Kalam Cosmological Argument 2.Physicists and Philosophers strike back

Ғылым және технология

This is the second film we have made, critiquing the Kalam Cosmological Argument.
Our first assembled many leading physicists and philosophers to offer what they think is wrong with the argument.
It clearly got the attention of William Lane Craig as he made a four part series responding.
In this film we reply to his reply. There are yet agin many leading experts here including Sean Carroll, Carlo Rovelli, Niayesh Afshordi, Adrain Moore, Alex Malpass and others.
We also made a 6 hour long response video with Dan Linford ( who also appears in this film ), James Fodor and Digital Gnosis . Find that here: • Bad Apologetics Ep 21 ...
All opinions expressed are those of the person expressing them and should be taken as a collective opinion. Nevertheless, we sent this to everyone involved to make sure no one objected to it. None did.
Timecodes
0:00 Introduction
3:10 metaphysical absurdity
6:27 infinite subtraction
11:25 infinite future
14:27 Potential infinity
17:25 angels, God and infinity
18:49 infinite countdown
21:32 Grim Reaper Paradox
23:28 Absence of Evidence
23:49 Big Bang Singularity
26:46 Quantum Gravity
27:23 Hartle Hawking Model
29:37 BGV Theorem
32:25 Quantum Eternity Theorem
34:00 Cherry Picking
36:00 Collapsing Universe
40:46 Reversing the arrow of time
41:46 entropy
42:50 Wall theorem
44:27 singularities again
45:19 Neo Lorentzianism
54:10 models with a beginning
55:47 causality and QM
1:02:00 causes and cats
1:04:33 metaphysical principle
1:06:19 simultaneous causation
1:07:48 time travel
1:08:40 free agent
1:12:47 desperate atheists
1:14:35 summing up
Cast:
Adrian Moore
Graham Priest,
Wes Morriston
Alex Malpass
Daniel Linford
Sean Carroll
Niayesh Afshordi
Carlo Rovelli
Barry Lower
Chris Hitchock
Susanne Schander
Abhay Ashtekar
Arif Ahmed
Aurelien Barrau
Alistair Wilson
Alan Guth
Alex Vilenkin
Simon Saunders

Пікірлер: 1 500

  • @sahb8091
    @sahb8091 Жыл бұрын

    An exceptional and worthy undertaking which offered a significant, accessible and highly academic response to cosmological arguments which often are revered by believers and go unchallenged. I believe in God, I am a Muslim, but I feel apologetics that try to use philosophy to pontificate upon things which defy our evolved intuitions prevents us from fully appreciating and enjoying what only science has, and can, uncover. The answers are out there, not within. Incredible work, Phil.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks so much for your comment, it is much appreciated.

  • @Carlos-fl6ch

    @Carlos-fl6ch

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow. I know how much intellectual honestly is needed to be able to escape doctrine and admit such. Moreover I think it's hard for people to combine science and religion. You made it sound easy

  • @aidos6127

    @aidos6127

    Жыл бұрын

    I too am a Muslim, not deeply religious, but I do believe in God, after years and years of denying that, when I thought I knew everything, and I have 2 things to say: Firstly, that Al Gazali's Kalam argument is absolutely brilliant, and, in my opinion uncrackable! Secondly, if by saying that the ANSWER is out there not within, you mean that just as our senses are limited and we cannot hear everything and our eyes cannot see all colors, our brains too have limits, then I totally agree. Humans just like all other species evolved to meet the need for survival and preservation of the specie, and contemplation in existence was not a matter of interest, biologically.

  • @Carlos-fl6ch

    @Carlos-fl6ch

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aidos6127 are you sure it is uncrackable. Do you actually understand the argument or do you just have a feeling. The first premise is creation ex materia the second premise is creation ex nihilo. As result the argument is not only unsound it's also a non sequitur. Moreover. No one can demonstrate that the universe has a beginning. The argument is strong because it resonates with theistic presuppositions but it's not a good argument in any possible way. It fails..it's purpose.

  • @aidos6127

    @aidos6127

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Carlos-fl6ch Wow! You know lots of big words! You must be right.

  • @Datokah
    @Datokah2 жыл бұрын

    The amount of effort it takes to refute Craig's rhetoric (often dripping with an unwarranted smugness and certitude) in a debate is vast, which is why he usually appears to do so well, but here skydivephil et al do all that heavy lifting and firmly remind him what intellectual honesty looks like. Brilliant.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks thats very kind of you

  • @odinallfarther6038

    @odinallfarther6038

    2 жыл бұрын

    He always Struck me as a bloviating grifter I could never understand how he had such standing and was never really challenged intellectually or philosophically by his peers of the time .

  • @thecloudtherapist

    @thecloudtherapist

    2 жыл бұрын

    But surely you cannot claim any different motivation was behind the intent of the first (heavily-biased) docu and this second?

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thecloudtherapist How are these heavily biased? The guests are all expert speakers with different background and different belief systems. This is far from biased as it is possible to get on anything. The only thing critics ñike you know how to do is to try to poison the well, because they know they cannot debunk the actual counterarguments presented in these. It says a lot about not only you as people, but about how indefensible your belief system and conclusions are.

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    Жыл бұрын

    @@odinallfarther6038 Most serious philosophers would never waste time with WLC, because that is the equivalent of a physicist wasting time with a flat Earther. Serious philosophers have much better things to do than debunk arguments from a charlatan.

  • @johnwick2018
    @johnwick20182 жыл бұрын

    One thing I noticed from all these exceptional physicists is that every single one of them admits that there are all kinds of models and theories and they are not sure about which one is the correct one. Then there is WLC.

  • @maujo2009

    @maujo2009

    2 жыл бұрын

    I know right? All these scientist thread lightly on everything they say because they admit the possibility of being wrong. Meanwhile, i have *NEVER* heard or seen WLC admit he's wrong on anything! If you know of an instance when he did, please let me know.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    wow that sums it up very nicely

  • @caiomateus4194

    @caiomateus4194

    2 жыл бұрын

    Craig never claimed that he knew which model was the correct one, only that whichever one is correct is likely to contain an absolute beginning. This he can say, because he has shown that models that do not satisfy this condition are unfeasible. Given this fact, those who previously dismiss the idea that science can prove theism, such as Carroll and Rovelli, would be dishonest not to claim that they do not know whether the universe began or not. Of course, the question of causality, for them, would not be in dispute, insofar as their own interpretations of physics are based on a dirty philosophy (logical positivism, already buried).

  • @caiomateus4194

    @caiomateus4194

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@maujo2009 Admitting that "could be wrong" in these contexts is not a good thing. To claim that "perhaps temporal becoming does not exist" or that "perhaps there are events without causes" (which, by the way, have been alleged with considerable conviction, to say the least) is worse than thinking that we cannot know that there is something outside of my own mind, as modern idealists thought. It's just cheap skepticism, and of the worst kind. In fact, given the state of the evidence, the only thing they could say after using extreme epistemic rigor (unapplied in other scientific contexts) would be that they "don't know", anyway.

  • @johnwick2018

    @johnwick2018

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@caiomateus4194 "Craig never claimed that he knew which model..." First of all, none of those physicists were sure about whether the universe had a beginning. Also, Dude just listen to yourself. "Universe must have had a beginning because beginningless models are unfeasible". This is not science. This is ignorance at its best. "Universe must have had a beginning because models which have a beginning are and could be the only feasible models." Now this is science. This is what you should prove for the beginning of universe. Not the other way around. Beginningless models are unfeasible does not imply models with begining is feasible.

  • @fred_2021
    @fred_20212 жыл бұрын

    Scientists tend to go wherever the science leads them. WLC tends to lead the science wherever he wants to go.

  • @Some_Deist

    @Some_Deist

    2 жыл бұрын

    Then why don’t scientists accept the fact that consciousness isn’t being generated by the brain ? Why don’t scientists adopt the view of idealism ?

  • @fred_2021

    @fred_2021

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Some_Deist Accepting 'the fact' requires the establishment of the fact. Perhaps you have established the fact, and can provide the evidence.

  • @Some_Deist

    @Some_Deist

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fred_2021 Yes, first I’ll explain the evidence then I’ll send the source. Near Death Experiences, people have experience with zero brain activity, can your reductionists explain this ? And psychedelics, experience with extremely low brain activity, again can your reductionists explain this ?

