First cause.

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Furrowed Brow
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First cause.

Post #1

Post by Furrowed Brow »

4gold wrote:A beginning must have a cause. No matter how far back you shift the question, the beginning must have a "first cause", and not just that, but an uncaused cause.
Why must a beginning have a cause?

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Post #2

Post by Furrowed Brow »

I promised to argue this point with 4gold. To kick off. I'd argue that there is no logical or formal reason for a beginning to need a cause. To think that a beginning needs a cause is akin to other common sense assertions such as "what goes up must come down", "you can't get something from nothing", "what is true for you is true for me", which whilst being truths of common sense are either false or not logically true.

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Post #3

Post by ollagram88 »

mind if i ask, can we name an example of something without a cause?

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Post #4

Post by Furrowed Brow »

ollagram88 wrote:mind if i ask, can we name an example of something without a cause?
Virtual particles may be a physical example. In physics there is no law or principle that says something must have a cause. The limitation is that certain principles like conservation of energy and momentum are not broken.

I'd also say that the experience or rather sensual experience qua experience is uncaused. We might at some point identify which neuron-chemical interaction is the experience of say a smell of the colour blue, but as to how the physical interaction is the subjects experience of lavender or the experience of blue I'd say is not a matter of a causal explanation.

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Re: First cause.

Post #5

Post by Nick_A »

Furrowed Brow wrote:
4gold wrote:A beginning must have a cause. No matter how far back you shift the question, the beginning must have a "first cause", and not just that, but an uncaused cause.
Why must a beginning have a cause?
The great debate:

1. The essence of religion asserts that the first cause is consciousness without objects

2. The modern atheist asserts that qualities of materiality arising by chance in one way or another unite and at a certain complexity produce consciousness.

I'll stick with #1 and with Simone's observations on Creation:
"God could only create by hiding himself. Otherwise there would be nothing but himself."
This is why:
"It is only the impossible that is possible for God. He has given over the possible to the mechanics of matter and the autonomy of his creatures." Simone Weil - from "Gravity and Grace"
Consciousness without objects is the first cause because all possible objects are connected as lawful "fractions" of a greater wholeness.

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Re: First cause.

Post #6

Post by Goat »

Nick_A wrote:
Furrowed Brow wrote:
4gold wrote:A beginning must have a cause. No matter how far back you shift the question, the beginning must have a "first cause", and not just that, but an uncaused cause.
Why must a beginning have a cause?
The great debate:

1. The essence of religion asserts that the first cause is consciousness without objects

2. The modern atheist asserts that qualities of materiality arising by chance in one way or another unite and at a certain complexity produce consciousness.

I'll stick with #1 and with Simone's observations on Creation:
"God could only create by hiding himself. Otherwise there would be nothing but himself."
This is why:
"It is only the impossible that is possible for God. He has given over the possible to the mechanics of matter and the autonomy of his creatures." Simone Weil - from "Gravity and Grace"
Consciousness without objects is the first cause because all possible objects are connected as lawful "fractions" of a greater wholeness.
It is seeing reasoning like that which if firming up my change from a weak theist to a weak atheist to a strong atheist. The circular nature of that arguement makes me dizzy.
“What do you think science is? There is nothing magical about science. It is simply a systematic way for carefully and thoroughly observing nature and using consistent logic to evaluate results. So which part of that exactly do you disagree with? Do you disagree with being thorough? Using careful observation? Being systematic? Or using consistent logic?�

Steven Novella

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Post #7

Post by Nick_A »

Goat
It is seeing reasoning like that which if firming up my change from a weak theist to a weak atheist to a strong atheist. The circular nature of that arguement makes me dizzy
Then from a strong atheist you will continue the progression and become a strong theist.

I can't believe you won't admit the difference at least theoretically between "nothing" and "no-thing." Both are without objects but entirely different.

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Re: First cause.

Post #8

Post by bernee51 »

Nick_A wrote:
Furrowed Brow wrote:
4gold wrote:A beginning must have a cause. No matter how far back you shift the question, the beginning must have a "first cause", and not just that, but an uncaused cause.
Why must a beginning have a cause?
The great debate:

1. The essence of religion asserts that the first cause is consciousness without objects

2. The modern atheist asserts that qualities of materiality arising by chance in one way or another unite and at a certain complexity produce consciousness.

