Alois:
The same could be said for an infinite universe. You assume it needs a “start” point, but that the starter doesn’t? That’s illogical.
I meant that just as the set of Integers conceptually has no start or end -inf … -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, … +inf], and no one really uses that as a reason to say the set doesn’t exist, so to does infinite existence have no start or end, without there being a problem. And let me focus on the aspect of the set being a conceptual existence, and not a basket of eggs. I say that because a concept is more easily understood to exist outside of time or place.
Now, although there was no start point for Z, yet there are start points for equations referencing numbers from Z, that manifest instances of those numbers. But perhaps this comparison is becoming obscure now.
Let’s say we have the set of all conceivable faces. It is not manifested, but it exists. We can implement one in a block of stone, at which point it started to “exist” in the sense it was manifested. But we don’t think in terms that all faces exist in concept already. We think in terms that a new face was “created” by a sculptor in the stone. And if it breaks or is otherwise destroyed, then it stopped “existing”. My point is that is indeed more logical that all faces already exist as a concept, independently from a particular manifestation, and they cannot be destroyed by anything in the physical universe. And so when they started to “exist”, it was only because they were starting to be made manifest in the observable universe. Thus, the source did not start, but the manifestation did start. Now, I am not saying this source of concepts is God. I am only giving this as a generic example of how something “without a limit” can be the source of something that “has a limit”.
So it is very logical. Or do you think that a start point means there was nothingness before the start?
That is illogical. If there was truly “nothing”, and I mean at
any level, then how could anything have started? For then there would not even be any ideas or concepts, or logic itself. For logic is something.
Alois:
Alois said:
Originally Posted by Alois
However, existence is not the source of existence. It is existence.
Sometimes an existing object is the source of another existing object, perhaps by composition, perhaps by imitation, etc. An invisible design can be the source of a visible sculpture. A block of stone can be the source of the sculpted bust. Its existence subsists in the other.
The block, in this case, is the base not the source. The human carving that block is the source, the God. The sculpture would still be a part of that block after it is sculpted, and would still be a part of it. This is consistant with existence.
We are miscommunicating. The concept of a face is the source (form) for the construction of the sculpture, thus existence is the source of existence. That is one way. A second way is that the stone is the source (substance) for the construction of the house, thus existence is the source of existence. Neither of these really involves a doer yet.
When you refer to a human carving that block, that is the source (cause) of the manifestation, a third way.
Now, if eternal existence is the source, then since it is the only existence that ever was (and ever will be), it must be the source in all three senses: form, substance, and cause.
Alois:
This analogy is inaccurate however, because a block of stone in not an infinite set. …
Agreed. I was just making a case for how existence can come from existence.
hurst