A
AntiTheist
Guest
Always happy to oblige.I’m interested in what AntiTheist makes of this particular proof
I would stop with the first premise. That first premise is true for all things that exist within the universe; the problem is that you then want to turn around and apply it to the entire universe itself.
- If something exists, there must exist what it takes for that thing to exist.
- The universe—the collection of beings in space and time—exists.
- Therefore, there must exist what it takes for the universe to exist.
- What it takes for the universe to exist cannot exist within the universe or be bounded by space and time.
- Therefore, what it takes for the universe to exist must transcend both space and time.
You can’t use observations about objects in the universe to come to conclusions about how the universe came to be – especially before the Big Bang, when we don’t know whether or not the laws of the universe (pre-universe?) operated in the same way as they do now.
In other words, since we don’t know anything about the period before the Big Bang – or whether or not it even makes sense to speak of “before the Big Bang” – we can’t make any reliable judgments about “what it takes” for the stuff that came before the Big Bang to exist. Perhaps the stuff that came before the Big Bang always existed. Perhaps some pre-universe natural law – that’s not operative anymore – caused particles to emerge from the rough equivalent of a void. Perhaps some supernatural being other than your god caused the Big Bang to happen.
We really don’t know. And at any rate, even if there were a god, what are the things that must exist for a god to exist? If you’re going to state that a god can exist all by himself without a beginning, then you have contradicted your first premise, and your argument fails. If your god could have existed all by himself without a beginning, there’s no reason that the “stuff” that came before the Big Bang couldn’t have existed all by itself without a beginning. [And if you’re going to say, “Well, god’s special,” then that’s special pleading]
Like I say, either there’s an infinite chain of causes (which doesn’t make sense) or something (whether an intelligent being or some kind of mindless matter) always existed (which doesn’t make sense) or the universe emerged from a void due to some quantum principle (which also doesn’t make sense).
We don’t know. And “I don’t know” can’t be used to support a claim.
You keep coming back to variations on this same argument from ignorance, which suggests that you’re really holding on to it and holding out hope that there’s some word game that can make it work.