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Is GOD In The 'Multi-verse'?

Posted on 10/23/2011 4:30:28 PM PDT by freejohn

I hope that it's okay to post this in the Religion forum!?

I have been thinking about this for quite some time now and have come to my own conclusion and that is .. GOD HAS TO EXIST and not only does he exist .. He is the main argument Against the now popular 'Multi-verse' scenario!

Scientists from many different areas are pondering an infinite number of universes to explain our existence.

They talk about 'string theories' and 'infinite universes' where anything and everything can and does exist!

An example may be that in one universe, I am alive but in another I never was.

In one universe, I am a doctor while in others I may be a lawyer or an Indian Chief while in THIS one .. I'm just another 'smuck'! *)

IF the multi-verse theory were correct then GOD would HAVE to exist simply because 'Scientists' say ALL things MUST take place in 'Infinite Universes'!

Now .. Wouldn't it make sense that if GOD were to exist in even one of these universes then NONE of the rest of those universes could or would exist!?

GOD is a GOD of ORDER and Not a GOD of DISORDER so-o-o .. HOW could such a chaotic universe or in this case Chaotic Universes exist!?

I believe that Science has backed itself into a hole on this one!
(or maybe just created another paradox?)

What do you think?

If you were able to get beyond the multi-use of the word 'exist' in my ramblings .. I would Really like you Scientific and Religious thinkers input on this! 8)


TOPICS: General Discusssion; Religion & Culture; Religion & Science; Theology
KEYWORDS: gagdadbob; god; onecosmosblog; science; universe
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To: freejohn; All
Here is a Jewish take on a Unified Field Theory. It meshes remarkably well with Jewish thought.

Unified Field Theory

I think you are onto it though. In our universe, ~73% of it's entirety is Dark Energy, ~23% is Dark Matter and 4% is the "stuff" that we can see, stars, galaxies etc. Scientists do not understand exactly what composes dark energy or dark matter.

But atheists like Lawrence Krauss will tell you with a straight face (on youtube) that the universe was created from a quantum fluctuation and required no god. Even though they cant explain 96% of the universe...they "know" that.

101 posted on 10/25/2011 10:29:46 AM PDT by blasater1960 (Deut 30, Psalm 111...the Torah and the Law, is attainable past, present and forever.)
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To: 21stCenturion

So you agree that the multiverse theory is false.


102 posted on 10/25/2011 7:16:43 PM PDT by reasonisfaith (Sarah Palin: "I'm not for sale.")
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To: reasonisfaith

Nice try ...

If you review my comments in this thread, I most carefully neglected to comment upon the so-called ‘Multi-verse theory’ and restricted myself to ONLY the flawed arguments y’all were tossing around.

I am a retired engineer with considerable expertise in Computer Systems design and implementation. I can discuss many topics in my field with assurance that I am competent and well enough informed in both the underlying technology and methods for applying that technology. On such topics, I am happy to assert opinions, armed with the knowledge that what I know and how I express myself are correct and proceed from demonstrated competence.

I have SOME exposure to the topic y’all have been batting about here, enough to recognize the vast distance between what you THINK you know and what you actually don’t know, at all.

To begin with, your ‘argument’ presupposes many things which simply aren’t ‘true’. There is NO ‘Multi-verse theory’, as you describe it. There ARE a number of conjectures and models describing the nature of ‘reality’ and the natural history of the Universe which attempt to incorporate features like ‘infinity’, the interaction of matter and various forces, the nature of time and so forth.

None of these are ‘theories’. A ‘theory’, in correct usage, has certain characteristics or it is merely a shambles. A theory, to be useful, MUST incorporate everything about the topic it addresses that we already KNOW to be true — demonstrated, repeatable according to known methods and / or principles and, arguably, self-consistent.

This structure has two further characteristics without which it is useless and pointless to pursue. It MUST make predictions that are unambiguous and can be verified. It MUST also be ‘falsifiable’ — in other words, if any part of it can be demonstrated to fail, as advertised, or if any measurement or demonstration required by it’s predictions fail to match up, we deem the ‘theory’ to have ‘failed’ or been disproven.

It general, a ‘theory’ CAN fail or be proven / demonstrated to be inadequate. A ‘theory’ CANNOT be deemed ‘true’ or ‘false’. It can only serve as a stepping stone to further ‘theorizing’ and the attempt to acquire more knowledge or a greater understanding within the limited scope to which it applies.

Some ‘theories’ are small in scope and more easily demonstrated to be useful. Other ‘theories’ are so grand in scope that they exceed our present ability to construct or conduct meaningful observations or demonstrations. Until our knowledge or capabilities expand to encompass them, they must remain ‘conjectures’ — speculation, guesses, unrealized possibilities.

