J
JuanFlorencio
Guest
When you say “Consider an unstable sort of energy which existed at the beginning of time. It simply existed so it was uncaused. It was unstable so it could cause…” and then invoke the principles of conservation, all you are saying (though I can see now that you don’t realize it, which to me means that thinking about the subject “for a while” does not mean that you have thought it thoroughly) is that that “uncaused energy” is the same “stuff” that exists now. In other words, what you dogmatically assert is that the universe is uncaused. This is old materialistic dogma.
But you want to stress, almost prophetically, “no, but I say that the uncaused energy existed at the beginning of time”, as if it added something new. You don’t realize that the word “beginning” acquires its meaning within a temporal frame, so that the expression “beginning of time” means nothing.
You need to realize that you can write whatever you want, no matter how inconsistent and contradictory it is. You can imagine I don’t know what “energy” and simply say “it is uncaused!”, and add that it is also “unstable” just because you think if fits your wishes. If you want you could also say that it tasted like mint! All the same it would just be bad poetry, at the most.
But you want to stress, almost prophetically, “no, but I say that the uncaused energy existed at the beginning of time”, as if it added something new. You don’t realize that the word “beginning” acquires its meaning within a temporal frame, so that the expression “beginning of time” means nothing.
You need to realize that you can write whatever you want, no matter how inconsistent and contradictory it is. You can imagine I don’t know what “energy” and simply say “it is uncaused!”, and add that it is also “unstable” just because you think if fits your wishes. If you want you could also say that it tasted like mint! All the same it would just be bad poetry, at the most.
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