Jac3510 wrote:I don't think anyone is saying that, Audie.
If proof of god via first cause etc is offered in any part on the basis of a profound misunderstanding ofvwhat time is, then-?
Jac3510 wrote:I don't think anyone is saying that, Audie.
That is because A) the METAphysics came FIRST, and B) whatever physical things came into existence are here because of whatever TRULY pre-existed within the metaphysical realm. And something within THAT metaphysical realm had to have been eternal, powerful and intelligent, etc - because of the amazing characteristics of the precise things which instantly emerged from it. The identity of that thing or things physical things emerged from can be reasonably debated. However, we unquestionably and rationally know that SOMETHING was in the metaphysical realm - and that truth is established simply by the fact that we have an extraordinary universe, whereas before the physical appeared, nothing physical existed.metaphysics is as true regardlees of physics.
No. The question of God's existence via the First Way (to offer a specific example of a first cause argument) is in no way related to the question of the nature of time. Morever, the question as to the nature of time is not asked and answered without respect to physics. It is based in large part on physics. It just turns out, per my OP, as any good theory, that predictions from the theory are being confirmed (e.g., relativity being the big one). Another major prediction relates to the whole notion of indeterminacy. A major problem in philosophy today and related enterprises is the question of hard determinism. But that's an outmoded idea, a relic of a Newtonian view of the universe. It's wrong. The classical view has always espoused that the physical universe is fundamentally indeterministic. Science is starting to prove that right, and it will continue to do so. Just like it is and has been with time. And that is also why people don't know what time is. In a Newtonian world, time is one thing. And the Newtonian view is commonly assumed. And that creates intractable problems. But if you get away from those errors to what we have always said time is, then the problems immediately clear up.Audie wrote:Jac3510 wrote:I don't think anyone is saying that, Audie.
If proof of god via first cause etc is offered in any part on the basis of a profound misunderstanding ofvwhat time is, then-?
And that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
And that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
True - as the latter came from and was produced from within the former.Jac: My point is that metaphysics are physics are interrelated...
No! There once was NO physical reality - and then, suddenly, there was. The metaphysical reality was absent of the physical and IS absent it (at least the physical reality of our universe) but birthed it.Jac: ...and that is because both are describing the same reality. But they are describing different aspects of that same reality.
Of course not.Jac: Physics literally cannot answer metaphysical questions...
Well, other than they are somehow responsible for the physics of things.Jac: ...and metaphysics literally cannot answer physics questions
And vice versa! And the physics of things still need an explanation - and that must lie within the metaphysical realm. But physics can never explain metaphysics, because that is not what it is capable of examining. But I would say the universe shouts that the physics of things hint rather strongly at metaphysics, AND tracing their existence backwards naturally leads to metaphysics.Jac: ...stated more succinctly: physicists tend to be bad philosophers and don't realize it.
You actually have that backwards. Meta means "after." Metaphysics are what we see must be true after we study physics.Philip wrote:True - as the latter came from and was produced from within the former.Jac: My point is that metaphysics are physics are interrelated...
When there was no physical reality, there was no metaphysics.No! There once was NO physical reality - and then, suddenly, there was. The metaphysical reality was absent of the physical and IS absent it (at least the physical reality of our universe) but birthed it.
Right, but you can't reason that way. You don't know a thing's potencies until you measure them. In other words, you can't reason to how things will work in the physical world a priori. That kind of knowledge can only come a posteriori, and so such knowledge is fundamentally and necessarily empirical. And it is from such empirically based knowledge that we get the data to come to our metaphysical conclusions.Well, other than they are somehow responsible for the physics of things.
And that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
I spent just a little bit of time digging around YouTube. Here are several short videos I'd like to offer up, not just to you, but others also on metaphysics and the nature of such knowledge (the second one below I'd especially recommend Audie, as it clarifies types of knowledge to be had):Audie wrote:Seemed others are saying that their metaphysics is as true regardlees of physics.Kurieuo wrote:I don't really know what your perception of philosophy is, but it seems direly wrong to me. Science really couldn't get off the ground without it. And philosophy without science is like navigating blind. The two really mutually inform each other.