Simply put, a ‘theory’ is NOT something you can loosely throw out in conversation and demand agreement — is it ‘true’ or is it ‘false’.

As you seem to use it, the ‘Multi-verse’ addresses the notion that a single Universe is insufficient to contain all the possible components, events, information and whatever other ‘stuff’ CAN POSSIBLY exist. This assumes that every possible event or outcome of the interaction of all possible combinations of matter, energy or whatever MUST somehow be permitted to occur, somehow, someplace, sometime.

The argument proceeds by ‘somehow’ replicating a single Universe which already encompasses everything that exists into multiple similar Universes also containing everything that already exists but subtly different due to the observation that something that existed or occurred in one somehow doesn’t exist or occur in the same state in another. Expand the scope of this an infinite number of times and you obtain an infinite number Universes in an infinite number of configurations.

And, oh, by the way, NONE of these infinite Universe have ANY contact, overlap or whatever with ANY of the others. You cannot observe ANYTHING that happens outside of your particular Universe. It’s as though none of the other Universes actually even exist, for all you can observe. You cannot observe or demonstrate whether or not there is ANYTHING outside of the Universe you happen to occupy.

The ‘Multi-verse’ thus attempts to describe a condition that is, by it’s own definition, unknowable, unmeasurable, intangible and beyond the scope of any conceivable method of observation or demonstration. Therefore, we CANNOT test any feature of existence accessible to us to determine whether or not this class of conjectures ‘means’ anything. We cannot use it to make any predictions; we cannot test these non-existent predictions in an attempt to ‘falsify’ them; we cannot ‘do’ or ‘conclude’ ANYTHING meaningful about this conjecture.

Do I think it’s ‘false’ ? I think it’s meaningless to invest any effort or energy into this concept until or unless you have anything more to offer than free-floating speculation and a massive overdose of wish-fulfillment.

One Man’s Opinion

21stCenturion


103 posted on 10/26/2011 6:43:17 AM PDT by 21stCenturion ("It's the Judges, Stupid !")
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To: freejohn

bookmark


104 posted on 10/26/2011 6:50:43 AM PDT by airborne (Paratroopers! Good to the last drop!)
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To: Texas Songwriter
"Leibnez asks, "If God does not exist, why is there anything at all?"

It's not a meaningful question. You can ask why is there anything at all, whether god is in the mix or not. And having god in there doesn't answer the question because you can still ask, why is there god?

105 posted on 10/26/2011 7:03:43 AM PDT by mlo
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To: freejohn
I don't accept your premises about every possible universe existing. But to answer your question anyway...

"Now .. Wouldn't it make sense that if GOD were to exist in even one of these universes then NONE of the rest of those universes could or would exist!?"

No, that doesn't make sense. There's no paradox. Your premise is that every possible universe exists. That would therefore include a god in some of those universes. But your conclusion is that a gods in any number of the individual universes somehow equates to a single god of the multiverse. You've mixed up in your head the parent multiverse and children universes.

If something arises within a child universe because all possible child universes must exists, that something exists inside that child universe only.

106 posted on 10/26/2011 7:09:48 AM PDT by mlo
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To: mlo
It's not a meaningful question

You saying it is not meaningful does not make the question inconsequential. Before the universe began....before there was anyting.....something happened to bring forth everything from nothing. What conditions changed? What changed? It seems the only viable answer is that there was a personal decision. That person was timeless, immaterial, supremely powerful to bring forth everything from nothing. That is what inductive reasoning will conclude, it seems to me.

The question stands, 'If God does not exist (to make that decision) why is there anything at all?"

107 posted on 10/26/2011 8:42:47 AM PDT by Texas Songwriter (I ouTha)
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To: Texas Songwriter
"You saying it is not meaningful does not make the question inconsequential."

You ignoring the logic of my post does not make it go away. :-)

The logic doesn't rest on my say so. You can say god was the cause, but what caused god? You haven't gotten to an answer yet, you've only pushed it back an extra step.

"It seems the only viable answer is that there was a personal decision."

You have no idea what all the viable answers are. It's the height of arrogance to claim that if you can't think of an answer to a question that an answer can't exist.

Again, inserting "god" into the "why does anything exist" question achieves nothing to answer the question, because the question equally applies to god.

108 posted on 10/26/2011 11:25:15 AM PDT by mlo
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To: mlo
The Law of Causality states, 'everything which comes to be has a cause'. If the Universe had a begining, it had a cause. Everything that had a begining had a cause - which is the fundamental principle of science. Without the law of Causality, science is impossible. As Francis Bacon said, "True Knowledge" is knowledge by causes. In otherwords, science is a search for causes. Simply put, scientist try to discover what caused what.