  • @fred_2021

    @fred_2021

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@Some_Deist Allow me to correct you: reductionists don't belong to me :) Seriously though, I agree that much of our experienced reality is beyond the remit of reductionism. On the other hand, whilst anecdotal evidence alone is insufficient, it raises speculative possibilities which may be grounds for further research. One's personal beliefs and/or faith aside, there appears to be no conclusive evidence - nor indeed, any scientific understanding at all - regarding the fundamental nature of consciousness.

  • @Some_Deist

    @Some_Deist

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fred_2021 Except we do have understanding of consciousness, we know for a fact that people have intense conscious experiences with zero brain activity (NDE) and extremely low brain activity (psychedelics) so if we take the materialistic reductionism rout we end up with a dilemma, if the brain generates consciousness shouldn’t the brain have intense activity ? At least some activity ? But we don’t see this, we see experience/ intense experience with zero brain activity, so this heavily points towards idealism which says that brain doesn’t generate consciousness.

  • @silverwolfmonastery
    @silverwolfmonastery2 жыл бұрын

    It's interesting that according to WLC the very physicists who created the theories he uses as "proof" for his ideas are wrong about the physics that he is using as "evidence".

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    yep thats it

  • @caiomateus4194

    @caiomateus4194

    2 жыл бұрын

    What Craig used for support from the physicists featured in the video is in full accordance with their respective views. The fact that they are disagreeing with him in general does not mean that they disagree on the relevant points in particular. Malpass and Morriston, for example, would never agree that modern physics has refuted presenteeism at any level, as was later suggested. Priest would never agree that the existence or absence of contradictions serves as a criterion for determining the legitimacy of a position, concept or idea, as has been suggested by others in the video. Regarding the BGV theorem, for example, only an untrained person would be distracted by the conceptual imprecision of Vilenkin and Guth. The fact is that the theorem proves the beginning of the universe, if its conditions are met. Vilenkin and Guth interpreted the question as "does the mere EXISTENCE of the theorem prove the beginning of the universe?", in which case the answer would be an obvious "no", even for Craig.

  • @Smayor75

    @Smayor75

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@caiomateus4194 sorry but no. What Guth and Vilenkin clearly state is that the theorem only talks about the beginning of the expansion, not the absolute beginning of the universe. Craig is the one that is imprecise.

  • @caiomateus4194

    @caiomateus4194

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Smayor75 The mere existence of the theorem proves the beginning of the expansion. The truth of the theorem as such (that is, the satisfaction of its conditions) proves the beginning of the universe, since the condition is exactly that the universe is always expanding. Maybe I wasn't correct, even... the imprecision was due to the interviewers not clarifying the ambiguity, since they supposedly already know the dialectic of the debate. Vilenkin and Guth have no such obligation, which is exactly why you will find Vilenkin's claims where he explicitly states that the theorem indicates the absolute beginning of the universe.

  • @Carlos-fl6ch

    @Carlos-fl6ch

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@caiomateus4194 Wow I thought apologists only interpreted the bible to meat their favorite conclusion. But I seem to be completely mistaken. The BGV simply presupposes anything needed for the universe to expand to exist prior to inflation.

  • @hank_says_things
    @hank_says_things2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks to all involved for this stellar effort. I’ve long considered Craig’s argumentation to be naive, self-serving and based entirely on - and made entirely in support of - his unwarranted religious presuppositions. Not only that but his responses to criticisms are all too often glib misrepresentations or misunderstandings (punctuated with incredulous giggling), and his cherry-picked cosmological models often rule out his preferred conclusions. He’s better educated and more polished than most other Christian apologists, but Craig is as much working toward a predetermined conclusion as a common used-god salesman like Ray Comfort.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    you are welcome,

  • @patricksee10

    @patricksee10

    2 жыл бұрын

    The presenters here are free of the dreaded preferred conclusion? You believe that? I don’t. Their presuppositions: That naturalism and physicalism must be true. That mathematics and physics provide a comprehensive complete account of reality?

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@patricksee10 did you actually watch the film. one of the main speakers isn't even a naturalist. Our whole argument is that we dont understand the Big bang, not the we do understand it

  • @patricksee10

    @patricksee10

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 why don’t you address my criticism rather than changing the subject? It’s true that all these presenters are shot through with pre suppositions, naturalism, hubris and prejudice. Do you want me to prove that?

  • @eddsson

    @eddsson

    Жыл бұрын

    @@patricksee10 Even if you were right it still wouldn't change how wrong Craig *is* in his reasoning. You either misunderstood the video or you didn't watch it.

  • @bensmithoriginals3413
    @bensmithoriginals34132 жыл бұрын

    This is fantastic! So many of my favorite academics in one place 👏🏻 great work, great sound and photography... thanks for creating this!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    you are welcome

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Жыл бұрын

    God is a dual concept. The observed is dual to the observer -- David Bohm. The future is dual to the past -- time duality. We predict the future (syntropy) and remember the past -- time asymmetry. Absolute nothing is dual to relative nothing. Lacking is dual to non lacking. Being is dual to non being creates becoming -- Plato's cat. Alive is dual to not alive -- the Schrodinger's cat superposition (duality). Thesis (alive, being) is dual to anti-thesis (not alive, non being) creates the converging thesis or synthesis -- Hegel's cat or Fichte's cat, the time independent Hegelian dialectic. Schrodinger's cat is based upon Hegel's cat and Hegel stole it from Plato (and Socrates). Everything (all things) is dual to nothing. The one is defined in terms of the other. Antinomy (duality) is two truths that contradict each other -- Immanuel Kant. If you choose nothing then this implies that something or everything already exists! The concept of nothing is inherently dual, nothing requires something to already exist in the first place. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant. Brahman (creator god, thesis) is dual to Shiva (destroyer god, anti-thesis) synthesizes Vishnu (preserver god) -- Hinduism or the Hegelian dialectic. You can derive the Hegelian dialectic from the Hindu religion. Action is dual to reaction -- Sir Isaac Newton (the duality of force). Cause is dual to effect -- forces are correlated. Forces are a by product of conserving the duality or correlation of cause & effect. Attraction is dual to repulsion, push is dual to pull (forces and hence energy are dual). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Absolute truth is dual to relative truth -- Hume's fork.

  • @ronarprefect7709

    @ronarprefect7709

    Жыл бұрын

    From your post, I take it that you must believe in an afterlife rather than the materialistic idea that we all become wormfood and nothing more.

  • @bensmithoriginals3413

    @bensmithoriginals3413

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ronarprefect7709 worm food either way, right?

  • @CosmoPhiloPharmaco
    @CosmoPhiloPharmaco2 жыл бұрын

    Craig doesn't stand a chance against this (that is, when physicists themselves explicitly and clearly reject his premises). I know he won't admit it, but this is really bad for his apologetical project.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks, thats what we like to hear.

  • @CosmoPhiloPharmaco

    @CosmoPhiloPharmaco

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 No, _we_ should thank you and Monica (for the hard work)! :)

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@CosmoPhiloPharmaco you are welcome

  • @nemrodx2185

    @nemrodx2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    Really, with this weak response...? Only fanatics would think like that.

  • @CosmoPhiloPharmaco

    @CosmoPhiloPharmaco

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nemrodx2185 Only fanatics would think this is a weak response! ;)

  • @pesilaratnayake162
    @pesilaratnayake162 Жыл бұрын

    A great follow-up. Covers a great deal of my issues with Craig's approach. My impression is that he is quick to assert knowledge of the nature of the universe based on his own intuition, despite that many people who study it empirically would not reach that conclusion because they do not believe there is enough information to warrant it. I think he is working backwards to support his conclusions, trying to use deductive reason (the only way is... somehow imagining and eliminating all other possibilities) to try and determine the nature of reality, which seems more reliably understood via inductive reasoning. If Craig actually cared about being taken seriously, it would be wise for him to demonstrate a model, and publish in reputable peer-reviewed physics journals, that 1) satisfies the vast majority of most reliable empirical data, 2) has specific, testable falsification criteria, 3) generates predictions that can be tested, either through simulation or empirically, and 4) has successfully predicted phenomena that were not implicit in the model. However, since I think Craig's ambition is not to gain credibility among publishing physicists but rather to proselytise for his religious convictions, his approach of asserting knowledge beyond that of careful researchers and dismissing objections as irrelevant or as a misunderstanding of the concepts, is probably the best he can do. Personally, I think if someone could convince the world's foremost scientists that a creator God was necessary for the universe to exist, it would go a long way towards bringing millions of people to believe it as well. I guess he doesn't care about salvation as much as I thought...

