by Book Mitten » Tue Jan 14, 2020 5:35 pm
> That gets very tricky, because we're talking about timelessness. It is theorized by most scientists that before the Big Bang, time did not exist, which is something we can't even hypothetically comprehend. So phrases like "prior to creation" and "What was he doing" take on a twilight-zone haze.
Indeed. This becomes problematic when trying to discuss God, especially one that wants to reveal himself and be known, all the more so when the kalam or first cause arguments are used. Why is it problematic? Because it takes things towards unfalsifiable territory and vagueness. You might argue that something doesn't need to be falsifiable to be worth pursuing, as Feyerabend did. This may or may not have intellectual weight. Even so, it would still be reasonable, I think, for me to demand at least some clarity on what we're discussing, if (part of) the proof of God is in this very discussion of a timeless origin of the cosmos, even if we were to ditch the value of empirical testability and falsification. It's also a reasonable demand because it's a determining factor in our lives and conduct, both regarding judgement or a lack thereof in the afterlife, as well as our mindset and actions in this world.
> Yet there are those who say that God existed in timelessness through eternity past, but how can one exist where there is no "just a moment ago"? It's beyond my pay grade.
Some would argue for simultaneous causation, (one analogy is sitting and creating a "lap" from sitting). The issue I have with this is that it still uses an example that occurs within space and time, even if the two things still occur simultaneously. They require that metaphysical predicate of temporality in order for there to be an action, as well as the requirement of a decision to make it so, which is temporal and in flux itself.
> Speculating: in a timeless environment, wouldn't the universe be eternally existent while being temporal in nature, since for someone in timelessness, all is in the present? Again, it makes my brain hurt. A paradox perhaps, but possibly also true?
Depends if you're using the B theory of time, which is possibly more accomodating to this conception. I'm not a physicist, so like you I'm limited (like we all are), but B theory seems to me to not require a conscious creator of the universe, as it "begins" only the same way a yardstick "begins" at the first inch. So to put it differently, it's possible in a B-theory universe that the second year of the universe simply follows from the first, and is thus temporal, but "comes into existence" in a similar way to the yardstick analogy. So you have an eternal existence or fact of a temporal universe, perhaps.
> But if I'm even close to right, all aspects of Him, including actions and thoughts along with ontological attributes, existed (there I go with a past tense) prior to our universe.
Would this exclude his responses to our actions? Moreover, what thoughts, aspects of him etc exist which are not these kind of adaptions to a changing universe? All these aspects (along with evil) make me doubt, which leads us back to the original question. Jesus seems more likely a superhuman or alien being.