In fact to deny the Law of Causality is to deny rationality. The very process of rational thinking requires us to put together thoughts (the causes) that result in conclusions (the effects). The Law of Causality is well established and undeniable. So, we ask, "Did the universe begin?" From science, we have 5 lines of evidences which remove essential all doubt that the universe began. I won't go over those again but to enumerate: (1)General Theory of Relativity, (2)Eddington's findings confirming Einsteins theory, (3)(Hubble's findings of the red shift showing the epanding universe, (4) Wilson and Penzias findings o cosmic background radiation a(the echo of the original big bang) (5)The findings of COBE and Smoots WMAP. There are many other logical 'proofs' of a beginning from the Kalam argument, the ontological argument, the epistemological argument, the metaphsical arguement, and many, more. I won't bother you with these other logical arguments for First Cause....just the scientific explainations.

So, since the universe had a beginning (science tells us) it had to have a beginner (a Cause). So in light of all of the evidence of a beginning for the space-time universe, indicating the moment prior to the beginning the beginner must have been 'outside' of that universe which had not yet begun to exist. Here is where you come in with your question....'if the universe had to have a beginning, then what caused God?' Here is where the atheist derisively states , what caused God? They fail to understand Law of Causality....Whatever comes to be has to have a cause. Theist, of all stripes, never affirm that God came to be. He is eternal. He transends time/space/energy/matter. Remember, as Alamo-girl often says, "In the absence of space matter cannot exist. In the absence of time events cannnot take place." So as an atheist you might say, "Wait, if you can have an eternal God, I can have an eternal universe." The problem with that argument is while it may seem logically that the universe could be eternal, in reality we have given you multiple lines of scientific evidence that it is not eternal...it actually had a beginning. So, by ruling out an eternal universe, we are left with that other option which atheist find distastful...Something outside the is eternal (remember time began at the Big Bang). So, to reitterate, the universe had a beginning, so it was caused by something else - by something outside itself, according to science.

Now we take a further steps and ask what is this First Cause like? We can discover the nature of First Cause by what scientific findings tell us.

It must be self-existent, timeless (eternal) nonspacial (not extending into space), immaterial (since First Cause created time, space, and matter (in other words limitless), unimaginable powerful, to create the entire universe out of nothing, supremely intelligent with such precision (remember the Law of Uniformity despite the second Law of thermodynamics), and personal, in order to choose to convert nothingess into a time-space-matter continuum we call the Universe.

These are characteristics of First Cause, and they are exactly thecharacteristics theists ascribe to God. Again, I did not derive them from any theist, but from Einstein, Eddington, Hoyl, Wilson and Penzias, Smoot COBE, WMAP.

So when you so derisively denounce Leibnez question, I will repeat it and ask you to answer it....If God does not exist, why is there something rather than nothing?

As a sidebar, I would ask you if you are a materialist, darwinist, physicalist, naturalist in your worldview?

109 posted on 10/26/2011 12:52:34 PM PDT by Texas Songwriter (I ouTha)
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To: 21stCenturion

You’re saying the multiple universe idea is not falsifiable empirically—in an a posteriori fashion—therefore we cannot really discuss it in a meaningful way. But the empirical is not all inclusive.

I’m saying the idea is falsifiable logically—that is, in an a priori sense. This sort of context is epistemologically valid, thus meaningful. Logic is the greater scope—logic encompasses empiricism. Not the other way around.

As for nature of the multiple universe idea, we should look at its origin. There are strong indications that it arose in the form of a psychologically motivated response by secular/atheist scientists to the discovery of physical evidence establishing the truth of the Big Bang. The Big Bang was a major refutation of the conventional view of many scientists who were educated during the first half of the 20th century. They tended to hold the belief that the universe had no beginning.

But the fact that the universe had a beginning makes it extremely difficult if not impossible to deny that it had a cause. This leads to the likelihood of intelligent design, an idea which is a major source of fear for secular scientists whose identities and sense of pride has been founded on the belief in a Godless, randomly based universe.


110 posted on 10/27/2011 9:45:55 AM PDT by reasonisfaith (Sarah Palin: "I'm not for sale.")
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To: reasonisfaith

All I can say is ... Wow !!!

It is impossible for me to imagine having a ‘meeting of the minds’ with someone who is willing and able to publish such gobbledy-gook and EXPECT to be taken seriously.

You must get really dizzy spinning yourself around in circles like that all the time.

I tried — I Really TRIED — to translate enough of what you just published into a sensible form that might be refutable. However, I confess I have failed. We do not appear to share enough common ground to support further discussion — it would appear to be pointless.

At this point, I’ve lost all interest in trying to respond, so ... Buh ‘Bye !!!