  • @joegeorge3889

    @joegeorge3889

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes that's true a Christians goal is to covert everyone into their pernicious delusional cult

  • @atheologica
    @atheologica2 жыл бұрын

    Keep up the great work, Phil! Can't express my appreciation enough!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks so much

  • @donnievance1942

    @donnievance1942

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 Phil, I'm shocked to hear it claimed that "we don't need cats to describe fundamental nature." This cannot stand.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donnievance1942 fair point

  • @bendavis2234
    @bendavis2234 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the amount of effort you put into these videos and getting interviews with so many great minds. These videos do so much more than disproving Craig’s argument because they’re incredibly informational in the process. I honestly learned some new scientific knowledge here, unrelated to the argument itself. It’s really cool to see so many diverse minds talk about such deep topics like infinity and theoretical cosmology. Looking forward to part 3!!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks , glad you liked it Have you seen our other cosmology videos? kzread.info/dash/bejne/mJmh2qx_o93In5s.html

  • @bakedalaska6875
    @bakedalaska6875 Жыл бұрын

    Craig is almost too polite in butting these non-sequiturs. It's really not too difficult to understand the difference between 1) a mathematical infinite and 2) an actual infinite that is substantiated in the real world. What possible proof, other than one based on reason/intuition/metaphysics, can someone provide that an actual infinite is not realizable?

  • @knyghtryder3599

    @knyghtryder3599

    6 ай бұрын

    So you can't walk a metre because you could divide a metre into infinite parts? The kalam-ity is the dumbest argument ever All empirical evidence points to an infinite eternal universe

  • @verafleck
    @verafleck2 жыл бұрын

    These discussions are so important and interesting. Thank you all.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Жыл бұрын

    God is a dual concept. The observed is dual to the observer -- David Bohm. The future is dual to the past -- time duality. We predict the future (syntropy) and remember the past -- time asymmetry. Absolute nothing is dual to relative nothing. Lacking is dual to non lacking. Being is dual to non being creates becoming -- Plato's cat. Alive is dual to not alive -- the Schrodinger's cat superposition (duality). Thesis (alive, being) is dual to anti-thesis (not alive, non being) creates the converging thesis or synthesis -- Hegel's cat or Fichte's cat, the time independent Hegelian dialectic. Schrodinger's cat is based upon Hegel's cat and Hegel stole it from Plato (and Socrates). Everything (all things) is dual to nothing. The one is defined in terms of the other. Antinomy (duality) is two truths that contradict each other -- Immanuel Kant. If you choose nothing then this implies that something or everything already exists! The concept of nothing is inherently dual, nothing requires something to already exist in the first place. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant. Brahman (creator god, thesis) is dual to Shiva (destroyer god, anti-thesis) synthesizes Vishnu (preserver god) -- Hinduism or the Hegelian dialectic. You can derive the Hegelian dialectic from the Hindu religion. Action is dual to reaction -- Sir Isaac Newton (the duality of force). Cause is dual to effect -- forces are correlated. Forces are a by product of conserving the duality or correlation of cause & effect. Attraction is dual to repulsion, push is dual to pull (forces and hence energy are dual). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Absolute truth is dual to relative truth -- Hume's fork.

  • @maujo2009
    @maujo20092 жыл бұрын

    As a physicist I can’t stop praising your excellent work on KZread. 😄👍

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks so much , appreciate that . What kind of physics do you do?

  • @maujo2009

    @maujo2009

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 These days I’m a teacher but I’ve been teaching myself GR for nearly 5 years to begin to grasp the ideas discussed in your videos I totally agree with Sean Carroll btw. Also, I’ve collaborated with you in the past. I contributed with subtitles to some of your videos several years ago when KZread allowed them. I’m sad I couldn’t contribute more but life happened. You guys work is excellent! No other KZreadr is doing this in the platform! Keep it up !

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@maujo2009 ahh, of course yes, thanks for the encouragement

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 The future is dual to the past -- time duality. We predict the future (syntropy) and remember the past -- time asymmetry. Absolute nothing is dual to relative nothing. Lacking is dual to non lacking. Being is dual to non being creates becoming -- Plato's cat. Alive is dual to not alive -- the Schrodinger's cat superposition (duality). Thesis (alive, being) is dual to anti-thesis (not alive, non being) creates the converging thesis or synthesis -- Hegel's cat or Fichte's cat, the time independent Hegelian dialectic. Schrodinger's cat is based upon Hegel's cat and Hegel stole it from Plato (and Socrates). Everything (all things) is dual to nothing. The one is defined in terms of the other. Antinomy (duality) is two truths that contradict each other -- Immanuel Kant. If you choose nothing then this implies that something or everything already exists! The concept of nothing is inherently dual, nothing requires something to already exist in the first place. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant. Brahman (creator god, thesis) is dual to Shiva (destroyer god, anti-thesis) synthesizes Vishnu (preserver god) -- Hinduism or the Hegelian dialectic. You can derive the Hegelian dialectic from the Hindu religion. Action is dual to reaction -- Sir Isaac Newton (the duality of force). Cause is dual to effect -- forces are correlated. Forces are a by product of conserving the duality or correlation of cause & effect. Attraction is dual to repulsion, push is dual to pull (forces and hence energy are dual). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Absolute truth is dual to relative truth -- Hume's fork.

  • @donnievance1942

    @donnievance1942

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hyperduality2838 Please don't copy/paste spam.

  • @anonymoushuman3657
    @anonymoushuman3657 Жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed hearing the experts’ criticisms and loved the music and animations. I think it’s very important to remember that if the kalam’s conclusion is false it’s either because the universe began to exist without a cause or the universe has existed forever.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes that seems right or maybe the notion of time is too classical and we dont have the language to describe what's really going on.

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Жыл бұрын

    God is a dual concept. The observed is dual to the observer -- David Bohm. The future is dual to the past -- time duality. We predict the future (syntropy) and remember the past -- time asymmetry. Absolute nothing is dual to relative nothing. Lacking is dual to non lacking. Being is dual to non being creates becoming -- Plato's cat. Alive is dual to not alive -- the Schrodinger's cat superposition (duality). Thesis (alive, being) is dual to anti-thesis (not alive, non being) creates the converging thesis or synthesis -- Hegel's cat or Fichte's cat, the time independent Hegelian dialectic. Schrodinger's cat is based upon Hegel's cat and Hegel stole it from Plato (and Socrates). Everything (all things) is dual to nothing. The one is defined in terms of the other. Antinomy (duality) is two truths that contradict each other -- Immanuel Kant. If you choose nothing then this implies that something or everything already exists! The concept of nothing is inherently dual, nothing requires something to already exist in the first place. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant. Brahman (creator god, thesis) is dual to Shiva (destroyer god, anti-thesis) synthesizes Vishnu (preserver god) -- Hinduism or the Hegelian dialectic. You can derive the Hegelian dialectic from the Hindu religion. Action is dual to reaction -- Sir Isaac Newton (the duality of force). Cause is dual to effect -- forces are correlated. Forces are a by product of conserving the duality or correlation of cause & effect. Attraction is dual to repulsion, push is dual to pull (forces and hence energy are dual). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Absolute truth is dual to relative truth -- Hume's fork.

  • @donnievance1942

    @donnievance1942

    Жыл бұрын

    Actually, that is not a valid dichotomy. The Bord-Guth-Velenkin theorem states that given a universe that has been expanding on average throughout its history, the expansion must have a boundary in the past. But if that implies a singularity at the boundary, per General Relativity, it is still not clear that that can be called a "beginning" in any ordinary sense of the word. The singularity is a dimensionless condition of infinite mass/energy density, with time infinitely dilated. Can something be said to "have a beginning" when it emerges in some unfathomable way from a state of infinitely dilated time? That is to say, that it is emerging from a condition in which time is standing still. But such a condition can not be said to have a duration, as duration implies a measurable progression of time. The word "beginning" means the initial state in some progression. But there is no progression in a state of infinitely dilated time. Such a state has no correlates with any previous understanding of the word "beginning." And it is not a condition that can be understood to be an infinite progression of past time either. A state of infinite time dilation is not a progression with an infinite past or a progression with a beginning. It just is not a progression at all. An actual "Big Bang" singularity, if it existed, simply cannot be described in any formulation of classical semantics. That, in itself, renders the second premise of Craig's Kalam fantastically unsound and inapplicable.

