Obvious Leo wrote:Scott Mayers wrote:Obvious Leo wrote:The entire multiverse argument rests on a single flawed a priori assumption, namely that our universe is made according to a suite of physical laws. This is a load of crap and no such laws of physics exist outside the consciousness of an observer.
If we have no 'laws', then why would you even be against me with regards to assuming absolute nothing to reality as having justice to be a product of both consistency and inconsistency, reality and non-reality, contradiction as a functional motivator or 'cause' of everything? You're own a priori assumption of causation too is no more valid either as it insists that a consistent truth about everything is certain. This is thus a law you impose upon reality too.
Excellent. We've put the subject back on topic and now we're talking about determinism again. Please explain how our universe can be comprehensible if effects are not preceded by causes in an orderly and generative fashion.
"Our universe" is comprehensible because it is our
local perception of reality based on consistency, which is a function of law. But just as you only perceive your particular reality as a part of a bigger world in which you do not nor cannot know everything and everywhere at once, you have to extend this to humanity's perception of our [
unique
version of reality ("our
universe") too. Also, you have to accept that if we find 'truth' itself variable, such as that you could be alive in the 20th Century AND not alive in the very same 20th Century, this proves that these options actually exist and therefore the logical universal (the 20th Century in the example, for instance) exists to contain such truths as well as falsities.
So here, I don't disagree that "our universe" has consistency....is ordered and generative. But just as evolution weeds out those factors that don't 'fit' within a given environment, totality only allows consistent factors to our contingent universe because they 'fit' with that consistency. This doesn't mean that there are not places where such consistencies do not exist distinct from our one universe. For instance, we know from evolution that life involves way more deaths of species that act as entities that have died out enabling our existence. But would you deny that those living creatures actually never existed just because only we are the ones who have survived? You do this when you deny that other possible worlds exist by your bias not to recognize that dead ones could just as reasonably existed.
Remember, this works when there are NO Gods because only a totality without would have the capacity NOT to care originally what is real, not real, consistent, non-consistent, a something or a nothing. So there ARE multiple universes by necessity in logic, something you don't believe is real but that I do. Totality beginning with no essence would thus have to both allow an infinite set of worlds that both exist and do not exist. To pretend that we are the ONLY universe reinstates humanity here as a special factor favored by this totality, which reduces to being just another God again.
What is determinate of totality is based on it being both capable of being both determinate AND indeterminate equally by coincidence. But it is also not the case that even determinate AND indeterminate causation can be perceived in one place at one time (something akin to the Uncertainty Principle), and so this implies that in any such
unique perspective, that perspective becomes either determinate or indeterminate [...not always evident to be both at the same time].