Hi All,
Sorry to be jumping in so, late. I was away all last week in Memphis and then I've been catching up and organizing a conference for most of this week. Forgive me if I respond to some points in prior posts.
Originally posted by Chairboy
The problem, of course, is that it dismisses the theory of infinite regression of cause. Just because you assume that every cause must have an effect doesn't mean that, when dealing with the question of the beginning of the universe, that every effect must have a cause. We're still learning new things every day, it seems a bit early to dismiss everything because, mathematically, a bumblebee cannot possibly fly.
Philosophy is composed of questions that cannot be answered, and religion is answers that cannot be questioned.
Chair respectfully, while it makes for a nifty catchphrase the AH OC disproves your second point. Around here and indeed throughout Europe and most of America, Christianity is treated with a hermeneutic of suspicion - everything that it declares is considered suspect. I myself grew up automatically doubting the veracity of everything taught in the bible. Interestingly enough, the bible itself states that the natural man will be absolutely
disinclined to believe what it teaches.
In any event, the high priests of our society who teach unquestionable doctrines these days are not ministers but scientists. Just as an example of this phonomenon, the minister at your local mainline church may be permitted to disbelieve any and every doctrine taught in the bible, a teacher of theology in a divinity school may actively teach that the bible is a book of myths and fables, that Christianity is a historical oddity, and that there is no God (many do) but a scientist who publically doubts doctrines like evolution or even global warming is likely to be branded a heretic and a fool and loose his place in the academy.
As to your first point regarding contingency, the laws of the universe that we can identify such as the first and second laws of thermodynamics forbid an infinite regression (additionally, there are good philosophical arguments that show an infinite regression is theoretically impossible).
As I stated in another thread, there are really only three possibilities to explain the existence of the Universe:
"1) It Was Spontaneously Generated - Nothing Generated Everything. This violates the First Law of Thermodynamics.
2) It is Eternal - This violates the Second Law of Thermodynamics, the amount of energy in a closed system is constant and that energy and that energy while not lost is becoming less and less usable, entropy as I quoted earlier means that "the amount of energy available to do work is decreasing and becoming uniformly distributed. The universe is moving irreversibly toward a state of maximum disorder and minimum energy."
Had the Universe always been here entropy would have been completed - you'd already have maximum disorder and minimum energy.
3) It Was Created - this violates neither of the Laws of Thermodynamics, but it does obviously upset a great number of people who don't like the implications. I can sympathize having been there myself."
Regardless Chair, there is far more evidence for the existence of God than there is that my great, great, grandfather existed. No one alive has ever met my great, great grandfather or knows his name, he has left behind no record, or evidence that he lived, and all efforts to trace him have proven fruitless. As far as the available evidence is concerned my great grandfather might well be the product of spontaneous generation, and yet I can almost guarantee that despite a total lack of evidence, no one on the board doubts his existence. By comparison, there is ample evidence for the existence of the Triune God; many alive today know Him quite well and know His name, He has revealed Himself to us both through nature and an entirely sufficient written record and those who genuinely seek Him, find Him - and yet doubts about the existence of God are legion. As such, evidence alone will never be the key to believing or disbelieving in God, as I mentioned in the beginning, we are not naturally inclined to believe in the God of the bible and only He can change that state of affairs. Thank heavens that He does or I'd still be an non-believer myself.
- SEAGOON