  • @vokuh
    @vokuh Жыл бұрын

    How wonderful! just the other day i was wondering if you made new videos - i devoured all your previous work. Thank you so much!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    you are welcome, thanks for your comment

  • @kamilgregor
    @kamilgregor2 жыл бұрын

    "That's just hand-waving, an appeal to the unknown." Well, there goes skeptical theism.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    lol

  • @thephilosophynerd7292

    @thephilosophynerd7292

    2 жыл бұрын

    The funny thing is Craig in response to the POE advocates for skeptical theism (e.g., his debate with Daniel Came)-albeit, he doesn't like the term "skeptical theism".

  • @kamilgregor

    @kamilgregor

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@thephilosophynerd7292 I know

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kamilgregor There's no such a thing as skeptical theism. This is a contradiction in words.

  • @kamilgregor

    @kamilgregor

    Жыл бұрын

    @@angelmendez-rivera351 I guess there are no Christian atheists either. Oh wait...

  • @romanbesel4759
    @romanbesel47592 жыл бұрын

    Hoped you would make a response. Really cool to see Sean Carroll and Wes Morriston also featuring in the video!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @Grinsekatze113

    @Grinsekatze113

    2 жыл бұрын

    they are not fetured. their material was ripped and lawyers are on it

  • @somodatmedia
    @somodatmedia Жыл бұрын

    This should not be confused with something called a debate. Craig presents his argument, counter arguments are given by many who don't all agree with each other although the editor did his/her best to present a unified front and no rebuttal is afforded Craig to respond to their critique or for those "striking back" to disagree with each other, which I guarantee from listening to hours of these discussions, continuous disagreement among this group is a provable fact. Was he given the opportunity to rebut? If not, why not? One thing I believe is consistent when it comes to answers we seek from creation conclusions is that scientific theories of how time started on earth require faith in something that you may think makes sense and in some cases you WANT it to make sense conclusively, that unfortunately is based on your emotions, past anecdotal experiences, and the opinions of others. So whenever faith in theories from experts are in the equation, the variables are seemingly infinite, certainly too many to justify arrogance on any side. If people are considering the infinite regress and physical vs metaphysical to decide whether they believe in a "creator" that can control their current lives and eternal future, you first have to settle the question of whether or not you want something to be true if it was up to you and then keep that in mind when you are "objectively" looking for the logical answer. Nobody comes to this room. without their emotional and particularly limited observational baggage.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    Craig makes videos promoting the Kalam and does not give any voice to his critics. So why shouldn't we do the same?

  • @feynmanaruda8063
    @feynmanaruda80632 жыл бұрын

    Craig sometimes seems very desonest.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    there are cases where it seems that way. Particularly re Vilenkins tunnelling from Nothing, he either doesn't know this is VIlenkins model or he is deeply ignorant of Quantum Cosmology

  • @SnakeWasRight

    @SnakeWasRight

    Жыл бұрын

    It's definitely possible, but cognitive dissonance and lying looks the same to an outsider. I think these people are just ignorant of how problematic their beliefs are because they belief it regardless of the evidence, so it literally doesn't matter what evidence is presented to them, and so any excuse that pops up MUST be a fine excuse because they CANNOT be wrong!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@offense53 Vilenkin did say the BGv proved a beginning , he doesn't anymore. same with Guth and the lcicm is nowhere to be found in the paper. Simple really.

  • @jmike2039

    @jmike2039

    Жыл бұрын

    ​​@@PhilHalper1 Christian first. Philosopher second. Science third. He has to take on such fringe views just to defend the kalam.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jmike2039 yes neo lorentizian is extremely fringe, nothing wrong with entertaining fringe views but relying on home for a deductive argument, thats different.

  • @lickroadkill3973
    @lickroadkill3973 Жыл бұрын

    You just made my Sunday morning, thank you for great uploads👍 happy to find a channel with some substance, subscribed in a nanosecond ☺️

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks, hope you like our older videos too

  • @atmanbrahman1872
    @atmanbrahman1872 Жыл бұрын

    Lol. These folks dealing with the grim-reaper paradox is a sight to see... grasping at straws, and not even doing it elegantly...

  • @goldenalt3166

    @goldenalt3166

    Жыл бұрын

    The proposal of the "grim reaper paradox" was a grasping at straws to begin with. Nothing about the proposal makes sense physically and when you boil it down logically the conclusion that the subject would be killed involves evaluating an undecidable function and therefore no paradox exists.

  • @atmanbrahman1872

    @atmanbrahman1872

    Жыл бұрын

    @@goldenalt3166 lol. no.

  • @goldenalt3166

    @goldenalt3166

    Жыл бұрын

    @@atmanbrahman1872 Exactly how do you think a reaper makes physical sense?

  • @CosmoPhiloPharmaco
    @CosmoPhiloPharmaco2 жыл бұрын

    Oh man! That's brilliant. I can't wait to see this one!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Жыл бұрын

    God is a dual concept. The observed is dual to the observer -- David Bohm. The future is dual to the past -- time duality. We predict the future (syntropy) and remember the past -- time asymmetry. Absolute nothing is dual to relative nothing. Lacking is dual to non lacking. Being is dual to non being creates becoming -- Plato's cat. Alive is dual to not alive -- the Schrodinger's cat superposition (duality). Thesis (alive, being) is dual to anti-thesis (not alive, non being) creates the converging thesis or synthesis -- Hegel's cat or Fichte's cat, the time independent Hegelian dialectic. Schrodinger's cat is based upon Hegel's cat and Hegel stole it from Plato (and Socrates). Everything (all things) is dual to nothing. The one is defined in terms of the other. Antinomy (duality) is two truths that contradict each other -- Immanuel Kant. If you choose nothing then this implies that something or everything already exists! The concept of nothing is inherently dual, nothing requires something to already exist in the first place. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant. Brahman (creator god, thesis) is dual to Shiva (destroyer god, anti-thesis) synthesizes Vishnu (preserver god) -- Hinduism or the Hegelian dialectic. You can derive the Hegelian dialectic from the Hindu religion. Action is dual to reaction -- Sir Isaac Newton (the duality of force). Cause is dual to effect -- forces are correlated. Forces are a by product of conserving the duality or correlation of cause & effect. Attraction is dual to repulsion, push is dual to pull (forces and hence energy are dual). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Absolute truth is dual to relative truth -- Hume's fork.

  • @calebp6114
    @calebp61142 жыл бұрын

    Although I’m a fan of the Kalam, this series is very welcome! Thank you for it.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks , appreciate the comment

  • @knyghtryder3599

    @knyghtryder3599

    7 ай бұрын

    The kalam is the dumbest argument ever postulated

  • @charlescarter2072

    @charlescarter2072

    5 ай бұрын

    @@knyghtryder3599why

  • @Smayor75
    @Smayor752 жыл бұрын

    For me, the most fascinating thing said here by Craig is that, he, the apologist, has no problem accusing everyone else here of refusing to reach his conclusions because of their refusal to believe in God.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    yes and he accuses us of Ad Hom!!

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    Жыл бұрын

    Which would be just plainly stupid, as many of the people cited here are theists. The only thing people like WLC and all the critics responding to this video know how to do is poison the well, because none of them actually have valid counterarguments to the objections presented in the video, because there _are_ none.

  • @goldenalt3166

    @goldenalt3166

    Жыл бұрын

    It's one of the essential parts of the complete Kalam argument. You must dismiss anyone who questions the syllogism part of the argument because the remainder requires someone to be absolutely credulous to accept it. If you let someone that questions the syllogism get to "phase two" as some apologists call it, they'll tear the argument to pieces.

  • @romanbesel4759
    @romanbesel47592 жыл бұрын

    Masterful work! Great thanks to Phil and crew for making this video and to all the scientists and philosophers for providing their expertise.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks so much for your comment

  • @wulphstein

    @wulphstein

    2 жыл бұрын

    Who cares about Hilberts hotel? It won't create prosperity.

  • @TBOTSS

    @TBOTSS

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 Wow even more crap than the first one.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@elorebenyame2016 we did reply, and we replied twice one in our own film and once in the 6 hour discussion we did that we mentioned in the beginning. Maybe watch the film before making these comments?

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@elorebenyame2016 did you even watch the film,? we covered this issue, the critic of the argument doesn't have to prove the premises are false. They only have to show the evidence used to support them are shoddy. And we did do that.

