You can. But it's good you're not a scientist, then. Their role is to try to answer questions that have not yet been explained.
As for this question, the reason the unknown cause has to be God is simple: there is just no plausible alternative. Whatever did create the universe, it had to be timeless, uncaused, immensely powerful and capable of instilling order and purpose out of nothing.
So use an old scientific principle called "recourse to the best explanation." What do you end up with?
Not just "possible." It's undeniable. The infinite-regress explanation just doesn't work at all.All I'm saying is that if a first cause is possible, which you say it is,IC wrote:That's a misunderstanding of what a "scientific law" is. What we call a "scientific law" is actually just a description of what we observe to already be in place...a regularity, a principle that appears universal. But laws don't "do" things. They only regulate the terms on which something that is being done is being done.Harbal wrote: If God could be the first cause, then a first cause must be a possibility, and if a first cause is a possibility, maybe the laws of physics themselves are the first cause.
Something has to establish such laws; and something has to be being done already before they can apply. So the laws themselves cannot explain what's being done. We need a very different kind of explanation for that.
But that there is a First Cause of some kind is logically certain and undeniable, by way of a mathematical evidence that infinite regresses of causes never start. The universe has started; therefore, it is not the product of an infinite regress of causes. Therefore, there was a First Cause.
Now, we can debate the nature of that First Cause, of course; but we can't deny the necessity of there having been one. That would be irrational, since it's already mathematically certain.
No, it's everybody, alright. There are only two kinds of moral thinkers in the secular world: one is the Nihilist, who knows there is no such thing as morality. The other is the deluded person who imagines that either his will, his society, phenomenology, or tradition will supply the warrant for morality.Yes, if you were discussing morality with someone who believed in God, then God may well be very relevant, but it is pointless you and I discussing morality if you think God is central to it, because I don't believe in God. I think I made that point earlier.IC wrote:He's always been the main point in morality. So since morality's the topic, there's no getting away from it.Harbal wrote: Anyway, well done you; you've managed to get us talking about God again.Subectivism, in its various forms, does not tell us anything about morality, because it's incapable of inducing duty. It can't even tell us we shouldn't kill each other. So that drives us to a simple alternative: either we believe in some objective morality, or we believe in no actual morality at all. All we have left are moral delusions.
This may be the case for you, but not for me and countless others.
But, of course, these things won't stand up. They fail at the very first cynical hurdle: the first skeptic who asks, "Why should we agree?"