jamotide: The two what? Try to be more specific. The reason there is no need for a first cause is because there could be infinite regression, we know that now. About the 45th time I tell you.
Between the first cause being first chronologically versus first ontologically. If the claim was that it was first chronologically, then whether infinite regress was possible would be important, but because the claim is first ontologically, it has nothing to do with infinite regress. Regardless of what you think you know about infinite regress, it is completely irrelevant to the argument from first cause, so the fact that you keep bringing that up only continues to show that you completely misunderstand the argument. I don't know how to make that any clearer to you.
I'm not sure you could miss the point any harder if you tried. The point was to tell you that your example is a strawman, but I hate that word, so I explained it with the flowers,bees and leaves.
*sigh*
Using the the example that was used as part of the argument itself to help explain the argument to you can't possible be a straw man argument. Conversely, making up something that you think sound good has no relevance to the argument whatsoever.
Yes clearly I have never looked at it, and all the stuff I quote to you I came up with myself because I live in the dark ages and don't know shit. Or was that the other guy, am I "confusing the two"?
So far you have not quoted Aquinas, but have only made up what you think he said or what you think would be possible for him to know. I have absolutely no idea why you think he said or thought those things, but I'm pretty sure it's simply because you've never read him and not because you lived in the mythical dark ages.
This is really getting to be painful. There could be other things it is dependent upon which we can't fathom, there is no reason to assume it is a "being" with a "mind".
The fact that you lack the mental capability to understand that argument does not mean he is assuming the conclusions are true.
I do that when you demonstrate something that isn't dependant on time and space.
I'm not sure why you're ignoring the argument that's been presented. If the universe had a beginning, then it had a cause. Scienctific and philosophical arguments show the universe has a beginning, therefore it has a cause. It is not possible for a cause to be caused by the thing that it is a cause of. The cause of space and time can not be caused by space and time, so it does not owe its existence to space and time, and it must transcend space and time.
There is no nothing. There is no need for anything to be created out of nothing.
Then why is there something rather than nothing?
Seriously are you a dumbass? The dark ages a myth? Old arguments can't be outdated, proven wrong? I guess that mindset is a necessity when you believe books that were created by mindless desert folk thousands of years ago.
Yes, the dark ages are a myth, read a book:
http://www.strangenotions.com/gods-philosophers/
Of course, if an argument is based on premises that are later shown to be false, then it can become outdated, but an argument does not become outdated simply because of when it was created. It is again a logically fallacy to say that desert folk are wrong because they lived thousands of years ago.
Weird, I wonder how the two make sense in your mind, logic and Crag Hack.
Again, I invite you to take a logic class, you might learn something.
Team jamotide created your god.
That's only how philosophy works in your fanciful imagination. Again, I invite you to take a philosophy class, you might learn something.
How?
You're the one who claimed that we know that an infinite regression is possible. I assumed that you would know how to back up your claim, otherwise you wouldn't be making it. /facepalm
Soyeong: Everyone is smarter than "professional philosophers" if that is the kind of BS you need to believe to become one. Why are pixies a strawman but not other gods?
Take a look at these two arguments
1.) All men are mortal.
2.) Socrates was a man.
3.) Therefore, Socrates was a mortal.
1.) All men are mortal.
2.) Socrates was a man.
3.) Therefore, pixies exist.
There first two premises show that it is logically necessarily that Socrates was a mortal and that is the only thing that they show to be necessarily true. When you swap out the conclusion in the second argument for something else, then you no longer have an argument with a valid form. Team jamotide makes just as much nonsense as the second argument.
omgs and you keep quoting definitions of logic
That is the conclusion from a logical argument I've given, not a definition of logic...
Man do you even read what you write? How does all this jive with logic?
It jives with logic by making logical arguments.
Soyeong: Of course, no such thing as luck, but souls, gods,timeless spaceless being for sure!
If you think luck exists, then make a logical argument for it, like the logical arguments for those other things. Meanwhile, you haven't interacted with my argument against luck. If luck existed and a large group of people were randomly flipping a coin and they wanted it to come up heads, then there would be people who approached other percentages than 50/50 in accordance with how much luck they had. While we might perceive a string of the coin coming up heads as being lucky, the fact that it evens out for everyone shows that it is nothing more than our perception.
That is kind of the definition of metaphysical,genius.
Since you aparently don't regard metaphysical proofs as proof, you're free to answer the question as well, genius.
Your problem is not faith, it is a fundamental misunderstand of logic and evidence.
Thanks for the laugh. Honestly, you would greatly benefit from taking a logic class. And you're welcome to disagree with the dictionary about what evidence is.
Ah so you know it's all BS, but being the spiteful fighter you believe it anyway.
When you're deciding whether or not to trust someone, you don't know with 100% certainty whether they will be trustworthy, so there always exists doubt about that. If you choose to trust them based on past evidence that shows they are generally trustworthy, then you are acting in faith in spite of doubt. You do the same thing every time you have faith in someone or something else.