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Picky_Picky
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Oh dear. Take your time.
So this isn't extremely long, I'll address Post 58 by itself later.
For post 59 and summing up the chewing the fat continuation. It has been a good chew, but I can't say I wouldn't be a little disappointed if at least to this point we didn't recognize all of the context we've looked at to help clear away some of the weeds in the myth theory. I think we could identify a few posts that add context.
Kind of like the Hitler analysis earlier. You laid out a bio that to the unlearned might seem quite honest and true, but we both know details that give a fullness of truth.
The myth theory is comfortable to those that do not know the details that show the myth theory standing on a sandy foundation. One of those details simply being that if it only was a good story, the authors did a poor job presenting themselves. Too many times do they write of their own foolishness and dumb actions.
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With regard to moving forward, I too have thought about where we could go. A couple of items I heard recently which I thought were interesting, and perhaps you might feel likewise.
1) How the word 'believe' is meant and used today vs yester-year and surrounding analysis.
2) The purpose of the New Testament. An analysis of why it was written that I never heard before, but makes sense to me.
I'll be taking care of my dad for a couple days again here this week. Also my best time to online chat is being driven from me, so I might have to be much shorter, if we shall continue.
Take care,
Mike
Hi picky, thanks for the numbering. I think I’ll start with your last 2 parts, with two simple answers.I hope all is well with you, Mike.
I’m going to chop Fr Schmitz’s argument right down. If I misrepresent him horribly, let me know (of course I won’t do justice to him in this short space). Well, it seems to run like this (with, of course, my comments) …
1 The material world is causal. Agreed
2 There must have been a First Cause. Not agreed.
3 Because the material world is causal, if one had stood at the Big Bang with a powerful enough computer, and if the universe were purely material, one would have been able to predict the whole future of the universe. Not agreed.
Firstly it is probably the case that one could not fashion such a computer. That’s not just a picky point, it’s important because it means that whether the material universe is completely predictable or not, it is not completely predictable by us.
Secondly quantum mechanics teaches that we cannot predict anything with certainty, only with some degree of probability.
4 We have free will. Well, we have the sensation of free will.
5 Free will and a completely predictable universe are incompatible, therefore the universe cannot be purely material: there must be something else that renders the material universe contingent on exercises of free will; that something is God. Not agreed.
Firstly a compatibilist might ask what a free will decision could possibly look like if it were not based on causes: my genetic inheritance, plus all the experiences I have had, including my education, my family, my religion if I have one, such ability as my brain has developed to think logically, my emotional development, the people I have loved, the things I have lost, what I have found good, my mood today – these will be among the things that channel my decision.
Secondly, we have too little knowledge of what “free will” is to understand it. We know it is connected in some way with consciousness, but then we don’t understand consciousness either. We can’t make far-ranging conclusions on the basis of such ignorance.
Thirdly we have shown in any case that the material universe is not completely predictable (point 3).
Fourthly if free will and a completely predictable universe are incompatible, then free will must be incompatible with an all-seeing all-knowing God.
…
My own view is that we are dealing with a problem here that doesn’t matter.
The universe may or may not be predictable, but we know that it is not completely predictable by us – chaos theory would tell us that, and our personal experience confirms it. We cannot, in other words, distinguish between the universe we have and a universe which is not completely predictable. If we cannot distinguish between them, they are the same for all human purposes.
Free will may or may not exist, but we know that even if our decisions are causally based the causes are so intricate and complicated that we could not predict completely how they would determine our decisions. We cannot, in other words, distinguish between a universe in which free will is unfettered and one where free will is causal. If we cannot distinguish between them, the difference cannot be relevant for any human purposes.
I may be talking nonsense, but my little brain is content with that outcome.
Hi Picky, I hope things are well.5 Free will and a completely predictable universe are incompatible, therefore the universe cannot be purely material: there must be something else that renders the material universe contingent on exercises of free will; that something is God. Not agreed.
Firstly a compatibilist might ask what a free will decision could possibly look like if it were not based on causes: my genetic inheritance, plus all the experiences I have had, including my education, my family, my religion if I have one, such ability as my brain has developed to think logically, my emotional development, the people I have loved, the things I have lost, what I have found good, my mood today – these will be among the things that channel my decision.
Secondly, we have too little knowledge of what “free will” is to understand it. We know it is connected in some way with consciousness, but then we don’t understand consciousness either. We can’t make far-ranging conclusions on the basis of such ignorance.
Thirdly we have shown in any case that the material universe is not completely predictable (point 3).
Fourthly if free will and a completely predictable universe are incompatible, then free will must be incompatible with an all-seeing all-knowing God.
…
I’ve started reading back through the posts of yours I’ve missed, and I notice that you say there what you say here: that in denying First Cause I’m proposing a breach in the laws of physics. I don’t think so. What I’m objecting to is “First”. That implies the universe had a beginning: an unproven assumption.Welcome back Picky!
I thought I had let too much time pass myself, and you had moved on.
I answered much or all of you summary in my previous posts. I think we’ve worked our way down to this question on the ‘first cause issue’ …
Why do we easily accept an exception to what we have learned about matter here with ‘no first cause’, but reject other exceptions to matter’s cause-effect properties that it would seem humans actually witnessed?