  • @elihaitov1849
    @elihaitov18492 жыл бұрын

    Regarding the claims of some physicists in the video that there are quantum events without causes: The issue that is constantly being confused is determinism and causality. The pre-existence of quantum field (for example) would be a causally necessary condition for quantum fluctuation while the pre-existence of atomic nuclei and the so-called weak nuclear force would be causally necessary conditions for beta-decay, in the absence of which the beta-decay would not occur (Bussey 2013, p. 20). The difference between supposed quantum indeterminism and (say) the supposed uncaused beginning of the universe(1) is that the former lacks a causally sufficient condition whereas the latter lacks a causally necessary condition. The kalam proponent claims there has to be a causally necessary condition for an event. He is not claiming that there must be sufficient conditions for its beginning (which is consistent with quantum indeterminacy).

  • @kiralight6661

    @kiralight6661

    2 жыл бұрын

    in order for an event to take place it needs its sufficient reasons to be present.( necessary but not sufficient reasons ) are by definition not enough or not " sufficient " for the event to take place. if god is a causally necessary condition for the beginning of the universe but not a causally sufficient condition then the beginning of the universe will not happen. ___________ this is a quote from a website that explains the difference between necessary and sufficient reasons " A causal fallacy you commit this fallacy when you assume that a necessary condition of an event is sufficient for the event to occur. A necessary condition is a condition that must be present for an event to occur. A sufficient condition is a condition or set of conditions that will produce the event. A necessary condition must be there, but it alone does not provide sufficient cause for the occurrence of the event. Only the sufficient grounds can do this. In other words, all of the necessary elements must be there. " ___________ so saying that "there were not sufficient conditions for the beginning of the universe" is simply another way of saying that "the beginning of the universe didn't happen"

  • @libere1001

    @libere1001

    2 жыл бұрын

    Actually, you've confused some of the issues at play. You are right that we need to distinguish determinism and causality. But, as pointed out in the video, we need to go further. We need to distinguish at least two kinds of determinism: nomological determinism, the view that all physical events are necessitated by the laws of physics, and causal determinism, the view that all physical events are necessitated or determined by prior causes. Regardless of whether we should accept an indeterministic interpretation of quantum mechanics, several philosophers and physicists who participated in the video argued that we should think that quantum mechanics does not involve causation. We also need to distinguish different kinds of necessary conditions. In your example, the pre-existence of atomic nuclei is a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for the nucleus decaying. And that's right: without the nucleus, there will be no decay process. But that doesn't tell us whether the decay process had a cause; all that tells us is that there are conditions that must obtain in order for there to be a decay process. Perhaps the presence of the nucleus is -- as you claim -- a causally necessary condition, but you haven't actually shown that to be true. All you've shown is that the presence of the nucleus is a necessary condition for decay. The distinction between nomological determinism and causal determinism is helpful here. Suppose that nomological determinism is true and that causal determinism is false. In that case, the nucleus decays only if some set of necessary conditions obtain. Nonetheless, the nucleus's decay is uncaused. Of course, this might also be true if no version of determinism were true. Consider the following analogy. Suppose that someone steals money from my bank account. The fact that I have a bank account is a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for money to be stolen from my bank account. After all, without a bank account, no one could have stolen from my bank account. Nonetheless, the fact that I have a bank account is not the cause of money being stolen from my bank account. Thus, in general, the conditions that are necessary for an event to obtain are not necessarily the cause of the event, so we cannot identify those conditions as the cause.

  • @caiomateus4194

    @caiomateus4194

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@libere1001 Causes are nothing more than things or events/states that serve as conditions and according to some predictability factor (it can be a specific probability, or an intention). Your distinction between "cause" and "necessary condition" in this case is simply meaningless. Your bank account is indeed one of the causes of the effect you mentioned, although it's not the only one and although it's not enough.

  • @libere1001

    @libere1001

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@caiomateus4194 "Causes are nothing more than things or events/states that serve as conditions and according to some predictability factor (it can be a specific probability, or an intention)." That's not true. For example, I can use the length of the shadow cast by a flag pole to predict the height of the flag pole. But the shadow is not the cause of the flag pole or of the flag pole's height. (This is a famous example, originally due, I think, to Wesley Salmon.) In fact, if the cause of x were merely anything that allowed us to predict x, then there would be nothing that distinguishes correlation from causation. Whenever two variables are correlated, I can use one to predict the other. But we know that correlation is distinct from causation. So, the fact that one variable allows us to predict another variable does not make the first a cause of the second. Philosophers have developed various theories of what causation is. For example, according to Aristotle, efficient causation involves the actualization of a potential, whereas, according to David Lewis, efficient causation is reduced to a specific kind of counterfactual dependence relation. Neither Aristotle nor Lewis would agree with you about what causation is. "Your distinction between 'cause' and 'necessary condition' in this case is simply meaningless." Causes are distinct from necessary conditions. For example, if abstract objects, such as numbers, sets, or properties, existed, then causation would be inapplicable to abstract objects. As philosophers say, abstract objects are causally inefficacious. But there would still be necessary conditions that apply to abstract objects. Given that there is a distinction between necessary conditions and causation, we cannot conclude that x was the cause of y merely on the grounds that x is a necessary condition for y. It might the case that x did cause y, but, in order to conclusively show that x was the cause of y, you have to do more than simply show that x was a necessary condition for y.

  • @caiomateus4194

    @caiomateus4194

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@libere1001 Lengths and heights are not things or events, so they cannot be involved in causal relationships (of course you can causally associate the event of the shadow having a certain length with the event of the mast having a certain height, but this relationship - when considered in all its terms - would have logical necessity. That is, one property would follow analytically from the other. Causality does not involve logical necessity. A better example would be the event that a body has a certain mass with the event that the same body has a certain attraction gravity. In that case there would plausibly be a causal relationship, yes). Aristotle, in turn, might say that there is causality between the two things (formal causality). Anyway, I'm not defining causality (I don't think this is possible. Passive potency update, for example, is not definition, just analysis). I am giving intrinsic grades that will also serve as criteria for their recognition, which we use daily. Causality also involves potency actualization, but this is not a definition and in particular is not useful for identifying any causality. I find Lewis's idea useful, but not as a characterization, for causality is one level above the intensionality of counterfactuality. It is a hyperintensional notion, as is Kit Fine's reasoning. If abstract things existed, the logical relationships between them would be causal, yes. I consider this a reductio ad absurdum of the position.

  • @HolyKoolaid
    @HolyKoolaid2 жыл бұрын

    I'm so excited for this!!!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    cool, please let us know what you think when you watch it.

  • @BertrandLeRoy
    @BertrandLeRoy2 жыл бұрын

    I am as excited about this as I am annoyed by the silliness of the Kalam. (A lot)

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @knyghtryder3599

    @knyghtryder3599

    7 ай бұрын

    Agree 👍👍

  • @valkyrievision
    @valkyrievision Жыл бұрын

    Oh, thank you! I have found my next rabbit hole :-) I know I’ll have to listen to this several times but the philosophy is just magnificent.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    you are welcome

  • @elihaitov1849
    @elihaitov18492 жыл бұрын

    Regarding Carroll’s claim that causation is absent in physics: Weaver observes that many great physicists past and present, including the discoverers of relativity and quantum mechanics, ‘adopted causal approaches to physics and conceived of their inquiry as a searching evaluation of the world that should *uncover causes’* (Weaver 2019, p. 71). The equations of fundamental physics do not specify causality because they do not provide an exhaustive description of reality. Consider the following example which illustrates that mathematical equations do not provide a complete account of the natural world and that an interpretative framework involving causal considerations is required: The quadratic equation x2 - 4 = 0 can have two mathematically consistent results for ‘x’: 2 or −2. Both answers are mathematically possible. However, if the question is ‘How many people carried the computer home?’, the answer cannot be ‘−2’, because in the concrete world it is metaphysically impossible that ‘−2 people’ carry a computer home, regardless of what the mathematical equation shows. The impossibility is metaphysical, not mathematical, and it illustrates that metaphysical issues are more fundamental than mathematics. The conclusion that ‘2 people’ rather than ‘−2 people’ carried the computer home is not derived from mathematical equations, but from causal considerations: ‘−2 people’ lack the causal powers to carry a computer home.

