Gorgias:
How? Nothing (material) comes from nothing.
What you said is completely irrelevant. Why do you think that the initial state of universe should have a cause?
Because nothing physical proceeds from nothingness.
OK… but that’s a different claim than “it is uncreated.” Things that have existed from the beginning of creation can be said to “have existed from the beginning of time”; that doesn’t imply that they’re uncreated.
Well, you cannot ignore my argument and discuss the conclusion. My arguments has parts: What I am trying to say is that the stuff has existed, from beginning of time to now.
You really
do need to use more precise language.
When you say “existed from beginning of time to now”, do you mean
- always existed, without beginning
- came into existence at the beginning of the existence of the universe
or something else? I thought you meant the former, but your phrasing here seems to indicate the latter. The latter isn’t a problem – sure, there could have been “unstable energy” that was created in the Big Bang. But, that’s not what you seem to be arguing here.
The stuff deforms and changes but you always have the same amount of it. This means that we have the same amount of stuff if we go back in time until the beginning of time. The stuff either was moving at the beginning of time or it was static and unstable. So the picture is complete and simple.
Unless you can demonstrate that anything contingent can exist without a cause, then your argument here is sunk. (And, of course, you realize what the definition of ‘contingent existence’ is, right?)
This is simpler picture and you don’t need God to explain the existence of the universe so we should discard the concept of God by Occam’s Razor.
If your concept made sense, then you could make that claim. It doesn’t, so you can’t.
It is necessary in this picture. Either you have a mover or things moves on its own.
Yes, I agree that you need that assumption in order for your argument to hold up. I’m not calling you out on that. Rather, I’m asserting that your assumption is
not necessary in the context of the universe; and therefore, your argument doesn’t hold up.
What? You are the one who is claiming that it is possible so burden of proof lies upon you. I am happy with the picture that I have.
Happy? Perhaps. Proven that it’s true? Not even close…
There was nothing before the beginning.
Quite. In other words, your “unstable energy” did not exist before the universe was created. Therefore, it itself is created. You’ve just dismantled your own argument. Congratulations.
So you cannot prove that God created the universe? I am happy to hear that.
Depends on what kind of ‘proof’ you’re asking for. If you want empirical evidence of a transcendent being, then you’re not making sense. If you want philosophical reasoning, then Aquinas’ five demonstrations suffice.