I think, if you are willing, it would be worth hearing Fr. Riccardo’s similar talk while thinking about this stuff…
avemariaradio.net/audio_archive/christ-is-the-answer-july-9-2014-4/
There is one dated the 8th, but it gets cut off, this is a direct page for the 9th where they posted the full version.
I only listened to it once, I’ll listen again today, as it hopefully helps us move this great talk forward.
Have a great day and week!
Take care,
Mike
Since it seems my ability to post from here has returned, I can catch up on this one.By the way, as to C S Lewis’s three Ls, that was how this thread, or rather its predecessor, started! Some of us questioned whether Lewis’s choice-of-three covered all the possibilities. It doesn’t, of course, and as an example I suggested Jesus was a preacher and healer whom the authorities executed, and in the wake of which tragedy his followers began to see visions, around which myths formed. You said something like “Ah, the daft old hallucinations theory” … and here we still are, growing older but not wiser, still chewing the fat.
I’d like to add to our meal on this one a little.I’ve started reading back through the posts of yours I’ve missed, and I notice that you say there what you say here: that in denying First Cause I’m proposing a breach in the laws of physics. I don’t think so. What I’m objecting to is “First”. That implies the universe had a beginning: an unproven assumption.
With regard to Fr. John, I did not note what was not on the talk, but I think your alertness is a wonderful quality. Is there a site you would recommend in understanding this disagreement further?
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I had heard about the tri-L-emma only in the last few years (I wasn't much of a reader early on and my memory is not good, so it's possible I heard of it as a youngster)
It's argument was not what brought me to like Fr. Schmitz' talk so much, it was actually the further breakdown to 'God, or Bad Man', a bi-L-emma.
I think our analytical ways are a little different. I look at analyzing like an upsidedown triangle with the goal to getting to the bottom, the source of all that is inside, holding it all up.
I think that if we were to take each of the options that you presented (the deca-L-emma), we could logically break them down to 1 of the three Lewis conclusions, or better, 1 of the 2 Schmitz (and later learning Fr. John) options.
As Fr. John mentions, Jesus is the key. He either was who He said (and showed) He was, or He is not.
No matter how many types of a person, anyone wants to introduce, it breaks down to that, simply.
I'll touch up on our science route later but I want to shout what you wrote above as I totally agree and maybe it's the next part of our analysis...
"If the truth is extraordinary, it may well need proof to be believed."
~Picky Picky, CAF member 2014
Absolutely.
have a great weekend,
Mike
Yes, it’s strange how we find one model of the universe more comfortable. I think of causes having causes having causes stretching backwards, and effects causing effects causing effects stretching forwards, and that makes an eternal universe seem more comfortable than one with a beginning. The human mind is an odd creature.Alrighty, back to all that science fun (I have a few more minutes).
With regard to the science fun (and the other stuff), I’m not really attacking it like “how can I defend my position about God” as much as “Let’s really think about what we believe and analyze it”.
When you lay out that the universe is causal, but without a cause to start it (I believe a 1 and 2 in a previous post). This is a confusing concept to me…
My belief in ‘first cause’ is not built in this way - that the universe 'has a ‘beginning’ - thus ‘first cause’.
Rather, in reverse. - If effects have causes, there must be a cause to the first effect(s).
Thus there must be a beginning, because effects have causes. That’s how I see it.
I can’t line up an effect without a cause, especially related to matter, as force is needed to move matter (even if an unpredictable path). I would need someone to show me how effects can be without causes. For that one I need that proof, if true.
So of our two unproven’s - the universe has always been, and the universe has a beginning, I can use science and logic to see why the second one works, but need to take on a blind faith for the first at this point in time.
I’m just too weak of a person for a blind faith.
Now, have a great weekend!
Take care,
Mike
I like the idea of the gavel. It could smack down after each creative command in Genesis 1.That is so great. What an interesting observation.
I don’t think I mentioned earlier, but I can confirm I did hear of the pool ball analysis, and Fr. Schmitz actually uses it in that talk. I probably skipped that detail in the summary.
It is enlightening to learn that the cause-effect relationship is not a given, this revelation helps with understanding your thought process a lot ( and I will note this as another point to understand with folks early on in future conversations, thank you).
When I think of the Big Bang, I think of a ‘thing’ that needed to be banged, thus the cause was the ‘banging’ (though I don’t think there was a hammer or gavel involved, and would only make guesses for fun as to how God actually created).
The effect then was the expansion of matter.
Of course that’s combining cause with effect, I can see how that doesn’t work for you now.
You aren’t alone in the brain bottleneck to accepting arena. If I accepted better what I profess, I would be at mass daily.
Even Catholics in general, if one was to believe polls. I think it’s somewhere north of 50% of Catholics don’t know that the Eucharist is Jesus. So you have folks who profess one thing in Mass and in the same Mass 20 minutes later don’t know what it is they profess.
Maybe the pollsters call folks on a Sunday morning and catch the ones that skip Mass.
Take care,
Mike