Phil, just out of curiousity, how do you think the non-physical can give birth to physical? I mean on a cosmic scale, how do you understand it?Philip wrote:OK, there are differing perceptions of what is considered to be metaphysical. What I am referencing is ONLY that invisible, non-physical realm that preceded ALL things physical, and from which all things physical originated.
How do you mean?And, BTW, time itself emerged from the metaphysical
I'm sorry, I never claimed time exists without physicality, in fact I think the exact opposite because we know that from evidence of space-time.Philip wrote:Neo, let me ask you: If you define time as something that exists without ANY physical things in existence - well, then, what is it, really? I equate time as a measure of things and events related to the physical.
You mean a quantum vacuum? it has potential energy but is it really nothing? It's controversial. Some poeple think a qunatum vacuum is not really nothing. Some like you are referring to do. What we do know that even in vacuum QPs start to appear and disappear.most scientists agree there is a point in which nothing physical existed.
Great. Because WHEREVER the physical came / whatever the Source, is also the source of the time that came into existence with it!Neo: I'm sorry, I never claimed time exists without physicality, in fact I think the exact opposite because we know that from evidence of space-time.
I tend to think billions of years ago. Precisely? That's unknowable. And for me, that exact point or length of time is relatively irrelevant.Neo: But I wanted to know how you think of it. I mean at what point did God say let there be light?
Clearly. And it's also what Scripture teaches.Neo: God is eternal but he there was obviously a moment when he ushered the words as a verbal command, right?
Does a spiritual being have a physical voice? Yes, He can create and USE a physical voice, just like He can create and utilize anything He so desires. But as there were no other beings alive to hear and understand, why would God use a physical voice? Not to mention, it doesn't really matter how He "spoke" the universe into existence.Neo: Because a verbal command is basically an utterance of sound, is it physical the voice I mean? Or do you envision it as a thought just echoing inside the God mind?
As we are not BORN Christians, but born to quickly begin sinning, and as God is pure, we are clearly separate beings, else we could not sin, because God cannot contain any imperfection. And He tells us we once did not exist, and how we were created - and that is true whether Adam & Eve were the first real humans or not. You either believe that or not. Or, you could just latch on to Pantheism - which is where "we are all part of God" can lead.Neo: Or if that doesn't make sense, how do you understand that physical came into existence? As you say God didn't have a truck- load of things to dump, and that's fine. I can accept that but how then do you think we exist? Do we exist in God's mind, or are we a separate existence from God? Is our existence an extension of God's own reality, his own existence or should I say his own being, being the existence?
Of course I mean from God.Neo: I'm sorry, I just wanna know how you make sense of it in your own belief, which you seem quite sure of, that everything came from metaphysical, which you still haven't explained if you mean God by it or something abstract.
That's not an understandable question. But God is not a physical being, but a Spiritual one! His Spirit took on the cloak of a human - and forever so!Neo: How does the jump from non-physical to physical happened? I mean who is to say that God in his own right the only physical being that truly is physical in the way that he exists.
Neo, really, what is your point? Either God exists and He created the universe, or He did not. As for the HOW off all of this - that seems to be what you are exceedingly hung up upon. You appear to be obsessed with untold processes as opposed to the one Who created and controls the processes. You seem all worked up over whether God micromanages the universe, or whether He just programmed it for randomness, unconcerned about the details of how that would eventually work out. And yet even that is absurd because an all-knowing Being could not have created ANYTHING that He didn't ALWAYS have full knowledge of what it would do or produce. And so, for it to have come out any differently than how it has come about (and ALL that happens), He would had to have created it differently - and yet, HOWEVER He MIGHT have created, He would have full knowledge of every future aspect of it.Neo: You mean a quantum vacuum? it has potential energy but is it really nothing? It's controversial. Some poeple think a qunatum vacuum is not really nothing. Some like you are referring to do. What we do know that even in vacuum QPs start to appear and disappear.
