J
john_doran
Guest
i think we’re talking about dfferent things…For two reasons:
I am more than willing to change my theory, if new evidence shows up. Are you?
- There is no satisfactory theory supporting that or similar “beliefs”, but there are alot of things that point into that direction. Like it is compatible with proven laws of physics.
- It is the best theory I have. The best theory you have is “goddidit”. That is obviously a better theory to you than to me, but I regard it unsatisfactory. It explains everything and nothing. Accept that as a theory and we could abandon further fundamental research.
i’m questioning your epistemology, not your metaphysics: you have stated your positive belief in a theory for which no empirical confirmation exists, in apparent violation of your own ciriticisms of me, for example, for believing a theory under the very same conditions.
but whatever. your other points are off the mark.
- if your beliefs are compatible with the laws of physcis, then so are mine, since our beliefs diverge only at the moment of the universe’s coming into being.
- stated in those terms, your best explanation is “itjusthappened”. and i’d like to see someone seriously propose that as an explanation in the courtroom, for example (your honor - i know i was there with the gun and that i pulled the trigger, but i didn’t do it - it just happened).
to the extent that my disagreement with you is scientific (i think, for example, that quantum fluctuation cosmology is untenable), then more and better evidence will definitely change my opinion.
but, to the extent that my disagreement with you is epistemological and ontological, specifically regarding the necessity of and my certainty in the causal principle and the impossibility of an actually elapsed infinite number of moments of time, then there just isn’t evidence that can be discovered to shift the balance of my convictions: i believe that the causal principle is necessarily true, and that the existence of an actual infinite is logically impossible, both of which are beliefs not based on empirical evidence.