the argument fails.
Of course I do, there’s no need to resort to insult. The problem here is that you don’t agree with what I say, not that what I say is wrong. The conclusion reached by the argument may be right, but it isn’t right by virtue of its premisses and construction. Therefore, as an argument, it fails.
I understand it very well. This is not a complex argument (which is why I had to smile when you intimated I had to think for days before responding!). The definition of a necessary being is clear. That doesn’t mean that its actuality is any more comprehensible or demonstrable, than an infinite regress. As I keep saying, we can’t demonstrate that either is wrong or right - we just don’t have the knowledge.
funny but now its back to this.
 
funny but now its back to this.
If I put loads of new lines in, sometimes CAF will play ball. Sometimes, clearly, it won’t, 'cos I stacked 'em up in my two recent responses to no avail. I think this is a bug in the forum software - it randomly ignores new lines.

I didn’t actually realise that the problem you were having was when you clicked to reply - I thought you were saying that my actual posts appeared like that to you.

I’ll keep putting the new lines in, it seems to have an effect sometimes at least!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top