21stCenturion


111 posted on 10/27/2011 2:54:08 PM PDT by 21stCenturion ("It's the Judges, Stupid !")
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To: 21stCenturion; Alamo-Girl; xzins; freejohn; buccaneer81; Mind-numbed Robot
How ‘bout y’all invest in a basic education in fundamental logic techniques. There you will encounter the concept of ‘logical fallacies’ and how they corrupt our thinking and the products thereof.

21stCenturion, you cite Anselm of Cantebury and Thomas Aquinas — both saints and doctors of the Roman Catholic Church — of providing prime examples of the fallacy of Begging the Question/Circular Reasoning. I have some doubt, however, that you understand what these two world-class thinkers were saying.

Moreoever, there is a fallacy that you may not have heard of — the Fallacy of Misplaced Concreteness, so ably described by the great mathematician and philosopher A. N. Whitehead — but it seems to me that you have committed it; and that it may be "corrupting" your thinking.

The tip-off comes in your remark, "GOD must exist somewhere within such an infinity of Universes." No He mustn't — no more than Michelangelo "must exist" in the Sistine Chapel, or in his magnificent sculpture, David.

The Fallacy of Misplaced Concreteness which embroils you is your supposition that God "exists" as yet another existing entity within the universe we humans live in or within some other multiverse.

Yet when Anselm calls Him "Perfect," this must mean that God does not "exist!" Rather, it is an acknowledgement that He is pure, absolute, eternally self-subsistent Being and, that being the case, He is utterly perfect (in that He needs nothing from outside of Himself to Be what He IS).

God is not "IN" anything He made in the Beginning — including Space and Time (they are His creations too).

All existing things are finite and contingent. Man is finite; his life contingent on what happens around him and to him. The Fallacy you commit is to reduce God to what He is not — i.e., to just another existing thing within the Creation. A sort of superhuman after Feuerbach's "projection psychology," wherein the deity is thought to be nothing more than the fanciful projection of the highest desires and aspirations of mankind — nothing "real" in Himself, just an elaborate fiction designed to ease human existential anxieties.

Yet even the great classical philosophers (around 500–400 B.C.), pre-Christian though they may have been, drew the distinction between being and existence. They believed that all existent things were so because they were participations in divine Being. Because God IS, we are. Plato's God was a God utterly "Beyond" the Cosmos. As pure eternal Being, the source and sustainer of life, He could not be yet another denizen of the world of His making, the place designated for finite, mortal, contingent creatures to come into existence, and then to pass out of it in due course.

Moreover, the Greek word Kosmos refers to a single integrated, ordered system — and the order is there because of the divine Intelligence and Will that causes the world to be as it is, and not some other way; and to be something in the first place, and not nothing at all.... (Which answers Leibniz's two crucial questions.)

Materialism/scientism absolutely rejects a creator God in principle, preferring to believe the unbelievable — to wit, that the random motions of matter somehow have a "principle" conducive to the elaboration of ordered systems in Nature, including the principal ordered system of which they are parts and participants — the universe/multiverse itself.

It doesn't matter to me all that much whether there is one universe, of whether there may be many (multiverses). If they began in time, something had to kick-start their ordered processes.

And if they didn't have a beginning in time, then their existence is inexplicable.

This was the point Aquinas was making: you wrote —

In the Universe, all things that exist are the product of other things that already existed. This progression cannot continue infinitely as there must be SOMETHING that existed as the first producer of whatever came next. This first producer ( ‘first cause’ ) we have all agreed to call ‘God’. Do you see the fallacy operating here ?

No, I don't see the fallacy; I see logic at work. This is straight out of Aristotle, who reasoned that if there were not a "first cause," a/k/a an "unmoved mover," then the universe would have had to arise by virtue of an infinite regression of causes. But if that were so, then no particular thing could come into existence for lack of an organizing principle, a Limit (peras) — which is just another way of saying that purely random processes in nature are productive of nothing in particular, nor can they be.

Plus you can yell about random processes till kingdom come, and still not explain where the matter subject to such randomness came from....

And so if people have "agreed" to call this first principle God, I do not see how circular reasoning is at all involved. You could call this first principle "dandelion" if you wanted to — "a rose by any other name would smell as sweet." The logic of First Cause would not be disturbed at all, whatever you choose to name it.

Of course, we Christians are very glad to call it: God.

In closing, here's what Anselm wrote in Monologion 1:

If anyone does not know, either because he has not heard or because he does not believe, that there is one nature, supreme among all existing things, who alone is self-sufficient in his eternal happiness, who through his omnipotent goodness grants and brings it about that all other things exist or have any sort of well-being, and a great many other things that we must believe about God or his creation, I think he could at least convince himself of most of these things by reason alone, if he is even moderately intelligent.

