Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 5:36 pm
iambiguous wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 2:29 am
Okay, IC, the fourth video:
Have you been watching? Oh, good. Let's go with this one.
The Kalam Cosmological Argument - Part 1: Scientific
https://youtu.be/6CulBuMCLg0
What we have here is basically God being "deduced" into existence. Only, we are assured, there's science behind it.
We are shown the logic, actually, and we are invited to consider the data for ourselves. Seems fair.
No, we are presented with Christian assumptions about the universe. And then after science itself "proves" that a God, the God must exist, we are left to just assume that it must be the Christian God and not one of these...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_r ... traditions
...paths to immortality and salvation instead.
Thus...
Though, again, the argument in no way comes around to demonstrating that even if a God, the God is "thought up" into existence "scientifically", it is the Christian God.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 5:36 pmNo one claimed it does. Each argument is designed to deal with a specific question about God, not to answer
all possible questions about God (as if any one argument could answer all questions about anything, God or otherwise). The Kalaam is about the existence of God, not about His particular nature. So we can't ask an argument to do for us things that particular argument was not created to do. What we can do is ask if it achieves the particular goal for which that particular argument was offered, among the many other arguments that are offered.
That's why there's more than one video: because there's more than one kind of question about God.
Chuckle, chuckle?
Come on IC, it is your contention that beyond "the Christian God exists because the Christian Bible says so 'leap of faith'", these YouTube videos provided the evidence
you needed to be convinced that in fact the Christian God does exist. Sure, there are 13 more videos to go here. But the first four utterly fail to be convincing in my view.
Or, instead, are you able to note how in fact they
are convincing proof that the Christian God does exist?
Okay, we are told, the universe exists. And it simply makes more sense that something caused it to exist. Then the narrator points to the second law of thermodynamics which [we're told] tells us that the universe is "slowly running out of usable energy". And if the universe had been here forever, it would have run out of energy by now.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 5:36 pmRight. So we can look at it this way: the second law of thermodynamics means that the whole universe is a kind of "clock." We can calculate back from the state of decay of energy in the universe, and arrive at an approximate inception point, where the universe must have begun.
To put it glibly, it's like looking at a piece of cheese from the refrigerator, and saying, "This thing looks about a week past its due date," because it has deteriorated that much. We have a sense of the time from the rate of deterioration, in both cases.
Again, you note all of this "scientifically" as though if one takes these conclusions to the scientific community itself, it will scoff at Atheists: "You fools!"
And then when they note that...
"It turns out that roughly 68% of the universe is dark energy. Dark matter makes up about 27%. The rest - everything on Earth, everything ever observed with all of our instruments, all normal matter - adds up to less than 5% of the universe."
...you glibly remind them that "God does work in mysterious ways"?
Then the claim that this second law "proves" that the universe had to have had a beginning. And scientists have discovered that the universe is expanding so it must be expanding from whenever that beginning was.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 5:36 pmThis is basically Edwin Hubble's discovery, as a result of the "red shift" effect. It also is a scientific and observable fact, and it proves the universe is not infinitely old.
Hubble essentially ruled out any "infinite universe" hypothesis.
So, of
course the Christian God does exist!!! Again, IC, if it doesn't embarrass you to make these ridiculous leaps of logic to the Christian God here it doesn't embarrass me to suggest that it ought to.
But what remains peculiar [to me] in regard to you is that you have demonstrated to me that you do have an intelligent mind in some respects and can exchange some rather sophisticated posts with others here pertaining to Christianity historically and/or up in the spiritual clouds philosophically.
But here you are in turn claiming to have proof that might bring me back around to the Christian God. That my own soul might be saved again once I too have come to grasp that there is, in fact a Christian God "out there" somewhere. And, whether you believe me or not, I truly do want to believe that. I truly am searching for a path that will allow me to jettison the grim belief that my own existence is essentially meaningless and purposeless, that there is a path to objective morality, that immortality and salvation are within reach.
But with you, chuckles aside:
Where Is The Beef? Note the video that nailed it down for you.
And [of course] it is just assumed that God Himself is an uncased cause.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 5:36 pmThe Kalaam proves that something HAS to be. We can still say, "We don't know what it is," but That's because an actual infinite regress of causes is impossible. It never starts.
Blah, blah, blah? The existence of the Christian God can be definitively established -- proven -- by simply accepting your assertion here that "an actual infinite regress of causes is impossible. It never starts"?
As though this is now accepted across the board in the scientific community as, unequivocally, an ontological and teleological fact!!!
Besides, it must be an ontological and teleological fact because you believe it "in your head" to be?
Then just more of the same sheer speculation about the multiverse...
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 5:36 pm...even the proponents of the Multiverse Hypothesis insist that their theory is
a conceptual model, not a demonstrable fact. There is, they realize, and can be, no test for a Multiverse, because any "test" can take place only within THIS universe, which means, not THAT universe or THOSE OTHER universes. So it's not even clear how we can speak of them "existing."
But more than that, the Multiverse model, as the video points out, only moves the same problem back one step: from where come all the multi-verses? And again, the infinite regress problem applies to whatever is "generating" the "multiverse."
At this point, you can tell, we're getting to relying on kinds of explanation that are way, way more complicated and question-requiring than, "In the beginning, God created..."
Again, if we do take all of this to the scientific community, to those astrophysicists who grapple with all this empirically, experientially, experimentally, there will be a broad consensus that one way or another, multiverse or no multiverse all of this...
Light travels at approximately 186,000 miles a second. That is about 6,000,000,000,000 miles a year.
The closest star to us is Alpha Centauri. It is 4.75 light-years away. 28,500,000,000,000 miles.
So, traveling at 186,000 miles a second, it would take us 4.75 years to reach it. The voyager spacecraft [just now exiting our solar system] will take 70,000 years to reach it.
To reach the center of the Milky Way galaxy it would take 100,000 light-years.
Or consider this:
"To get to the closest galaxy to ours, the Canis Major Dwarf, at Voyager's speed, it would take approximately 749,000,000 years to travel the distance of 25,000 light years! If we could travel at the speed of light, it would still take 25,000 years!"
The Andromeda galaxy is 2.537 million light years away.
...clearly demonstrates the existence of the Christian God? The Christian God on steroids?
Finally, "since the universe cannot cause itself, its cause must be beyond the space-time universe."
Then this particular "leap of faith":
"It must be spaceless, timeless, immaterial, uncaused and unimaginably powerful. Much like...God. The cosmological argument shows that in fact it is quite reasonable to believe that God does exist."
Again, this is simply asserted to be true as though in asserting it that makes it true.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 5:36 pmNot at all. It's offered for your consideration, not as an assertion you have to accept. The procedure is "inference to the best explanation."
No, what I am after here is what you promised us: demonstrable proof that your "spaceless, timeless, immaterial, uncaused and unimaginably powerful" Christian God does in fact exist.
Then back to the fact that if you are not embarrassed to suggest that the first four videos provides us with that proof then I am not embarrassed to suggest that you ought to be.
Though, again, which God?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 5:36 pmThat is not the Kalaam's question. You're asking it to answer a question it did not set out to address.
Okay, so what are you saying here, that one of the next 13 videos
will provide us
with the proof reasonable men and women need to accept Jesus Christ as their own personal savior?
How about this: note which of them had the most powerful impact in establishing it for
you.