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05-23-2003, 01:39 PM | #1 | |
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Refutation of the Argument from First Cause
Some time ago, I wrote this refutation of the argument from first cause. Ever since, I've used it as a response whenever someone uses this argument. I think that in the interest of intellectual integrity, I should be certain that my argument is sound.
If anyone can think if a problem with this argument, or a way to improve it, please post it here. Quote:
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05-23-2003, 09:25 PM | #2 |
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In other words-
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05-23-2003, 09:44 PM | #3 |
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Hmm...more like:
(Not to derail my own thread, but where did that image come from, anyway?) But yes, the argument ends with Occam's Razor. |
05-24-2003, 01:38 AM | #4 |
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But wait, don't most theists assume that God is infinite, thereby bypassing basically your entire argument? You've shown via Occam's Razor that the only reasonable God to believe in must have always existed. Now it seems you must show that such an assumption is unreasonable in itself.
In my mind the best refutation of the first cause argument is to simply point out that not every effect needs a classical cause. First of all, if there was no time "before" the Big Bang, our notion of causation is meaningless pertaining to the initiation of the Big Bang expansion. If there was time before the Big Bang, there's no reason to assume it wasn't the result of some sort of uncaused quantum event. Lastly, if it was caused, there's absolutely no reason to attribute that cause to an intelligent creature. As I've pointed out before, this universe could have been blindly crapped out by a natural process in some uberverse. Perhaps prior to the Big Bang the universe existed as some sort of eternal chaotic microverse that after an infinite amount of time reached some state that would be considered "our universe," causing an ensuing Big Bang. Basically, the moral of the story is that the first cause argument implies nothing about a God and is a piss-poor argument that one must exist. |
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