  • @kiralight6661

    @kiralight6661

    2 жыл бұрын

    or because -2 people don't exist and it has nothing to do with causal power. anyway. the way I understood him is that in quantum physics there are cases where the same conditions yield different results with specific probabilities such as beta decay or the position of an observed electron. so, if our equations can describe these phenomena without attributing causes to why a specific result occurred then we don't need the notion of causality to understand the universe or even maybe the notion of causality is not fundamental to the universe.

  • @caiomateus4194

    @caiomateus4194

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kiralight6661 It is equally true that the "objects" that the formalisms of fundamental physical theories describe do not exist. What exist are things with essences and causal powers, which are only palely described by contemporary physicists (who are, after all, more concerned with practice than with truth, which are not the same).

  • @yf1177
    @yf1177Ай бұрын

    What is truly supernatural is the patience of these physicists with WLC's arguments

  • @Roper122
    @Roper122 Жыл бұрын

    You guys are still making great videos... how many years later? Well done.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @fffaclo7280
    @fffaclo72802 жыл бұрын

    Great video! I hope there are more episodes for the before the big bang series are in the works, those are also amazing

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks I went to the USA in April to film a whole bunch of different projects. A new episode fo Before the Big Bang being one of them but dont hold your breath, these films take a lot of time to edit.

  • @fffaclo7280

    @fffaclo7280

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 Sorry! I didn’t know how to word that without sounding demanding. Really appreciate your hard work my friend

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fffaclo7280 thanks I appreciate it

  • @elihaitov1849
    @elihaitov18492 жыл бұрын

    Carroll’s “quantum eternity theorem” doesn’t require any cosmological model to be past eternal. It only demonstrates that if an eternal universe existed, then Schrodinger’s equation would be able to calculate the wavefunction anywhere along an infinite timeline. But everyone working in QM knew that already.

  • @donnievance1942

    @donnievance1942

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm pretty sure Carroll didn't mean to imply that his statement did require any cosmological model to be past eternal. He was merely defeating the contrary assertion that said there was a basis for declaring eternality to be impossible.

  • @elihaitov1849

    @elihaitov1849

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donnievance1942 If that was his claim then he was attacking a straw man. The impossibility is philosophical-metaphysical, not mathematical. So yes, possibly you could construct an eternal modal mathematically consistent. So what?

  • @donnievance1942

    @donnievance1942

    Жыл бұрын

    @@elihaitov1849 So then the assertion that a past eternal universe is impossible is defeated. Period.

  • @elihaitov1849

    @elihaitov1849

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donnievance1942 wrong. because if it is metaphysically impossible then it will never be physically possible that the universe is eternal.

  • @knyghtryder3599

    @knyghtryder3599

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@elihaitov1849To make a bold claim like this you would need one scrap of evidence Currently 100% of empirical evidence shows an eternal infinite universe No matter how far back we look there is something and always has been

  • @drasticmeasuresislam
    @drasticmeasuresislam2 жыл бұрын

    Love your work Phil. Looking forward to this.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @HarryNicNicholas
    @HarryNicNicholas Жыл бұрын

    something that popped into my head about 35:00 and radioactive decay. say you take a point in time, then every time the geiger counter clicks you make a note, then somehow you rewind the universe to the start of the experiment, will particles emit at "different times" than the first pass, or will "history repeat" and the graph be the same? is this what we mean by "truly random", on a quantum level time would never repeat?

  • @MarkSheeres
    @MarkSheeres Жыл бұрын

    22:55 the guy says “I’m losing my grip on this concept.” That made my laugh because that’s pretty much how I felt the whole time.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    lol

  • @andydonnelly8677
    @andydonnelly8677 Жыл бұрын

    I'm not a philosopher or a scientist and this was hard going at times but I'm glad I watched it to the end. 👍

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    glad you did to

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thotslayer9914 yes but there is a difficulty on how to define naturalism , so Im not always sure I should be using the term .

  • @jamesbentonticer4706
    @jamesbentonticer47062 жыл бұрын

    How do you get these top shelf intellects to do these interviews? I love that your touching on deeper physics. Deeper than almost everything else on youtube.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's my charm

  • @Grinsekatze113

    @Grinsekatze113

    2 жыл бұрын

    he didnt. it was ripped off another interview.

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Grinsekatze113 citation needed.

  • @Grinsekatze113

    @Grinsekatze113

    Жыл бұрын

    @@angelmendez-rivera351 He has so much content on the internet it would take me a long time to do so. instead i contacted sean. Im sure he can handle it himself

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Жыл бұрын

    God is a dual concept. The observed is dual to the observer -- David Bohm. The future is dual to the past -- time duality. We predict the future (syntropy) and remember the past -- time asymmetry. Absolute nothing is dual to relative nothing. Lacking is dual to non lacking. Being is dual to non being creates becoming -- Plato's cat. Alive is dual to not alive -- the Schrodinger's cat superposition (duality). Thesis (alive, being) is dual to anti-thesis (not alive, non being) creates the converging thesis or synthesis -- Hegel's cat or Fichte's cat, the time independent Hegelian dialectic. Schrodinger's cat is based upon Hegel's cat and Hegel stole it from Plato (and Socrates). Everything (all things) is dual to nothing. The one is defined in terms of the other. Antinomy (duality) is two truths that contradict each other -- Immanuel Kant. If you choose nothing then this implies that something or everything already exists! The concept of nothing is inherently dual, nothing requires something to already exist in the first place. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant. Brahman (creator god, thesis) is dual to Shiva (destroyer god, anti-thesis) synthesizes Vishnu (preserver god) -- Hinduism or the Hegelian dialectic. You can derive the Hegelian dialectic from the Hindu religion. Action is dual to reaction -- Sir Isaac Newton (the duality of force). Cause is dual to effect -- forces are correlated. Forces are a by product of conserving the duality or correlation of cause & effect. Attraction is dual to repulsion, push is dual to pull (forces and hence energy are dual). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Absolute truth is dual to relative truth -- Hume's fork.

  • @ddavidjeremy
    @ddavidjeremy Жыл бұрын

    The most absurd thing about Craig's argument is that it becomes clear that his God has clearly only meant for Dr. Craig to understand it.

  • @letsomethingshine

    @letsomethingshine

    Жыл бұрын

    Correction: meant for Theological Philosophy Dr. Craig to merely claim to understand and content himself and his in-groups with.

  • @mikehrabar7999
    @mikehrabar7999 Жыл бұрын

    This is amazing. Well done! Very informative! For years I wished to hear opinions from the actual scholars working on the science cited by Craig. When confronted by the actual science, Craig presents like a fish flapping out of water.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @cba4389

    @cba4389

    7 ай бұрын

    You sound unaware of the distinction between natural science and philosophy.

  • @oldpossum57

    @oldpossum57

    Ай бұрын

    @@cba4389 So does Craig. No amount of metaphysics that explain how a realm outside the universe would behave. If Craig wants to invent gods into existence by word play, he can go ahead. I point out that his understanding of the universe is a representation in an ape mind.

  • @ickymouth
    @ickymouth2 жыл бұрын

    I think this makes for a most interesting case study on how an obviously intelligent and driven person will engage in a most disturbing display of religious argumentative contortionalism in order to validate evidence that is dubious at best. What if he was born with parents preaching the gospel of the flying spaghetti monster, all praise! wouldn't that be something!

  • @CosmoPhiloPharmaco
    @CosmoPhiloPharmaco2 жыл бұрын

    37:48 Well, but to be fair, some physicists proposed that the scalar field is the Higgs field. So, if this possibility is viable, we don't need to introduce a new kind of scalar field -- we simply use one we already have. See for instance, _Quantum Higgs Inflation_ (2020) by Martin Bojowald.

  • @chrismathis4162
    @chrismathis4162 Жыл бұрын

    Craig exemplifies the Dunning Krueger effect.

  • @angelmendez-rivera351
    @angelmendez-rivera351 Жыл бұрын

    The fact that there are so many theists and critics responding by attemptinh to poison the well, which is intellectually dishonest, rather than offering rebuttals to the counterarguments presented in the video, which shows that there they cannot find any, is an indicator of how good of a job you did presenting this. Clearly, you did something well, because the community is shaken enough that they all have to respond _something_ to try to make it seem like the video holds no weight, but I read almost all 632 comments in the comments section, and *none of them* have said anything that could even come close to amounting to a take down of the ideas presented in the video. Instead, they all engage in the same nonsense that WLC engages in: pretending they understand science and philosophy better than the experts, despite having absolutely no education on the matter. Props to you.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks , that very kind of you to say and I agree most comments have nothing of substance to say

  • @carlpeterson8182

    @carlpeterson8182

    Жыл бұрын

    I have watched 15 minutes of the video and I am not very impressed by the rebuttals. I think some are okay but they all seem to have significant issues. For instance the revelation that the philosopher (maybe mathematician) said he had no view on the theory of time but then said that an infinity in the past must have the same issues as an infinity in the future. That showed me that he was not really seriously commenting on the argument. A theory of time would matter to the question. That is just one of the many issues I think this rebuttal video had in just the first 15 minutes. Some of the other issues or rebuttals were just not very important. Oh and the Kalam does not argue for a infinite life in the future. Thus to use that line of argument against the Kalam does not work. I do not believe in the Christian God because of arguments like the ones Dr. Craig uses. But I think being fair to his arguments would make the response video better.