Notice that Anselm nowhere in this passage says that God "exists." Rather he is saying that God is the very cause and ground of everything that does exist. Anselm does not conflate being and existence; he does not reduce perfect being to finite contingent existence — and thus he, unlike you, does not commit the Fallacy of Misplaced concreteness!

Notice he also says that man's knowledge of God comes via reason, intelligence. It must be that way, since God Himself is not a direct observable — the sort of thing required by the scientific method.

God is seen, not directly via sense perception, but in His effects.

I'll leave you with that clue, 21stCenturion.

Thank you so much for writing!

112 posted on 10/27/2011 3:16:02 PM PDT by betty boop (We are led to believe a lie when we see with, and not through, the eye. — William Blake)
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To: freejohn
IF the multi-verse theory were correct then GOD would HAVE to exist simply because 'Scientists' say ALL things MUST take place in 'Infinite Universes'!

IF the multi-verse theory were correct then UNICORNS, HOBBITS, and LEPRECHAUNS would HAVE to exist simply because 'Scientists' say ALL things MUST take place in 'Infinite Universes'!

IF the multi-verse theory were correct then GOD would HAVE to exist simply because 'Scientists' say ALL things MUST take place in 'Infinite Universes'!

Assuming you're right, would He be God in all the universes or just in one or two?

In other words would He be what believers usually mean by "God" -- omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent?

113 posted on 10/27/2011 3:28:09 PM PDT by x
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To: betty boop

Betty, you had so much fun picking my comments apart, I almost hate to rain on your parade. But ...

In both instances where you ‘quoted’ ME, as though the ideas expressed were my own thoughts or beliefs, you were dead wrong.


The tip-off comes in your remark, “GOD must exist somewhere within such an infinity of Universes.” No He mustn’t — no more than Michelangelo “must exist” in the Sistine Chapel, or in his magnificent sculpture, David.


This was the point Aquinas was making: you wrote —

In the Universe, all things that exist are the product of other things that already existed. This progression cannot continue infinitely as there must be SOMETHING that existed as the first producer of whatever came next. This first producer ( ‘first cause’ ) we have all agreed to call ‘God’. Do you see the fallacy operating here ?

No, I don’t see the fallacy; I see logic at work.


In both instances, I was clearly paraphrasing or summarizing someone else’s ideas or arguments. In effect, you are arguing with the other guy( s) and leaving me out entirely.

In general, your entire response was an exercise in either willful or inadvertent misdirection. You were responding to what someone ELSE thought, which I quoted for reference, NOT to what I thought and clearly presented as my own thoughts, separately.

If you’re going to conduct a reasoned argument to somehow counter mine, please try to do a better job of construction and attribution. I don’t believe you actually addressed what I said and thus I don’t have any basis to respond other than as I just did.

Care to try again ? I AM still listening ...

21stCenturion


114 posted on 10/27/2011 3:46:18 PM PDT by 21stCenturion ("It's the Judges, Stupid !")
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To: 21stCenturion; Alamo-Girl; xzins; freejohn; buccaneer81; Mind-numbed Robot
In general, your entire response was an exercise in either willful or inadvertent misdirection. You were responding to what someone ELSE thought, which I quoted for reference, NOT to what I thought and clearly presented as my own thoughts, separately.

What part of what you wrote is your own thought? Where did you present your thoughts elsewhere, "separately?"

Do you normally cite authorities whose arguments run counter to your own? I got the distinct impression that you were citing those with whom you agree — that's why you cited them. As corroborating evidence, a it were.

We can correct all this — just tell me what YOU think, and then we can take it from there! (Or refer me to the clear presentation which clearly I must have missed.)

Thanks for your reply, 21stCenturion!

115 posted on 10/27/2011 5:11:34 PM PDT by betty boop (We are led to believe a lie when we see with, and not through, the eye. — William Blake)
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To: 21stCenturion

The post you call “gobbledy-gook” is clear, straightforward and logical.

You are unable to show which part deserves your name-calling, because none does.

Every time you reply to me, your post is emotional with personal attacks. I challenge you to remove this kind of gobbledy-gook from your thought process, and have a logical discussion.

For starters, do you understand what is meant when I say that empiricism comes under the umbrella of logic, and not vice-versa?


116 posted on 10/27/2011 6:34:15 PM PDT by reasonisfaith (Sarah Palin: "I'm not for sale.")
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To: betty boop

In #34, the references to St. Anselmo and Aquinas were provided as examples of ‘Begging the Question’. I don’t accept or agree with either argument nor did I even ‘imply’ agreement.

In #102, “There is NO ‘Multi-Universe theory’ ... “ is, in fact, my own thought. The subsequent discussion of what a ‘theory’ is or is not constitutes my argument in defense of that assertion.

