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Is it possible to talk with an atheist?

siti

Well-Known Member
Let me try to rephrase the point I believe that @siti is making.
Your claim that the universe had a beginning is without evidence. It seems intuitively true, because humans are programmed to see things in terms of beginning and end, but we have come to learn that isn't how things work in reality. Reality moves in cycles and transformation. So the universe may very well not have a beginning and the singularity is a transformation event and not a creation.

I hope siti will correct me if I am mistaken.
Tom
More or less - but I get the distinct impression that long, logically developed arguments are not going to be effective here, so I want to take Sanmario through it step by step - if he's willing to go along.
 

siti

Well-Known Member
Well its either yes or no - so lets go one by one...

If the cause was/is subject to or capable of change, in what sense is it, itself other than the universe?

If the cause was not/is not subject to or capable of change then the universe could not have happened since no change could have occurred in order to cause the universe to begin to exist.

So now - to use your parlance, its up to you. You must either offer a logically sound third option, answer or refute (with logic) one or both of the above.
 
Last edited:

Sanmario

Active Member
@shunyadragon
@ChristineM
@hadrianus
@Curious George
@columbus
@9-10ths_Penguin
@siti




Let's go back to this post from you, dear siti:

From siti

Sanmario said: ↑

The cause of the universe was present before the universe.


Was this cause subject to or capable of change?


Post siti #83


You notice that you concur with me there is the cause of the universe before the universe began?

So, let me be your pupil as you know more and better than me on the cause of the universe.

Please answer your own question, or choose your own answer to your own question, and I will see whether you make sense.
 

Sanmario

Active Member
@shunyadragon
@ChristineM
@hadrianus
@Curious George
@columbus
@9-10ths_Penguin
@siti


Okay, I am back, let's resume our exchange, dear siti, below is my post to you prior to my coffee break.

From Sanmario
___________

@shunyadragon
@ChristineM
@hadrianus
@Curious George
@columbus
@9-10ths_Penguin
@siti



Let's go back to this post from you, dear siti:

From siti

Sanmario said: ↑

The cause of the universe was present before the universe.​

Was this cause subject to or capable of change?


Post siti #83


You notice that you concur with me there is the cause of the universe before the universe began?

So, let me be your pupil as you know more and better than me on the cause of the universe.

Please answer your own question, or choose your own answer to your own question, and I will see whether you make sense.


#88
Sanmario, 51 minutes ago
 

Sanmario

Active Member
@shunyadragon
@ChristineM
@hadrianus
@Curious George
@columbus
@9-10ths_Penguin
@siti



Sanmario said: ↑
The cause of the universe was present before the universe.

Siti said
Was this cause subject to or capable of change?


From the exchange above, you notice that you concur with me there is the cause of the universe before the universe began?

So, let me be your pupil as you know more and better than me on the cause of the universe.

To your question below, please answer your own question, or choose your own answer to your own question, and I will see whether you make sense.



Well its either yes or no - so lets go one by one...

If the cause was/is subject to or capable of change, in what sense is it, itself other than the universe?

If the cause was not/is not subject to or capable of change then the universe could not have happened since no change could have occurred in order to cause the universe to begin to exist.

So now - to use your parlance, its up to you. You must either offer a logically sound third option, answer or refute (with logic) one or both of the above.
 

Sanmario

Active Member
Please, you did not choose to answer your own question that is in post #87, that is what I am requesting you to do, answer your own question, because you know more and better than me, on the cause of the universe.
 

siti

Well-Known Member
If the cause is changeable then it is no different than the universe itself (in that it - the change itself - requires a cause - can you think of any change that did not have a cause?)

If the cause is unchangeable then the universe could not have begun to exist (how can anything begin to exist in circumstances where no change is possible?).

Since the universe does (it appears) exist, and is (it appears) constantly changing, I conclude that it (the ever-changing universe) must have always existed and therefore it had no beginning.
 

Sanmario

Active Member

Sanmario

Active Member
Sorry, siti, you are still online.

So, please reply to my request on answering your own question in post #87.
 

Sanmario

Active Member
@shunyadragon
@ChristineM
@hadrianus
@Curious George
@columbus
@9-10ths_Penguin
@siti




Dear siti, you tell me:

Since the universe does (it appears) exist, and is (it appears) constantly changing,

I conclude that it (the ever-changing universe) must have always existed and therefore it had no
beginning.


Here, I will enumerate the text above into parts:

1. Since the universe does (it appears) exist,

2. and is (it appears) constantly changing,

3. I conclude that it (the ever-changing universe) must have always existed and therefore it had no beginning.



In No. 3, you it appears forget to mention (it appears), why?


Anyway, will you concur with you me that you are talking in an if scenario, that is all in your mind, in what I call the conceptival realm, as distinct from the objectival realm which is outside of our mind and independent of our mind.


Are you concluding from your if scenario that in the objectival realm of babies at home and roses in our garden, which are part and parcel of the universe, the universe has always existed?

Is that kind of a transit legitimate and valid: from an if scenario to the objective reality of babies and roses and everything that make up the universe, that the universe had no beginning?



From siti



If the cause is changeable then it is no different than the universe itself (in that it - the change itself - requires a cause - can you think of any change that did not have a cause?)

If the cause is unchangeable then the universe could not have begun to exist (how can anything begin to exist in circumstances where no change is possible?).

Since the universe does (it appears) exist, and is (it appears) constantly changing, I conclude that it (the ever-changing universe) must have always existed and therefore it had no beginning.


#97 siti, Today at 10:44 AM
 
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