Bozo Erectus
Master Baker
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2003
- Messages
- 22,389
In the reality of god, there are no beginings or endings. Alpha and Omega are one, and completely indistinguishable one from the other.
Unless you believe that there is a permanent, infinite, fundamental organizing principle or force to existence, you will be forever looking for a first cause: a chain of begats reminicent of the lineage of Jesus. Once you accept such a principle though, the "first cause" of the universe becomes an easy step. Whether you call such a thing primal source, god, darkest matter, the void, paramatma, allah, pink teacup, Alanis Morrisette or strings, makes no difference. The source is the same. If it is first and original to existence then it must have certain chacterisitcs. If it doesn't then it cannot be first or fundamental or permanent and you are back to the begats. You (or your church or other organization) can put any kind of spin on it, that you want; you can add all kinds of attributes that make you feel comfortable, but a rose by anyother name is still a rose.Free Enterprise said:I only have seen two options; never anything else. So although there is much unexplained I would say that probably one of the only hypothesis currently available that would be invisionable is that apparently the casual chain started somewhere.
Choosing a science path to explain the origin of the universe leads you down a road that involves testing and verification based on evidence. Scientific evidence points away from a steady state universe and towards the big bang. Find evidence to the contrary and you can win a Nobel Prize.Neomega said:Seems more probable? Since you are bringing a mathematical term into the discussion, how about you give me some numbers, exactly how much more "probabable"? I don't understand why a "big bang" makes more "sense" than "Steady State".
Monk said:How do atheists get around the concept of first cause? I was discussing theology with someone recently and they brought that up, and I shamefully couldn't think of a good explanation!![]()
Of course you don't like the question; it is the single question that calls your atheism into question. Any answer that implies a first cause weakens your position. So, don't ask the question, maybe it will go away.Milan's Warrior said:I am an atheist too and I don't think it is a particularly interesting question to figure out whether there was a first cause or not.
There are a lot of phylosophical questions for which we have no satisfactory solution, but that does not imply that that a religius solution is correct. Religious solutions (at least Roman Catholic religius solutions) are just a "plug", they are not an explanation, they just say "this is it". While the contary might well be true.
I would say the same.nihilistic said:I'll answer it as an atheist/agnostic:
I don't know. Is do not pretend to know. I am also not sure that time and matter "began".
I doubt having anything outside the universe will make this a simpler matter... The outer thing would have to also have had a start or something. At some point we would have to have either a loop or a "just is" type thing that has no beginning and no end, or an uncaused cause to a finite span.Free Enterprise said:I would say at least it seems fairly certain that there is something beyond the universe (the events causing the universe would be the evidence). There could be a larger universe type entity (or entities) or another thing (s). I would consider that in a like manner that humans have found that there are things beyond earth there are things beyond the universe. It is reasonable to expect to see or find things out there.
Neomega said:Aye, it may never be solved.

More useful? Why cannot an infinite existance be invisioned as being true?
Birdjaguar said:Of course you don't like the question; it is the single question that calls your atheism into question. Any answer that implies a first cause weakens your position. So, don't ask the question, maybe it will go away.
How could a first cause possibly be indistinguishable from god?Neomega said:How so? If first cause were proven tomorrow, how would that prove the existance of a God?
Birdjaguar said:Choosing a science path to explain the origin of the universe leads you down a road that involves testing and verification based on evidence. Scientific evidence points away from a steady state universe and towards the big bang. Find evidence to the contrary and you can win a Nobel Prize.
Dumb pothead said:How could a first cause possibly be indistinguishable from god?
Birdjaguar said:Of course you don't like the question; it is the single question that calls your atheism into question. Any answer that implies a first cause weakens your position. So, don't ask the question, maybe it will go away.
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Dumb pothead said:Neomega, of course this universe has a beginning, but what does that have to do with god?
I dont think god is a pink teacup, but if he(it) is, who am I to say nay?Neomega said:It could be the pink teacup.
The rules of this universe are very clear: everything has a beginning and an end.Neomega said:What makes you so sure the universe has a beginning?
Dumb pothead said:The rules of this universe are very clear: everything has a beginning and an end.
But it is expanding, and I believe accelerating its expansion. And unless you believe in miracles, the universe must obey it's own laws. Steady state does not fit with what we know.Neomega said:Some evidence would be that the farther we look, the more universe we see. Now the ouskirts of the universe, and it's estimated age, just increased tenfold, about 3 or 4 months ago.
We are back to defining god and whose definition you choose to use. If there is a most fundamental, most basic, undifferentiated source, then we get to fight over whose description is correct and not whether or not it exists.Neomega said:How so? If first cause were proven tomorrow, how would that prove the existance of a God?