All the discussion beginning with


“As you seem to use it, the ‘Multi-verse’ addresses the notion that a single Universe is insufficient to contain all the possible components, events, information and whatever other ‘stuff’ CAN POSSIBLY exist.”


through the end of @102 is the substance of my own ‘take’ on the so-called ‘Multi-universe’ conjecture.

The rest of my prolix discourse addresses the form of the arguments presented by the various folk I was addressing.

WRT “Do you normally cite authorities whose arguments run counter to your own?”, in each case I was pointing out that the arguments cited were fallacious. I thought I was rather unambiguous about that. Since when is citing someone you disagree with, in order to present the disagreement, somehow a defect in presenting an argument ?

In fact, you got it backwards — I was citing ‘em BECAUSE I disagreed. It doesn’t seem fair to leave out the substance of the argument I am disputing, now does it ?

BTW: I am quite familiar with Whitehead’s concept of ‘reification’. I don’t quite see how it applies to anything I’ve said, ‘though. As you should realize by now, nothing I said argues for or against the existence of God in ANY Universe, let alone some mythical ‘Multi-verse’. I never went there, even by implication. I was addressing the form of the arguments others indulged in, NOT the underlying ‘theology’.

Does this provide sufficient clarity ?

Look, it’s really quite simple. I think the ‘Multi-verse’ conjecture is a bogus exercise as there is NO basis for proliferating ‘Universes’ in order to overcome a purely human inability to comprehend the concept of ‘infinity’. Referring back to @102,


... the ‘Multi-verse’ addresses the notion that a single Universe is insufficient to contain all the possible components, events, information and whatever other ‘stuff’ CAN POSSIBLY exist. This assumes that every possible event or outcome of the interaction of all possible combinations of matter, energy or whatever MUST somehow be permitted to occur, somehow, someplace, sometime.


I can’t state my position any more succinctly without ‘losing’ the essence of what I mean to say.

As to YOUR assertion that ‘God is NOT within the Multi-verse’ ( or apparently anywhere else ), I suppose your supporting arguments might be interesting at SOME level but ... BIG But ... You lost me when you stated —


“Notice he also says that man’s knowledge of God comes via reason, intelligence. It must be that way, since God Himself is not a direct observable — the sort of thing required by the scientific method.”


Man’s ‘knowledge of God’ is merely the product of faith and the belief in some supernatural power that operates outside the realm of reason or the scope of man’s intelligence. That is NOT ‘knowledge’, that is the denial that ‘knowledge’ is possible.

I am often appalled to see how many different forms Man’s ‘Knowledge of God’ takes, depending on who is telling the story and what agenda they appear to be serving. Personally, I tend to sympathize with the adage ‘Man creates Gods to serve him’. It seems to cover the history of theological thought since prehistoric times quite adequately ...

One Man’s Opinion

21stCenturion


117 posted on 10/27/2011 6:48:56 PM PDT by 21stCenturion ("It's the Judges, Stupid !")
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To: reasonisfaith

OKay, sport, you ASKED for it.

YOU said


“You’re saying the multiple universe idea is not falsifiable empirically—in an a posteriori fashion—therefore we cannot really discuss it in a meaningful way. But the empirical is not all inclusive.”


I never SAID that or anything like it. You seem to have invented it out of whole cloth. But, that’s okay, I saw you palm that card. What I DID say was that


“The ‘Multi-verse’ thus attempts to describe a condition that is, by it’s own definition, unknowable, unmeasurable, intangible and beyond the scope of any conceivable method of observation or demonstration. Therefore, we CANNOT test any feature of existence accessible to us to determine whether or not this class of conjectures ‘means’ anything. We cannot use it to make any predictions; we cannot test these non-existent predictions in an attempt to ‘falsify’ them; we cannot ‘do’ or ‘conclude’ ANYTHING meaningful about this conjecture.”


a priori, you cannot presume to know, without ANY observation, that ANY Universe exists outside of the one in which we are now present and having this lovely conversation. If you can’t observe ANY Universe outside of our own, a posteriori, you cannot demonstrate ANYTHING meaningful about it. THAT is what I said.

You go on to state —


“I’m saying the idea is falsifiable logically—that is, in an a priori sense. This sort of context is epistemologically valid, thus meaningful. Logic is the greater scope—logic encompasses empiricism. Not the other way around.”


You don’t seem to grasp what is meant by ‘falsifiable’ within the context of the so-call Scientific Method. It doesn’t mean I can simply ‘deny’ something. A sound theory makes specific predictions. If ANY of them turn out to be ‘false’ / ‘inaccurate’, the theory is deemed to have ‘failed’. It is the process of demonstrating the ‘truth’ of those specific predictions that constitutes ‘falsification’. There is NO ‘logical argument’ that substitutes for demonstrating unambiguously and repeatably that a given prediction holds up.

