by jimwalton » Wed Mar 24, 2021 12:23 pm
> We have never, under any circumstances, observed anything "begin to exist."
We do all the time. My daughter-in-law is undergoing IVF. The technicians watch the sperm and egg meet and something new begins to exist. Every car that comes off the assembly line is now a car where previously it was not. I do woodworking. I shape pieces and join them, and the object I am making begins to exist as a chair, a chest, or whatever the project is. Two substances join in a chemical reaction, and a new substance is formed that was not there before (salt from sodium and chloride). It is no longer sodium or chloride, but now salt; it has begun to exist.
You may be thinking of the first law of thermodynamics: Matter can neither be created nor destroyed, but only changed in form. In actuality, this is a philosophical statement, not a scientific one. To be more accurate we'd have to say, "As far as we have observed, the amount of actual energy in the universe remains constant. That is, no one has observed any actual new energy either coming into existence or going out of existence." It actually says nothing about the universe being eternal or of having no beginning. As far as the first law is concerned, energy may or may not have been created, and then placed in a contained system of sustenance where no new energy is formed and none is lost. It simply asserts that if energy was created, then as far as we can tell, the actual amount of energy that was created has remained constant since then.
But frankly, the argument wins either way. If the universe IS eternal, then we admit that eternity is possible, and therefore God could be eternal also. If the universe is NOT eternal, it needs a cause.
> Literally all of material existence is a rearrangement of pre-existing matter.
Of course it is. But things begin to exist. It would be grossly inaccurate to say that I have existed from eternity because atoms existed. Ah, yes, "I am stardust." No, I'm me. Though I am to some extent the rearrangement of previously existing matter, I began to exist at a particular place and time in my mother's uterus.
The Earth, also, began to exist at a certain time. The fact that cosmic dust existed beforehand doesn't negate that this planet had a beginning with its agglomeration of matter. Before it was not a planet; now it is. We can trace its formation and the causal elements of its beginning.
> That's not what the big bang says. The big bang says approximately 13.8 billion years ago there was a massive expansion event that developed into our current local presentation of the universe.
An expansion from what? No one knows. The Big Bang model presupposes that all matter-energy in the universe, space, and time initially began in one point (having zero spatial and zero temporal extension). Space didn't even exist. According to current astrophysics, there was nothing that space expanded into. Space was being created as the universe expands. The universe truly began to exist.
> The big bang does not say that material came into existence from nothing, just that the universe developed into its current form from this state.
There is no scientific theory that postulates the existence of matter before the Big Bang. Some theorists propose an infinite density of energy, but with no particular substantiation of that idea.
I say, by looking at the logic and the science, the Kalam argument has plenty of support, reason, and substantiation.