Still not gonna respond to the analogy, huh. So you believe that it is possible for things to pop in to existence from a state of nothingness? No further questions, your honor.
What is "a state of nothingness"? Is this something you believe has any basis in the actual world?
Right, the act of creating is a change. That is why it was exactly at that moment of creation that God stepped in to time and is therefore forever temporal. But before the creation, God was atemporal. And btw, I dont have the same problem because the creator of time could not itself exist in time before time was created. Makes no sense.
How did God step into time if he's atemporal? Stepping into time is a change, it's an act, that is the beginning of the existence of God as a temporal being. Change was always possible so time was always a factor. If God can make himself a temporal being, he always was a temporal being.
Without God, there is no good explanation for how time could have reached the present moment from an infinite chain of cause and effect relations. If there is a good answer for this, I havent heard it yet.
Time doesn't have to reach anything. What are you talking about?
The present is here, it is always the present, it doesn't have to go through the whole causal chain of the past, the present is the state of things right now and I am part of that state. If what I perceive as the present is actually a part of an infinitely regressive causal chain of the past, whatever that means, then I'm not really sure how that makes any difference.
Is this a dressed up Zeno's paradox or something?
I knew the argument would convince you eventually lol.
Let's put this more clearly.
1. God is defined as an omniscient, omnipotent being that necessarily exists in every possible world.
2. The actual world is a possible world.
3. The actual world exists.
4. Therefor, God exists.
Same thing, right? The cheat is just more apparent.
1. Leprechauns are defined as magical beings that necessarily exist in every possible world.
2. The actual world is a possible world.
3. The actual world exists.
4. Therefor, leprechauns exist.
Nothing that is a product of the universe can be logically said to exist necessarily.
God is a product of our minds.
Our minds are a product of the universe.
Therefor, God does not necessarily exist.
Well, you are saying nature did it despite the fact that there is no knowledge of nature doing so. So as far as Im concerned, nature didnt do it either, so no knowledge is added.
Yes, I am saying nature did it. The difference is, I can provide you with heaps of actual material evidence, things you can see, touch and measure, and a well constructed theory describing precisely how nature did it . The keyword here is "how" .
In case you lost the link, here it is again:
Welcome to Evolution 101!
I don't care if you think it's the right explanation or not, but it is definitely a well thought out explanation based on all the available natural evidence.
"God did it" is not an explanation, it's one of those things people say when they can't think of an explanation. Like:
a: "hey, why are all the chairs upside down?"
b: "ghost pirates"
Yup, a whole lot of creation going on right there.
Do you accept the sky being a solid object keeping water from leaking in as a fact?
And if you look up sphere in the wiki article, it is a CIRCULAR object in three dimension space.
If you look up "forklift" in a dictionary, it is actually defined as a vehicle for lifting and carrying heavy loads.
That means vehicles are actually forklifts.
Obviously not. The difference is observation is supposed to be part of science. Theological implications are not.
So what exactly is the theological method for finding out things about reality?