CopaceticMan wrote:I have no problem with what Craymatter said, other than he may have rejected 'creation' too quickly.
Byblos wrote:You dismiss too quickly. You can ask the question 'who created God' only if the a priori assumption is that everything MUST have been created. Is that in fact the biblical or the classical philosophical claim? No it is not. The actual claim is that an UNCAUSED CAUSE must exist, otherwise nothing would get started to begin with, including your multi-verse. So to ask the question who created God would be tantamount to asking who caused the uncaused cause. It is a nonsensical statement that violates the law of non-contradiction.
You speak of an uncaused cause. What is this cause? God? Why does it have to be God (God, being a being with the 3*omni's)?
You can call it anything your little heart desires but it doesn't change the fact that the uncaused cause must be all-powerful to be able to create ex nihilo, must be simple so as to
need nothing, must be transcendent and therefore outside of its own creation, and must be intelligent so as to decide to create (there are more attributes of course but those will do for now).
CopaceticMan wrote: If we are calling this cause God with out a base for it, why can't I claim that this cause was just a quantum fluctuation, that inflated, bringing into existence our universe.
You can't call that the uncaused cause because quantum fluctuation does not conform to any of the attributes of an uncaused cause, let alone all of them.
CopaceticMan wrote:Quantum physicists, when they say that every thing ocame from nothing, they don't literally mean ex nihilo, out of nothing. What they speak of when they say nothing is the back round on which everything exists.
Do you see the emphasized? Where did everything come from? More to the point, where did the background where everything exists come from? Why is there something rather than nothing?
CopaceticMan wrote: Do I know what this is? No. Am I a string theorist? No. Do I know more about this than the average person, yes. Can I in due time? Yes.
Lol, you might find more than the average person around here. And I look forward to knowing as well. What is your point?
CopaceticMan wrote:If you can claim this uncaused cause is God, I can claim it is a random atom or Zeus.
Again, no you can't because by definition an atom or Zeus does not conform to the attributes of an uncaused cause (unless you want to argue infinite regress). This is not a matter of religion or faith, it is a matter of science (the bedrock of all sciences, i.e. philosophy).