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    Жыл бұрын

    @@carlpeterson8182 I don't believe you understand the context of the video. This video is a response to a 4-part response that WLC gave to the original video published by this channel. The responses are not meant to address the Kalam directly, but WLC's response. You aren't being fair to this video in the slightest either. None of the theists commenting to the video are, which proves my point entirely.

  • @carlpeterson8182

    @carlpeterson8182

    Жыл бұрын

    @@angelmendez-rivera351 I understand the context. It was the video that brought up future events. WKC even said it was not appropriate to the Kalam argument. It seems WLC's debators brought future events up first. The reason why they brought it up was to attack other beliefs WLC has. It also seems the main discussion was about the Kalam. How am I am not being fair. The point of the argument is about the Kalam. It seems that the people debating WLC brought up future events and they justify it by saying that it tackles other arguments besides the Kalam. Did I miss something or am I wrong on any of the assumptions? Was I wrong about what they said on any of the other points of the video? Are you being fair?

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    Жыл бұрын

    @@carlpeterson8182 You say you understand the context, but you aren't acknowledging it. You keep insisting that this video is a response to the Kalam cosmological argument. It isn't. It's a response to a response to a response to a response to the Kalam cosmological argument. Many of the things brought by WLC in the video being responded to don't even have much to do with the Kalam itself, but rather with arguments used to justify parts of the premises of the Kalam. For example, the infinity arguments from this video are response to WLC's argument from the impossibility of actual infinites, which by itself, doesn't actually have anything to do with the Kalam (and in fact, while WLC insists that this argument proves the premise "the universe had a beginning," it doesn't, there's no logical relationship between the claims). Your attitide is one where you're just not allowing the opponents to challenge the premises of the argument, because in order to challenge the premises, you have to challenge the arguments WLC presents for those arguments, but the moment they do challenge those arguments, you come in and say "well, that doesn't actually address the Kalam, so they aren't being fair to WLC." Frankly, it's bullshit. It's bald-faced sophistry. It's dishonest. How could I possibly think you're being fair? Explain that to me, please. You're not even actually addressing the arguments presented by the video, you're merely dismissing on the basis of some absurd criteria you made up: the criteria that if it isn't directly tackling the Kalam in some form, but is instead tackling a tangential argument presented by WLC in his previous response, then it isn't fair.

  • @Implementing0Failure
    @Implementing0Failure2 жыл бұрын

    What a great saturday morning treat to wake up to! Vielen Dank!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    hope you like it, let me know what you think

  • @ThatsABadMrKitteh
    @ThatsABadMrKitteh Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for taking the time to make this. The Kalam is an easy intuition to reach on one's own and I've realized that I can't argue against it without a higher understanding of physics and metaphysics. Obviously I can only follow so much of this but the knowledge that models of the universe can exist that don't have a t = 0 or the notion that quantum mechanics doesn't inherently have causality in the intuitive sense is very helpful

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    glad you liked our film , thanks for your comment

  • @oldpossum57

    @oldpossum57

    Ай бұрын

    I too am a layman, yet I noticed a number of problems with the Kalām in WLCs formulation. Above all he assumes that the realm outside the Universe works the same as the the realm inside. This makes no sense to me.

  • @user-pn8ke3kf5f
    @user-pn8ke3kf5fАй бұрын

    Probably a long shot but Capturing Christianity has a call in show scheduled for this Friday with Frank Turek. It would be highly entertaining for any of you guys to call in and ask him some questions on his Kalam argument.

  • @Carlos-fl6ch
    @Carlos-fl6ch2 жыл бұрын

    Hi Phil, First thing I notice is the remarkable quality of the video both the can work and the storyline. The funny thing is that almost simultaneously closer to truth released their interview with WLC where again he misrepresent science deliberately. I enjoyed this video with one of my favorite scientist and of course I've been with you and linford as guest of Nathan and James. I think those two are amongst the best work you and your team have produced. It is the go-to project to understand the science that is so often being deliberately misrepresented by WLC. It is therefore a necessary and comprehensive piece of work. Unfortunately WLC will not learn from it at all. He has to much invested in it and to many people cannot see through his agenda. It's quite clear William Lane Craig is disingenuous.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks very much for your support, much appreciated.

  • @Carlos-fl6ch

    @Carlos-fl6ch

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 Allways

  • @DigitalGnosis
    @DigitalGnosis Жыл бұрын

    Craig accuses other of ad hominem, then goes on to say people who disagree with him are just trying to avoid Theism. I guess it's fine for him to do it though?

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah at one point in the edit, we had a bit about this but it got cut for timing.

  • @ronarprefect7709
    @ronarprefect7709 Жыл бұрын

    "If the universe is eternal"--did he really just say that? Didn't scientists already prove the universe isn't eternal?

  • @knyghtryder3599

    @knyghtryder3599

    6 ай бұрын

    No , quite the contrary We have zero empirical evidence for creation, we have zero empirical evidence for a time before the known universe, we have zero empirical evidence for philosophical nothingness or any alternative to the known universe 100% of all the data we have shows an eternal infinite dynamic universe No matter how far back we look there is something and always has been

  • @monkerud2108
    @monkerud2108 Жыл бұрын

    Also, Shaun is just correct, the ultimate answer to wether the past is eternal or not is.. we don’t know. Because arguing wether it’s logically possible or impossible is silly, it is the way it is in the universe, and cannot be any other way, for reasons that it is so, and until we know exactly what “so” means we won't know the proper “reason” or construction that explains the answer to us.

  • @danielpaulson8838
    @danielpaulson8838 Жыл бұрын

    I’m frankly surprised that Craig elicits this much attention.

  • @chipperhippo
    @chipperhippo2 жыл бұрын

    I just can’t even imagine the time and money that went into this.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    yeah it was a big effort, thanks

  • @ashhempsall9803

    @ashhempsall9803

    Жыл бұрын

    In that case, imagine what is being said🙏

  • @stein1919

    @stein1919

    Жыл бұрын

    then it has to be a miracle

  • @chipperhippo

    @chipperhippo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stein1919 well played

  • @diegog1853
    @diegog185311 ай бұрын

    1:11:12 notice that Craig here is begging the question. The argument proposes that "everything that begins to exist has a cause" seems to be as intuitive as saying "everything that begins to exist has a material cause". They all apply to the same objects we observe in our universe, they seem to be equally powerful, but the conclusions are different. One would conclude that the universe has a cause while the other would conclude that the universe has a material cause. But Craig is arguing that this premise gets defeated because the universe cannot have a material cause. The problem is that we are precisely trying to infer how the universe was created based on how everything else works. But he is already assuming that the universe doesn't have a material cause before trying to solve the problem of whether or not it has any based on a kalam-like argumentation. The original argument relies on the intuition that everything behaves in a certain way "everything has a cause" but If he is already accepting that the universe is somehow a special exeption to everything that exists so that the parody argument is false, then why cannot the universe be a special exeption so that the original argument is also false. He is not being consistent with his argumentation, he tries to appeal to intuition in asserting there are certain universal properties that everything that begins to exist has... but at the same time he is willing to grant the universe a special exception if the presented argument doesn't agree with his presupposed conclusion. Hence he is begging the question, he is presupposing his own conclusion.

