I'm not necessarily saying it's false
Well, the arguments that he give in this regard are either true, or false. That is the point...if they are false, then they are necessarily false and there is no objection you can throw out there that will do you any justice.
Craig endeavors to show that infinities are weird, and counter-intuitive, and I agree with him, so far as that goes. But being weird or counter-intuitive is not the same thing as being logically absurd (self-contradictory), and in physics, being weird isn't really any objection. Our best theories in physics are extremely weird and counter-intuitive (QM, relativity).
Deal with the argument. If you can't offer a meaningful objection to it, then just simply admit that the argument is more plausible than its negations. Spare me the semantic word games.
What you are saying (that there must be a first cause because otherwise there would be an infinite regression and there cannot be one) is mistaken, for the reasons I've mentioned; there could be a universe that is not past-eternal, but does not have any transcendent first cause (as in the Hawking-Hartle proposal)
First off, Dr. Craig already offered objections to the Hawking-Hartle model in his public and written work, so once again, deal with the argument. Second, even if the model doesn't have a transcendent first cause, I fail to see how this negates the problem with infinity...there would still be an infinite number of events preceding every effect. That isn't going anyway.
, and nobody has ever successfully ruled out an infinite regression as either logically or empirically false in the first place.
Oh please, I've seen many people object to this. You can do this by using analogies, and if infinite regression wont work in the analogies, then it can't work in reality.
You've had this covered at some length at least once already, with LegionOnamaMoi...
You are certainly right, I did, but I don't think he offered a rejection that I can't respond to. But I am not talking to him, I am talking to YOU, but if you think he did offer a good enough objection, then quote me what he said that you think was so spectacular...and we can take it from there.
See, you don't even have to use your own argument...would that make it better?
I'm not sure where the problem is; one moment, then the next, then the next, then my birth, then some more moments, and so on. I'm afraid if you want a solution to a problem, you have to say what that problem is supposed to be.
Ok, so if I told you that you will soon become a millionaire, but the only issue is it will take an infinite number of days for the money to be deposited in your account, and you wait...at what day would you receive the money?
You just said "one moment, then the next, then the next, etc"....so if you waited one day, and then the next, and then the next....what day would you receive the money?
Yeah, you're seeing yourself restate the claim in question ("if there isn't a first cause, then there were an infinite amount..."), and pronounce it "nonsensical". This is not an argument, and this is precisely what you have now denied doing. And yet, here you are quoted as doing it.
Then I guess I am seeing things then.
Here's a tip: if you have to claim to have won an argument, you probably didn't actually win anything. In the meantime, focus less on patting yourself on the back despite not having done anything, and more on coming up with substantive responses and arguments.
Oh, you dont want to smoke? Fine, more for me then :cigar: