- If a material atheist world exists, then there must be a material cause for every effect; there can be no effect without a material cause.
- Slicing up time to the minimum slices of time, we see there cannot be material causes that materially connects time slice A to its effect in time slice B.
- Therefore, a material atheist world does not exist.
Can there be real causation for a material atheist?
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- harvey1
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Can there be real causation for a material atheist?
Post #1Here is my argument against material atheism:
Post #161
I really don't want to raise your blood pressure any higher than it is now, (I'm under strict orders to keep my own in check!) but this whole topic is founded upon your insistence that there's a paradox affecting material causality and I simply can't see it. I feel the need to register on some physics community forum or other to see what the wider reaction might be. I have disagreed with your premises which deny the continuous flow of time simply because arbitrarily stopping time and asking what restarts it seems nonsensical. How do you feel about calling on some additional thinkers? Alternatively where else are such matters already the subject of discussion?
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Post #162
Oh, I think mine is okay--I hope. Btw, I hope I'm not the cause of your higher blood pressure?QED wrote:I really don't want to raise your blood pressure any higher than it is now, (I'm under strict orders to keep my own in check!)...
Again, I'm trying to make it easier for you by postulating the solutions to Zeno's arrow paradox with calculus (i.e., the use of infinitesimal limits). If you prefer to stick with indiscrete time without infinitesimals (i.e., nominalism with respect to infinitesimals) as a way around these material causation paradoxes, please feel free to solve the problems that way. However, I see no means to solve those paradoxes using a nominalist approach either.QED wrote:but this whole topic is founded upon your insistence that there's a paradox affecting material causality and I simply can't see it. I feel the need to register on some physics community forum or other to see what the wider reaction might be. I have disagreed with your premises which deny the continuous flow of time simply because arbitrarily stopping time and asking what restarts it seems nonsensical.
As I mentioned, Peter Lynds successfully raised this issue in the physics and philosophical community. Nobody could answer the objections. He has pursued the nominalist approach. Unlike everyone here who thinks the nominalist approach works, Lynds has come to the correct conclusion: no material causation.QED wrote:How do you feel about calling on some additional thinkers? Alternatively where else are such matters already the subject of discussion?
- The Happy Humanist
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Post #163
May I make a suggestion? Jim Lippard is a friend of mine. I might be able to coax him on here. While I'm not sure of his grasp of theoretical physics, he is a whiz at epistemology and questions of this nature. He is also an incredibly resourceful researcher.QED wrote:How do you feel about calling on some additional thinkers?
I, too, admit to being baffled by the alleged conundrum Harvey1 presents, but I gave up arguing largely because I recognize I don't have a suitable vocabulary in this field (and because my time is extremely limited these days, as you can tell by my long absences).
Jim, the Happy Humanist!
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Any sufficiently advanced worldview will be indistinguishable from sheer arrogance --The Happy Humanist (with apologies to Arthur C. Clarke)
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Any sufficiently advanced worldview will be indistinguishable from sheer arrogance --The Happy Humanist (with apologies to Arthur C. Clarke)
Post #164
I'll welcome anything that opens this up to the extent that I can understand it.The Happy Humanist wrote: May I make a suggestion? Jim Lippard is a friend of mine. I might be able to coax him on here. While I'm not sure of his grasp of theoretical physics, he is a whiz at epistemology and questions of this nature. He is also an incredibly resourceful researcher.
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Post #165
It's better to have him come on as an anonymous individual. One thing that I don't want to see is any claims based on authority. Let's see reasons based on quotes, evidence, facts, etc..The Happy Humanist wrote:Jim Lippard is a friend of mine. I might be able to coax him on here. While I'm not sure of his grasp of theoretical physics, he is a whiz at epistemology and questions of this nature.
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Post #166
I don't think you'll have a problem. I, on the other hand, may just shake my head in total awe and befuddlement....QED wrote:I'll welcome anything that opens this up to the extent that I can understand it.The Happy Humanist wrote: May I make a suggestion? Jim Lippard is a friend of mine. I might be able to coax him on here. While I'm not sure of his grasp of theoretical physics, he is a whiz at epistemology and questions of this nature. He is also an incredibly resourceful researcher.
Jim, the Happy Humanist!
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Any sufficiently advanced worldview will be indistinguishable from sheer arrogance --The Happy Humanist (with apologies to Arthur C. Clarke)
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Post #167
If you're afraid that he'll come on here and simply say "I'm Jim Lippard and I don't agree," I can assure you that won't happen. In fact there will probably be more blue text than black in his messages. On the other hand, I am almost certain that he will want to come on here anonymously anyway - if at all.It's better to have him come on as an anonymous individual. One thing that I don't want to see is any claims based on authority. Let's see reasons based on quotes, evidence, facts, etc
Actually I can see at this point that I should have just gone and gotten him without saying anything....but this may work out.
Jim, the Happy Humanist!
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Any sufficiently advanced worldview will be indistinguishable from sheer arrogance --The Happy Humanist (with apologies to Arthur C. Clarke)
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Post #168
You didn't even recognize your atheist prophet when he was here, so why recognize a lesser one?The Happy Humanist wrote:I don't think you'll have a problem. I, on the other hand, may just shake my head in total awe and befuddlement....
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Post #169
harvey1 wrote:You didn't even recognize your atheist prophet when he was here, so why recognize a lesser one?The Happy Humanist wrote:I don't think you'll have a problem. I, on the other hand, may just shake my head in total awe and befuddlement....


Jim, the Happy Humanist!
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Post #170
The Happy Humanist I knew you would come crawling back. Good to see you. I don't know who Jim Lippard but it sounds fun anyway.
Nice thing about this thread it makes me reread books I haven't read in years.
I am still having with harvey's materialism. I seems to be an old view and hardly how we look at matter these days. The billiard ball view of atoms bumping together in a pure determinist fashion has been left behind.
harvey1 wrote:
Nice thing about this thread it makes me reread books I haven't read in years.
I am still having with harvey's materialism. I seems to be an old view and hardly how we look at matter these days. The billiard ball view of atoms bumping together in a pure determinist fashion has been left behind.
harvey1 wrote:
This approach may be backwards. I am not sure it is useful to say what material causes the next oscillation but rather how is the past felt by the present? Future causality is possibility(uncertainty) the past is preceived in part even if fully felt. Maybe we should not be looking at the arrow flies but how the target feels. I am working on it.This doesn't solve the conceptual problem put forward in this thread. If you have a spatial oscillation, what materially causes the next spatial oscillation?