It is NOT ‘epistemologically valid’ to attempt to argue the merits of a theory WITHOUT demonstrating unambiguously and repeatably whether any or all of it’s predictions hold up. This is NOT ‘empiricism’. This is the nature and definition of the Scientific Method.

You go on to state


“But the empirical is not all inclusive ... Logic is the greater scope — logic encompasses empiricism. Not the other way around.”


This is one statement I have no problem labeling Gobbledy-gook. Semantically, I can’t quite decipher what you think you’re saying. ‘Logic’ ( a method of constructing meaningful arguments ) is ‘the greater scope’ because it ‘encompasses empiricism’ ( the argument that all knowledge is derived from the evidence of our senses or our experiences ) ??? Apples and oranges ...

You then come in for a landing with


“But the fact that the universe had a beginning makes it extremely difficult if not impossible to deny that it had a cause. This leads to the likelihood of intelligent design, an idea which is a major source of fear for secular scientists whose identities and sense of pride has been founded on the belief in a Godless, randomly based universe.”


In engineering ( my field of expertise ) we work hard to distinguish between ‘cause’ and ‘correlation’. Just because ‘a’ precedes ‘b’ does not ‘prove’ that ‘a’ CAUSED ‘b’. There well may BE some element of ‘design’ in the way the Universe is constructed and behaves, but I don’t concede that your point of view or favored explanation has any more validity than anyone else’s. And I have a lot more confidence in MY epistomological methods than I can imagine having in your gobbledy-gook arguments.

Now, in view of


“The post you call “gobbledy-gook” is clear, straightforward and logical.

You are unable to show which part deserves your name-calling, because none does.”


I am content to think you published ‘gobbledy-gook’; that it was NOT ‘clear, straightforward and logical’; and that I have demonstrated a valid basis for that contentment.

One Man’s Opinion

21stCenturion


118 posted on 10/27/2011 7:37:32 PM PDT by 21stCenturion ("It's the Judges, Stupid !")
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To: 21stCenturion; Alamo-Girl; xzins; freejohn; buccaneer81; Mind-numbed Robot
Look, it’s really quite simple. I think the ‘Multi-verse’ conjecture is a bogus exercise as there is NO basis for proliferating ‘Universes’ in order to overcome a purely human inability to comprehend the concept of ‘infinity’. Referring back to @102,

Aw come on, 21stCenturion, do you mean to suggest that you do have the ability to "comprehend the concept of 'infinity'?" On the possibility that you might so comprehend (though that certainly seems doubtful to me), I suspect "infinity" in your sense would just be a stand-in for God.

You wrote:

... the ‘Multi-verse’ addresses the notion that a single Universe is insufficient to contain all the possible components, events, information and whatever other ‘stuff’ CAN POSSIBLY exist. This assumes that every possible event or outcome of the interaction of all possible combinations of matter, energy or whatever MUST somehow be permitted to occur, somehow, someplace, sometime.

Just who is it that (seemingly) claims to know future events (at least in general if not in each and every particular) and all the details of what is needed — "all possible combinations of matter, energy or whatever" — because they "...MUST somehow be permitted to occur, somehow, someplace, sometime."

That person evidently has a most exalted, God-like view of things. Kinda reminds me of Laplace....

Tell me, why MUST "all possible combinations of matter, energy or whatever" be "instantiated?" According to what rule, what purpose? Just because this cite of yours (with whom you state you disagree) insists that they should — i.e., insists that all possibilities eventually must manifest themselves, given enough time?

But of course, infinity doesn't really have so much to do with time as it does with number. It is a mathematical concept; and some physicists have complained that it is "unconstructible" in natural science.

I think what your cite may have in mind is "endless time." If time is endless, then anything that can happen, will happen. And the pièce de résistence is that if time is endless, then randomness might (in all probability) have a chance to "accidentally organize" itself into something actual. This is the thousand-monkeys-with-typewriters-shut-up-in-a-room-trying-to-compose-Shakespeare scenario.

Of course you don't need multiple universes to explain the manifold of the Universe. If there are other "universes," they would be embodied, integrated in some fashion into the ONE, indivisible Universe, the living Universe of God's Logos in the Beginning. JMHO.

You wrote:

Man’s ‘knowledge of God’ is merely the product of faith and the belief in some supernatural power that operates outside the realm of reason or the scope of man’s intelligence. That is NOT ‘knowledge’, that is the denial that ‘knowledge’ is possible.

God is not "supernatural": He is not any kind of "natural." He is absolutely irreducible to your "measurements." He most definitely IS outside the realm of reason, and definitely beyond the scope of man's intelligence, individual, collective, historical.

As Saint Anselm said (in Proslogion):

O Lord, you are not only that than which a greater cannot be conceived, but you are also greater than what can be conceived.

Anselm is thinking and reasoning along a line that perhaps you don't suspect exists:

Speak to my desirous soul what you are, other than what it has seen, that it may clearly see what it desires.

For Anselm, the fides quarens intellectum — the quest of faith seeking understanding, knowledge — is not essentially epistemic; it is volitional. Anselm is drawn by the Love of God, which he fervently and ever faithfully returns.

In the end, I gather we disagree about this: You believe that faith and reason are mutually exclusive; I do not.

Rather I believe they are necessary complementarities. Truthful human knowledge requires the light of both.

But it's late, 21stCenturion, and I've run on long. It's time to say good night — and sleep tight!

119 posted on 10/27/2011 9:29:04 PM PDT by betty boop (We are led to believe a lie when we see with, and not through, the eye. — William Blake)
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To: betty boop; 21stCenturion; xzins; freejohn; buccaneer81; Mind-numbed Robot
Thank you oh so very much for your outstanding essay-posts, dearest sister in Christ!

But of course, infinity doesn't really have so much to do with time as it does with number. It is a mathematical concept; and some physicists have complained that it is "unconstructible" in natural science.

Precisely so.

Since the 1960s forward measurements of the cosmic microwave background radiation consistently agree that the universe is expanding. This means that space and time do not pre-exist but are created as the universe expands. It also means there was a beginning of real space and real time.

That was the most theological statement to ever come out of modern science (Jastrow) – “In the beginning, God created …” (Gen 1:1)

There is no infinite past. Steady state cosmology is dead as a doornail.

So of course physical cosmologists went into high gear trying to obviate God the Creator evidently because methodological naturalism cannot allow for Creator God.

But none of the theories – cyclic, ekpyrotic, multi-verse, multi-world, imaginary time, etc. – can avoid the problem that space and time do not pre-exist.

In the absence of space, things cannot exist.

In the absence of time, events cannot occur.

Both are required for physical causation.

In other words, there can be no physical causation (energy momentum, wave fluctuation, etc.) without real space and real time.

Also, the singularity of big bang cosmology is not nothing:

Mathematically, the dimension of a space is the minimum number of coordinates (axes) necessary to identify a point within the space. A space of zero dimensions is a point; one dimension, a line, two dimensions, a plane; three, a cube, etc. That is the geometry of it. In zero dimensions, the mathematical point is indivisible.

It is not nothing. It is a spatial point. A singularity is not nothing.

In ex nihilo Creation (beginning of space/time) - the dimensions are not merely zero, they are null, dimensions do not exist at all. There is no space and no time. Period.

There is no mathematical point, no volume, no content, no scalar quantities. Ex nihilo doesn’t exist in relationship to anything else; there is no thing.

In an existing physical space, each point (e.g. particle) can be parameterized by a quantity such as mass. The parameter (e.g. a specific quantity within the range of possible quantities) is in effect another descriptor or quasi-dimension that uniquely identifies the point within the space.

Moreover, if the quantity of the parameter changes for a point, then a time dimension is invoked. For example, at one moment the point value is “0” and the next it is “1”.

Wave propagation (e.g. big bang, inflation) cannot occur in null dimensions nor can it occur in zero spatial dimensions, a mathematical point; a dimension of time is required for any fluctuation in a parameter value at a point.

Moreover, wave propagation must also have a spatial/temporal relation from cause point to effect point, i.e. physical causation.

For instance “0” at point nt causes “1” at point n+1t+1 which causes "0" at point n+1t+2 etc..

Obviously, physical wave propagation (e.g. big bang/inflationary model) cannot precede space/time and physical causality.

The wise man asks: Why this instead of nothing at all?

And he realizes that only God, beyond space/time and physical causation, can be the uncaused cause of causation, the first cause, The Creator of the beginning.

Space, time and physical causation are not properties of God the Creator. They are properties of the Creation. Only God is uncaused.

For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, [even] his eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse: - Romans 1:20

The origin of space, time and physical causation – although striking - are not the only open questions that vex scientists. There is also no explanation for the origin of information (Shannon, successful communication,) inertia, semiosis, autonomy and so on. And yet the universe is logical – if it were not, we could not understand it at all.

Order cannot arise from chaos in an unguided physical system. Period. There are always guides to the system whether one is using chaos theory, self-organizing complexity, cellular automata or whatever to analyze complexification, entropy and order.

Indeed, to me, the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics (Wigner) is God’s copyright notice on the cosmos.

Logos is the Greek word which is translated “Word” in the following passage. It is also the root for the word “Logic:”

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made. In him was life; and the life was the light of men. – John 1:1-4

God’s Name is I AM.

120 posted on 10/27/2011 10:24:25 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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