The paper *is* the 'horses mouth'. it is the carefully written down results of thought about the topic, as opposed to off-the-cuff comments that can include misstatements and inaccuracies.
Whether you read the paper about the theorem, or you watch a video presentation about the theorem...regardless, you should wound up at the same place at the end...which is a universe that began to exist.
And the BGV theorem is part of those speculations. In particular, it gives the limits of classical ideas and shows what sorts of things might arise when quantum effects are considered.
Red herrings and filibustering.
Well, yes, that is how science works. Models are made that are consistent with the evidence. Then the models are tested by *new* observations to see which ones 'stick' to the facts.
Well so far, the Standard Model of the big bang has the most evidence/facts supporting it..so lets let that one stick for now until you can find another with more evidence supporting it.
"What if"
"Perhaps maybe".
That is not evidence. You have to show that the model is true.
That is like me finding my dog dead in the backyard from obvious violent means.
And I hypothesize that Big Foot came into my yard and killed my dog.
Sure..could that be possible? Maybe. But what proof do I have that it actually occured?
Zero.
Possibilities can not be used as evidence.
Nope. Once again, your philosophical arguments carry very little weight in these matters. Much more important is internal consistency of the theory and agreement wtith observations and the evidence collected so far.
Filibustering. I gave you a simple, DIRECT reason why infinite regression is impossible.
Please, address my reasons, or I shall conclude that you've got NOTHING and are now just filibustering away.
Assuming an average expansion of the multiverse and that it is explained by classical concepts. Neither is likely.
Pretty safe assumption, according to Vilenkin..and then you've still got a fine-tuning problem with the multiverse, according to Penrose.
So, either way you look at it.
But did not read the scholarly paper.
1. I watched Vilenkin give a presentation of the paper/theorem.
2. Ive read commentary on the paper.
3. I am aware of the scientific community proposing models to violate the theorem.
All three taken together, and we have a fire-proof theorem that will take a lot to be violated.
BGV is one interesting result. But it is not the be-all and end-all of cosmology by a LONG shot.
Well, when you present your model which violates the BGV theorem, I will be in attendence clapping for you.
Until then..
Nope. As you have pointed out, a model avoiding its assumptions is all that is required. Such do exist and are being investigated.
Yeah and if the one sister that I have was born with a different reproductive system, she would be my brother.
Possibilities and hypotheticals are not evidence.
And you go way beyond that. At least the scientific speculation is limited to those theories consistent with the *known* facts of quantum mechanics and general relativity.
I go way beyond that, because the evidence takes me way beyond that.
You, on the other hand, are going *way* beyond the evidence in postulating something non-material that has the capabilities of making universes, etc. There is NO evidence for any of that. Only speculation.
I have a universe which began to exist..and I am smart enough to know that the origins of the universe must exist beyond the universe.
And Christians call a creative entity that exists beyond the universe God.
WLC is an idiot. he is highly regarded by some theists, but that only shows how low theism must go to look reasonable.
Sean Carroll said, in his opening statement of their debate, that William Lane Craig is the one guy who put the fear in all of his friends.
That, my friend, is high regard.
Where what?
Boy, do you have a lot to learn. There are many types of singularity. Not all imply a beginning.
First off, what a singularity
is or
isn't has no bearing on the argument...and I can care less what other types of singularities there are.
Already addressed this.
ANYTHING involving anything before the period of nucleosynthesis is speculation. Anything involving the geometry or structure of the universe before that time is speculation.
So ALL of this discussion is speculation on both sides. The difference is that I am trying to sticj to the scientific theories that have been *speculated*, but that agree with the known facts.
Nonsense. What the BGV theorem did was take what we know to be true, based on observation and formulated a mathematical proof based on these observations.
Your proposals are based on stuff we haven't and probably CANNOT observe...such as multiverses an quantum gravity...both of which has yet to be proven and is speculation at best.
So no, we are not on the same playing field, here. My stuff is based on what we know, your stuff is based on ignorance and what we are trying to figure out.
Goes both ways. Speculation about causality outside of the universe is just that: speculation.
Speculation about something before the universe is exactly that: speculation.
if you want to avoid speculation, don't discuss questions about the origin of the universe.
Nope. You cannot use anything
within your car to explain the
origins of your car.
That isn't speculation; that is Logic 101.
First show that the phrase 'allowed our universe to begin' even is meaningful.
If I say the 32 degree temperature in the freezer allowed the water to freeze...that is meaningful, isn't it?
If you have no problem accepting that meaningfulness, then what I said about the universe in the same way shouldn't be an issue.
Then show that such conditions actually existed (evidence, please).
Obviously, the conditions which allowed our universe to exist must have been existed...otherwise, there would be no universe, would there be?
Then give more deail about why it makes no 'logical sense' for the universe to have 'begun to exist' a finite time ago.
Example: if the conditions which allows water to freeze has existed for an infinite amount of time...then why would the water begin to freeze just yesterday?
Answer that question, please.
You are making fundamental assumptions even in your statement of the problem. But those assumptions may not be valid.
Your questions were answered, sir.
Right now, it is obvious that youve got NOTHING and now you are just filibustering, just clinching on to me and hoping the bell will sound soon..as I continue to bomb you with haymakers.