I'll stick with #1 and with Simone's observations on Creation:
This despite that fact that there is evidence for #2 and none for #1
Nick_A wrote:
"God could only create by hiding himself. Otherwise there would be nothing but himself."
As is believed by panentheists.
Nick_A wrote:
"It is only the impossible that is possible for God. He has given over the possible to the mechanics of matter and the autonomy of his creatures." Simone Weil - from "Gravity and Grace"
If Simone was with us we could debate her. Instead we get to read her opinions through a fan.
Nick_A wrote: Consciousness without objects is the first cause because all possible objects are connected as lawful "fractions" of a greater wholeness.
It was objects that facilitated the evolution of the consciousness that allows these objects to be realized.

You appear to have taken by the wrong end the idea that without consciousness the phenomenal universe would not exist.
"Whatever you are totally ignorant of, assert to be the explanation of everything else"

William James quoting Dr. Hodgson

"When I see I am nothing, that is wisdom. When I see I am everything, that is love. My life is a movement between these two."

Nisargadatta Maharaj

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Post #9

Post by Nick_A »

Bernee
It was objects that facilitated the evolution of the consciousness that allows these objects to be realized.

You appear to have taken by the wrong end the idea that without consciousness the phenomenal universe would not exist.
The sad part is that people argue so much that they will never see the relationship between both sides and just keep arguing.

Fortunately, if one gets beyond argument and contemplates deeper this situation the question of the source and levels of reality becomes fascinating.

http://www.integralscience.org/einsteinbuddha/

Thomas McFarlane did a fine job in uniting these excerpts from Einstein and Buddha. For example:
I teach that the multitudinousness of objects have no reality in themselves but are only seen of the mind and, therefore, are of the nature of maya and a dream. ...It is true that in one sense they are seen and discriminated by the senses as individualized objects; but in another sense, because of the absence of any characteristic marks of self-nature, they are not seen but are only imagined. In one sense they are graspable, but in another sense, they are not graspable. BUDDHA
Considering this quote alongside the one by Einstein the question becomes if the contents of consciousness or maya initiate objective consciousness or does objective consciousness devolve to make maya possible? If it does then the first cause is the source of this devolution.

I'm in the minority that believes consciousness devolves and our brains serve as the means to experience maya or our devolved reality.

If I'm in a minority that includes Buddha and Einstein, I cannot feel guilty.

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Post #10

Post by bernee51 »

Nick_A wrote:Bernee
It was objects that facilitated the evolution of the consciousness that allows these objects to be realized.

You appear to have taken by the wrong end the idea that without consciousness the phenomenal universe would not exist.
The sad part is that people argue so much that they will never see the relationship between both sides and just keep arguing.

Fortunately, if one gets beyond argument and contemplates deeper this situation the question of the source and levels of reality becomes fascinating.
Sad but true Nick...few will have your insight.

8-)
Nick_A wrote:
I teach that the multitudinousness of objects have no reality in themselves but are only seen of the mind and, therefore, are of the nature of maya and a dream. ...It is true that in one sense they are seen and discriminated by the senses as individualized objects; but in another sense, because of the absence of any characteristic marks of self-nature, they are not seen but are only imagined. In one sense they are graspable, but in another sense, they are not graspable. BUDDHA
Considering this quote alongside the one by Einstein the question becomes if the contents of consciousness or maya initiate objective consciousness or does objective consciousness devolve to make maya possible? If it does then the first cause is the source of this devolution.
The contents of consciousness are objective consciousness. It is only 'maya' because it is not recognized as such. It is given its own objective reality independent of the observer.

The evolution of consciousness provided the tool for the emergence of the sense of the 'other' - the establishment of 'objective reality'
Nick_A wrote: I'm in the minority that believes consciousness devolves and our brains serve as the means to experience maya or our devolved reality.

If I'm in a minority that includes Buddha and Einstein, I cannot feel guilty.
The Buddha also said:

"Investigate the validity of my teachings as you would examine the purity of gold, rubbing it against a stone, hammering it, melting it. Do not accept my words simply out of respect for me. Accept them when you see that they are true"
"Whatever you are totally ignorant of, assert to be the explanation of everything else"

William James quoting Dr. Hodgson

"When I see I am nothing, that is wisdom. When I see I am everything, that is love. My life is a movement between these two."

Nisargadatta Maharaj

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