by jimwalton » Tue Sep 26, 2017 4:49 pm
The statements don't apply to God because God didn't "begin to exist" and was never generated nor needed to self-generate. Something was always there. We know if we have nothing we get nothing. If anything can pop into existence (begin to exist) from nothing, there there is no such thing as science. Generally it is thought that something was either matter or the first cause. But since science is of a consensus that matter didn't always exist, then we are left to find another First Cause that didn't begin to exist. God is a reasonable logical conclusion.
Leibnitz spoke of a "Principle of Sufficient Reason." Everything has to have a reason for existence. There are basically two choices: (1) self, or (2) something outside of self. Therefore the universe has a cause for its existence. What would be a sufficient cause?
There must have always been something, so it must be an eternal cause.
If the past is infinite, we would have no present (Kalam's argument). Only if the past is finite can there be a present, so the sufficient cause must be timeless.
There must be a personal cause. Impersonal causes must have first causes. Only personal causes are capable of being first causes, to cause other things to come about. Kinetic energy is energy is motion; potential energy is energy stored. The only way something begins in motion is if there is a first cause. What puts a system in motion?
What if the universe always existed? For the universe to have eternal existence, it must have been static (potential energy). But what moved the universe into kinetic energy? How did it get in motion? Personal causes are the only things capable of being first causes (though not every personal cause is a first cause.) You can never have an infinite chain of causes—it regresses. Whenever we see a chain of causes, we can always ask, "Who caused it?"
It had to have been a powerful cause. The universe displays immense power and complexity.
It had to have been an intelligent cause because we have informational data. We have no example of informational data that does not come from an intelligent cause.
What we are inferring is an eternal, timeless, personal, intelligent, and powerful cause. If we are inferring the most reasonable conclusion, God is a reasonable answer.
The statements don't apply to God because God didn't "begin to exist" and was never generated nor needed to self-generate. Something was always there. We know if we have nothing we get nothing. If anything can pop into existence (begin to exist) from nothing, there there is no such thing as science. Generally it is thought that something was either matter or the first cause. But since science is of a consensus that matter didn't always exist, then we are left to find another First Cause that didn't begin to exist. God is a reasonable logical conclusion.
Leibnitz spoke of a "Principle of Sufficient Reason." Everything has to have a reason for existence. There are basically two choices: (1) self, or (2) something outside of self. Therefore the universe has a cause for its existence. What would be a sufficient cause?
There must have always been something, so it must be an eternal cause.
If the past is infinite, we would have no present (Kalam's argument). Only if the past is finite can there be a present, so the sufficient cause must be timeless.
There must be a personal cause. Impersonal causes must have first causes. Only personal causes are capable of being first causes, to cause other things to come about. Kinetic energy is energy is motion; potential energy is energy stored. The only way something begins in motion is if there is a first cause. What puts a system in motion?
What if the universe always existed? For the universe to have eternal existence, it must have been static (potential energy). But what moved the universe into kinetic energy? How did it get in motion? Personal causes are the only things capable of being first causes (though not every personal cause is a first cause.) You can never have an infinite chain of causes—it regresses. Whenever we see a chain of causes, we can always ask, "Who caused it?"
It had to have been a powerful cause. The universe displays immense power and complexity.
It had to have been an intelligent cause because we have informational data. We have no example of informational data that does not come from an intelligent cause.
What we are inferring is an eternal, timeless, personal, intelligent, and powerful cause. If we are inferring the most reasonable conclusion, God is a reasonable answer.