Lets assume that there was a beginning lets call it B
- There was a beginning
Given that there is existence, and given that existence is in a constant state of change, we can assume that there was a single point from which existence came into being, the inital action which set in motion all future reactions, otherwise known as the beginning
- This means that there was a point B at which there was no even before, no change before
True. Although the concept of “before” the beginning is meaningless, since “before” is a concept inherent to time, with only exists after the beginning. Since time is a construct of the physical reality, before the beginning (which is before physical existence) there was no time, and therefore the concept of “before” becomes meaningless.
- This also means that there was point B at which there was an single event after, one single change after
Still correct. The beginning set in motion all actions and reactions which would occure “after” it.
- This means that point B is anomalous since it separate change from no change
Anomalous: deviating from what is standard, normal, or expected.
This is where you start to break down. Standard, normal and expected are meaningless concepts at the beginning, because before the beginning there was nothing, and therefore no criteria by which to judge what is standard or normal. Furthermore, even making the assumption that it is anomalous is sort of non-sequitor because it requires a subjective definition of what is normal, which is not something you, as a finite being, are really capable of defining on a universal level.
- This anomaly is an entity that should exist to explain the current subject matter
Non-sequitor, you’re making logical leaps which do no flow form the premise. There’s no reason that the anomaly has to be an entity. The anomaly could just as simply be the result of the action of an entity, and not the entity itself, which would cause a problem in your next “point”.
- This means that we have to assume a point at which this anomaly start to exist which requires changes leading to infinite regression
Since, as I showed above, the anomaly is not required to be a being, this point is null.
None of your points have been right since number four, so your conclusion is flawed.
I’m going to put this as nicely as I can… but there’s really not a nice way of putting you.
You are absolutely atrocious at logical deduction… I’ve read several of your threads, wherein you attempt to argue against God through any number of flawed premises. You completely reject logical arguments when they are put forward to you, and frequently ignore valid points when they contradict your pres-assumed notions.
Put simply, you limit your own growth by rejecting anything you don’t like.
That’s about as nice as I can put it, and now I will take my leave of this thread. Instead of wasting your time trying to do something you’re really just not very good at, why don’t you actually try reading Church philosophers. They’ve addressed this… and pretty much every other “argument” you’ve made in your other threads ad-infinitum, and do a far better job of point out the flaws in the logic than most of us can.
God Bless, I hope your journey leads you to real knowledge.