D
danserr
Guest
- So it looks like it is more plausible that the universe began to exist than not. Which brings us to the cause of the universe
The Universe Began to Exist- Since the second argument is more plausibly true than not, We consider the cause of the universe. I offered two arguements:
a). The cause must be non-spatial, immaterial, atemporal (since those things began to existthis means it could be an abstract object or a mind. Abstract objects don’t cause things, therefore the cause is a mind. - you claim that minds are physical and then, that minds don’t cause anything physical. This is clearly a contradiction. But since the argument to this point is sound, and since numbers clearly do not cause anything, the cause of the universe is a mind, it logically follows. Of course neuroscience only studies the physical nature of the brain, science only can study the physical, but it doesn’t follow that there cannot be other evidence for the mind. Many philosophers insist on it. And scientific evidence cannot exclude the non-physical. Consider this: I ask my wife why water on the stove is boiling. She could say 1. because the heat is causing the water to reach sufficient kinetic energy that it boils, or 2. she could say: because I wanted tea. The scientific explanation (1) does not exclude the personal explanation (2). But your argument requires it do so. Since this is clearly untrue, we can conclude the cause of the universe is a mind, as the argument requires.
b) The cause must be personal or scientific, it is not scientific, therefore it is personal - you object:
: What flaws? If I have shown that one explanation (the scientific) is flawed (which you don’t dispute), and all that remains is another option (the personal), so then we justly infer the cause of the universe is personal. No fallacy is involved, scientists, philosophers, and historians reason this way all the time.This is the formal fallacy “Disjunctive Syllogism,” where you give two options, dismiss one, and select the other without due consideration of its flaws and merits.
- So you can see why your objections don’t really work. The first two premises are more plausibly true than not, and conceptual analysis of the cause shows it to be an unembodied mind, which Christians call God.
You object to the first premise that maybe something we don’t know about could come from nothing, to the second, that maybe something we don’t know about besides God did come before it, and to the third, that maybe something that we don’t know about besides God, did cause it.
- You keep accusing me of appealing to ignorance, but on the other hand, this is precisely what you are doing. This is why it seems to me you might want to consider that this argument implies the existence of God.