The problem is when you say billions of years ago, that introduces time outside of creation. And obviously, you only believe it came after. I hope you see the contradiction. There was obviously a point when God created but the very problem is "when" and "created".Neo: But I wanted to know how you think of it. I mean at what point did God say let there be light?
I tend to think billions of years ago. Precisely? That's unknowable. And for me, that exact point or length of time is relatively irrelevant.
And clearly flies in the face of what you said earlier, and how we both agree to it that time only exists after or when creation happened.Neo: God is eternal but he there was obviously a moment when he ushered the words as a verbal command, right?
Clearly. And it's also what Scripture teaches.
On the contrary Phil, I made it clear in my last post that all I am doing is trying to learn your reasons for what you believe and the apparent problems I see with it.Neo, really, what is your point? Either God exists and He created the universe, or He did not. As for the HOW off all of this - that seems to be what you are exceedingly hung up upon. You appear to be obsessed with untold processes as opposed to the one Who created and controls the processes. You seem all worked up over whether God micromanages the universe, or whether He just programmed it for randomness, unconcerned about the details of how that would eventually work out. And yet even that is absurd because an all-knowing Being could not have created ANYTHING that He didn't ALWAYS have full knowledge of what it would do or produce. And so, for it to have come out any differently than how it has come about (and ALL that happens), He would had to have created it differently - and yet, HOWEVER He MIGHT have created, He would have full knowledge of every future aspect of it.
It's really a non-objection. What are God's abilities in the context you say? if I throw a new-born baby into a cage of a hungry lion, will God come down to stop me? If I rape someone, will God come down and say stop it? If I decide to do any of those things, will God stop me or can I just do things? Observation and real world experiencing tells me, God wouldn't. He never does actually. So if a priest wants to add a second creation account in Genesis, will God stop him? I hardly think so.Neo, your view of God appears to greatly limit His abilities. Because either Scripture is God-given or it is not! IF it is not, this means that He either A) doesn't care about people being misled by some collection of writings that only mostly or partially originated from Him (just think of the immense trouble and danger of such a thing!), and B) if that is the case, we could have no confidence in ANY of it, or C) That a Creator that came to die for His Word, really didn't. Or D) Which is most absurd, is that God wouldn't have the power to protect His word, or E) that it really wouldn't matter for Him to do so - this a God who has created specificity on a level we can scarcely comprehend!).
Again, if you missed it in our previous convos, I don't doubt scripture, I know exactly the part that I have a problem with and that is only because evidence today tells me it's impossible, so I think it must be wrong. I sincerely believe that the scripture says what it means except ofcourse the part where there's evidence against it. I really doubt that God would fault me for using my brain. The Bible isn't an all or nothing. The first gentile church converts didn't have the O.T with them, nor the N.T for that matter, did it stop them from believing? I see the Biblical text for what it means and I respect it. I can understand why some of the detail is wrong and I am fine with it. I can see why that is so. Doesn't hamper my faith at all.Neo, all of this really begs a huge question as to why you believe in Jesus as God? Because Scripture says so???!!! Why believe THAT, if it is mixed up with tons of myth and fictions? How do you even know anything at all about Jesus - of significant detail that would lead you to faith? Because the Bible and God's prophets and Apostles said... Uh, that's a problem if you doubt so much of it. Really, why believe ANY of it. You're worried about all of these scientific "proofs" or speculations, and yet you state you believe as Jesus as your savior? WHY???!!! That's not scientific! Rational thinking didn't complete that for you. Somehow, ultimately, you must have faith in Christ. So, why DO you - if you don't accept the Bible as God's Word? And if you accept ONLY certain parts - how do you determine which is WHICH???
