Chad wrote:The "God did it" statement is able to answer any question thrown at it. The Multiverse theory attempts to explain a certain situation.
I don't think the phrase "God did it" answers every question. How did God do it? Are there any processes involved? What was existing before God did it? Etc. Quite the opposite of a multiverse did it answer. We might as well say that the universe and our memories to boot (up to 5 min ago) were part of a multiverse world. It's a classic situation of overdetermination.
Chad wrote:No, I don't consider this evidence of God because I find the notion rather silly and just a plain cop-out.
Well, that's a prejudice that I do not share obviously.
Chad wrote:Are you assuming that my non belief in god is based on a bad personal experience? Heh. My switch to to being an atheist was far from being a case such as that, nor should it matter. It was a personal issue, but it was nothing bad.
Chad, there's a universe that exists out there. We don't know why it's here. We see some extraordinary facts about its existence that leaves only two real possibilities, it was caused by a larger state space or it was caused by some process. In case of a larger state space, we have reasons to reject it because as a brute fact it is too complex and unimaginable for it to be the case without some process in place making it evolve to some complex state. The other, a process, can start off with a principle of causality, and doesn't require advocating some huge complex start to everything. Which is more logical? I say the latter. But, I acknowledge that there is a possibility the former is possible if we cannot show that it is unlikely given what we know. I think we can show it is unlikely, so there's no further reason to consider it. Your view, though, strikes down the latter view because of a preconceived prejudice. Do you see why I see that as a psychological based reason? Why should we reject one of two solutions (and accept the more unlikely version) simply because the latter version strikes you psychologically as unpleasing?
Chad wrote:So are you saying there was no cause to God and he just existed?
If your question is, "is there a cause to causation?", then my answer is that the question itself is meaningless. God is part of the cause relation, so it doesn't make sense to ask where the nature of that relation comes from.
Chad wrote:How is God so intelligent to determine ALL causal relations when just above you state God had no cause but was the cause(Unless im not understanding this correctly)?
You're confusing the nature of causation with individual causal relations. For example, if I tip a glass of water over, and the water spills on the table, the causal relation is C caused E (or tipping the glass caused water on the table). The nature of causation is what it means for C to cause E. If we ask what it means for C to cause E, then God is ultimately part of that explanation. God's intelligence is part of the nature of causation. For example, when I tipped the glass over, the effect wasn't a brush fire in Arizona. Why not? Well, because E must be in the context of C. C must satisfy the conditions of E happening. How is it that something can be satisfied unless it is true that C satisfies the conditions of E happening? It is this satisfaction relation that involves a mind. Without a mind knowing and confirming that something has been satisfied, then E cannot happen. This is why God exists as part of the principle of causation. Causation (incl. logic, truth) need satisfaction, and this is the role an Omniscient Interpreter provides.
Chad wrote:Are you saying God existed in a state so intelligent to be able to determine every causal relation?
Yes. Every causal relation has God's mind in use
in some capacity. Keep in mind, that capacity might be akin to our central nervous system confirming that a nerve ending has just been stimulated. Some causal relations require more cognizance than other more simple causal relations that predominate the universe.
Chad wrote:Why is there even a need for a God if he existed with all the causal relations?
Everything is built from the ground up. The ground is the principle of causation, and from that ground level you have all the theorems which are true as a result of there being causality and truth.
Chad wrote:How could a God even have a divine reason for creating a universe? Is God sitting in a room with other Gods and shooting pool and coming up with these ideas? Off what reasoning does he have to make these divine choices?
In addition to causality, you also have logic and truth. There are things that are true as a result of a principle of causation, and those things logically derive from the root of this principle being true. However, everything that is "true" must be derived and proven. Objects come into existence by being considered (derived) as possibly true, and they come into permanent existence by being proven true. I suspect that our universe has many, many structures that were proven long ago antecedent to our universe (although I don't mean to imply that temporality is involved).
This Omniscient Interpreter must decide based on what is conceivably possible and then decide what is logically possible, and then what is proven. So, it is God's role to bring forth new structures (or new worlds) by considering (creating) them.
Chad wrote:Is there anyway you could please give a straightforward answer to the question above? I know you feel that God is interwoven withing a principle, so do you feel that God always existed within that principle or that he evolved into it somehow?
God did not evolve, but God's knowledge evolved by adding new theorems that at the root of causality were not derived yet. This principle of evolution of new life is, I suppose, why God continues to use biological evolution in our world. This is the way God has been doing things for billions of worlds, and that's just the way things are done.
Chad wrote:How can God not be complex yet know how things must cohere and correspond to “truth”? Off what basis is God forbidding paradoxical actions? Does god “?just know” what should be forbidden?
I think an appropriate way to visualize this is with a branching structure to reality. So, God must choose between branches (e.g., truth or error), and once reality moves along the branch of a true statement, the open possibility is decided and becomes a closed possibility. That is, knowledge has been created. This knowledge is embedded in the nature of reality that is beyond the branching point. So, the knowledge just "is." The reason it just "is" is because there exists a causal history showing how it became that way, and this is what is actually meant by a principle of causality (E has a reality if C has a reality). After the branching point, E has reality.
God "knows" that E should have a reality based on previous knowledge, and based on God's nature itself which is the nature of causation. This nature must be consistent otherwise it would not exist by its own lights. Therefore, God knows a paradox because God's nature is part of God's knowledge (i.e., God knows the divine nature). God will not violate the divine(causal/logical/truthful) nature of Reality, and therefore every causal decision that follows is based on this basis.
Chad wrote:Can you please provide an example of an entity, theorem and what it would mean for it to be “true”?
Well, for example, any mathematical theorem. You pick...
Chad wrote:To say science is relying more and more on God is dependent on your definition of God or a pantheism approach. Sciences makes conclusions based on what we observe, and they have not observed a God. Nor can they “prove” that God doesn't exist. Which is part of the reason I feel he lives on so well. God is unobservable, untestable and has you assume him as an answer.
Every observation is based on there being logic/truth/causal nature to the world. This is what I mean by basing scientific views on God, at least in a pantheistic sense.