So you actually believe that Jesus confirmed the O.T...then you must also believe that the world was created in 6 days, and the sun and moon stood still when Joshua prayed?As the New Testament reveals that Jesus confirmed the entirety of the Old Testament canon of writing of the Law and the Prophets, and we have his Words from reliable sources. If we don't believe what those that knew Jesus said He taught - why believe any of it?
The feeling is mutual Phil. As I said its a discussion.Sorry, Neo, you should know how much I care about you - and respect you.
Yes, I agree, God can never have a new thought of something that would one day He would make become reality. But that is an entirely different thing than the fact that at one specific moment, He created the beginning of the physical reality which we live in.Neo: Because whatever God wants to create that is his mind, for the lack of better wording, is with him true from always. We can't say, God, one day thought of making us.
You just contradicted yourself! You don't doubt, BUT.... some aspect of it is impossible? If it is impossible, then it is not God's word. OR maybe, and far more likely, is you have either misunderstood the meaning OR you have bought into an inaccurate scientific understandings. Of course, we know that the Creation accounts have multiple possibilities based upon the wording - which many evangelical scholars agree upon.Neo: I don't doubt scripture, I know exactly the part that I have a problem with and that is only because evidence today tells me it's impossible, so I think it must be wrong.
Neo: I sincerely believe that the scripture says what it means except ofcourse the part where there's evidence against it. I really doubt that God would fault me for using my brain.
Jesus said SCRIPTURE is God-given. And He confirmed what was considered Scripture. The Apostles quoted so much of the Old Testament that you can almost assemble if from just the NT quotations. So, what you assert means that we should doubt large portions of what they and Christ is recorded to assert is Scripture.Neo: The Bible isn't an all or nothing. The first gentile church converts didn't have the O.T with them, nor the N.T for that matter, did it stop them from believing? I see the Biblical text for what it means and I respect it. I can understand why some of the detail is wrong and I am fine with it. I can see why that is so. Doesn't hamper my faith at all.
And you know that isn't correct - DEPENDING upon how one interprets it. Adam and Eve might well have been created LONG after God first created the first man - however and by whatever process that might have taken. I say by miraculus fiat - you, likely, by evolution. But God's line, could have come much later with the creations of Adam & Eve - and long after mankind was created. The text does allow for this - READ it. You also know the issues surrounding the "days" of creation, and how other passages show it need not require 24 hours. You also should know that miraculous creation could also account for the very same fossil evidences. But the main issue is that nothing could exist without God creating it.Neo: Though I do think you are making a stumbling block for yourself. Given what we know now, the Adam-Eve story can't be exactly how it's told.
Well, first, you have a huge problem in that you have no idea how to pick and choose what Jesus and the Apostles wrote as inspired, and what is just - what? Lies, outright fabrications? Distortions of others? Have you ever done research into the related issues - if so, you should know that there is immense support for the intergrity of Scripture.Neo: You can choose to say you don't accept it and that's fine. But its a major problem that comes with this type of thinking, when people realize it they just leave faith because they are taught an all or nothing approach.
But your main problem seems to be you read so much Scripture as literalist where it suits you, but not where it doesn't. Maybe faith in Jesus isn't so critical? Maybe it's okay to do all manner of whatever sins, and the texts are just the moralizing of some mens' human sensibilities that they incorporated into the texts.Neo: Instead of understanding the wider goals and making sense of things you need to have an affirmation that you must believe all of it true even though there's evidence against it. To be honest Phil, that's not faith at all. That is self-deceiving. And I will be guilty of that if I didn't clear my objections and still kept on believing against the evidence. As the New Testament reveals that Jesus confirmed the entirety of the Old Testament canon of writing of the Law and the Prophets, and we have his Words from reliable sources. If we don't believe what those that knew Jesus said He taught - why believe any of it?
Neo: Of course you don't, even though the scriptures clearly confirm it. May I ask why? Why not just believe what it says?