  • @anitkythera4125
    @anitkythera41252 жыл бұрын

    You got Wes on to comment that’s so incredibly responsible of you given how thoroughly he’s crushed Craig in the academic literature e.g. unsatisfiable pair diagnosis with Alex Malpass who you also interviewed! Wow I’m subscribing and visiting your patreon page. If this quality is a persistent feature of this channel then please enjoy my money lol!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks so much but i dont have a pattern page

  • @anitkythera4125

    @anitkythera4125

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 whew! ;-)

  • @leoe.r.7338
    @leoe.r.7338 Жыл бұрын

    Wow. Just, amazing! Incredible work. So complete. There is no way Craig survives this.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks very much

  • @keithf9985

    @keithf9985

    Жыл бұрын

    ... and yet he'll just pretend his position still stands. The fact that he has the audacity to question the integrity of scientists rather than accept that they have a point tells us a lot about his determination to stick with his preferred outcome. He's not interested in the discussion; he's only interested in trying to support what he already believes.

  • @leoe.r.7338

    @leoe.r.7338

    Жыл бұрын

    @@keithf9985 I agree. Apologists really don't care about the truth, they just want to have "intelligent" excuses for their beliefs.

  • @dangin8811

    @dangin8811

    Жыл бұрын

    "There's no way Craig survives this." You sound like a hater. If you were convinced by this, you must be very credulous.

  • @pabloandres06183

    @pabloandres06183

    Жыл бұрын

    @@leoe.r.7338goes both ways . I dislike apologists for how weak they are in terms of defending their faith. Atheists are bias also so dont be a prick ( i am agnostic/atheist btw) Look at Inspiring Philosophy video “are atheists bias”

  • @reedclippings8991
    @reedclippings89912 жыл бұрын

    Looking forward to this! But...You've already won. You've undercut his premises. Craig is highly invested and committed. All he needs to do is present something, confidently, that's good enough to convince others who are similarly biased. He's more than talented enough a sophist to do this. He isn't held accountable by his audience in the same ways that physicists are. There is no possible universe in which he says "Oh, I understand, this does undercut my premises!" This isn't about evidence for them. It's about belief.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @andrewwells6323

    @andrewwells6323

    2 жыл бұрын

    Just because someone doesn’t agree with you does not make them dishonest. I wish some people would learn the difference.

  • @bryandraughn9830

    @bryandraughn9830

    2 жыл бұрын

    In the past, I've attempted to see Craig's views, but his view aren't self consistent. When presented with a point, he becomes solely focused on refuting that individual point regardless of his other statements. It certainly seems like you're correct that he abides by his own set of rules. I know people who aren't even famous that can hold a more consistent argument during a discussion. He makes so many inaccurate assumptions about how scientists think. One can only tolerate so much until it's no longer productive to consider his views. In that respect, he's only working against his own cause.

  • @andrewwells6323

    @andrewwells6323

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bryandraughn9830 Can you give an example?

  • @andrewwells6323

    @andrewwells6323

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@glowing571 Are you talking about the BGV theorem?

  • @robotaholic
    @robotaholic Жыл бұрын

    Sean Carroll destroyed fine tuning and WLC position in their debate. He has the official best most comprehensive destruction and annihilation of Fine Tuning I've ever seen anywhere lol

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    have you seen our video on the topic ? Sean is in it. But there are other who arguably have even more devastating things to say about the argument kzread.info/dash/bejne/nH5hyMxsnNSwZrA.html

  • @hp127
    @hp1272 жыл бұрын

    A really refreshing look at some of the questions in this field. Thank you,

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    you are welcome

  • @thecloudtherapist
    @thecloudtherapist2 жыл бұрын

    23m20s "You don't get this kind of situation in physical reality". I think you just made Craig's point for him.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    not at all, you can believe in an infinite past without believing in a Grim Reaper that can kill someone in an arbitrarily small amount of time.

  • @grantgooch5834

    @grantgooch5834

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 You're arguing against the analogy and not the principle. The point of the paradox is to show that an actual infinite past leads to an absurd conclusion. Denying the possibility of the Grim Reaper Paradox IS denying the possibility of an infinite past. By simply hand-waving away the Grim Reaper, you concede the premise of the paradox: it's not actually possible for an actual infinite to exist.

  • @anflas7200
    @anflas72002 жыл бұрын

    The question to Craig is: How many responses Will there be?

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    indeed, another four part?

  • @bananabreadman55

    @bananabreadman55

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 does that mean you’ll go back on dg to respond to his response again?

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bananabreadman55 maybe

  • @joelgarland3161
    @joelgarland3161 Жыл бұрын

    Bravo 👏 Skydive Phil once again, you’ve produced wonderfully educational content that will keep me reflecting about our beautiful world as well as provide the average lay person like myself with the tools of intellectual self defence from certain individuals with dogmatic intentions

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @DrJasonTorn
    @DrJasonTorn2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent. Just forwarded this to several people for discussion.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    cool thanks

  • @frogandspanner
    @frogandspanner2 жыл бұрын

    20:15 Brilliant summary.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree, Alex is brilliant.

  • @CosmoPhiloPharmaco
    @CosmoPhiloPharmaco2 жыл бұрын

    I'm glad Linford appeared (much) more times in this one!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    me too , hes brilliant

  • @aem4670
    @aem4670 Жыл бұрын

    Probably one of the best videos I have ever watched on youtub... If it's not the best Thank you!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much

  • @WaxPaper
    @WaxPaper2 жыл бұрын

    I wish you could get more reach with your content. There's a whole space of viewers out there who would subscribe to your channel in a second, if they were exposed to it. Normally, you'd suggest something like collaborations with other KZreadrs to get exposure, but your content is kind of unique in that it's really dense. It doesn't really lend itself to that sort of shorter, off-the-cuff style. There's also the issue that your channel isn't an exclusive repository for your physics content alone. I dunno, I just feel like your stuff deserves a bigger audience. Particularly your Before the Big Bang series; that thing is a masterwork, as far as KZread content goes. I give people a link to the playlist whenever I can. Wish I could do more. Thanks for the effort you put into this.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks I think we release content so infrequently that may be the issue.

  • @HebaruSan
    @HebaruSan2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, I laughed when WLC cited Plantinga as if either of them had a shred of credibility

  • @carlpeterson8182

    @carlpeterson8182

    Жыл бұрын

    If you do not think Alvin Plantinga has a shred of credibility then I think you have kept up with Philosophy. He could be wrong but not having a shred of credibility?

  • Жыл бұрын

    Have you read any Plantinga's work before?

  • @carlpeterson8182

    @carlpeterson8182

    Жыл бұрын

    @ Not a complete text but I have read articles, listened to him speak, and read some of his philosophical arguments before. I cannot see how that would change the cogency of the arguments here. Especially if we are discussing credibility which he from others in his field.

  • Жыл бұрын

    @@carlpeterson8182 I was talking to Hebaru :) I think Plantinga is a respected philosopher especially in epistemology and logics.

  • @elihaitov1849
    @elihaitov18492 жыл бұрын

    Some philosophers in the video object to the argument against traversing an actual infinite that the argument begs the question by assuming a starting point, for if there is a beginningless series with an actual infinite number of earlier events, then an actually infinite sequence has already been traversed (for instance Morriston 2013, pp. 26-27). In reply, the argument against traversing an actual infinite is based on the nature of a one-by-one process, that is, finite + finite = finite, it is not based on starting at a point and therefore does not beg the question. In other words, Morriston is thinking in terms of adding a finite element to the series of events which already exists. This does not answer the more fundamental question of how the series is constituted by its individual elements in the first place (and one must be careful not to beg the question by assuming that a beginningless series can exist). Whereas I am thinking of the more fundamental question of how any series of events is constituted by its elements. I am thinking in terms of what is being added (i.e. one finite element followed by one finite element) to constitute the series (that is the meaning of the phrase ‘the accumulation of a series of strokes by a one-by-one process’). Finite + finite = finite thus refers to the (finite) elements that constitute the series; it is more foundational than the series which they metaphysically ground. The series of events is constituted by one (finite) element being added followed by one (finite) element being added. The essential feature of this one-by-one sequential process is that the series of strokes is supposed to have been made up by each stroke; none of the strokes existed beginninglessly. Each of them was added at some finite point earlier in time, one by one.

  • @christaylor6574

    @christaylor6574

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think what he means is that when you say "finite + finite = finite" is to beg the question. ie: you start with 'finite' then add 'finite'. But the hypothesis is supposed to be: infinite + finite = infinite. This is why there isn't an issue with traversing the infinite series because the hypothesis is saying that we're already within the infinite series. So the issue being raised just isn't applicable.

  • @elihaitov1849

    @elihaitov1849

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@christaylor6574 You have to be careful not to beg the question yourself since the question is how the infinity itself is formed. It is formed by the same process of one member after another. That is finite plus finite. So you can never form an actual infinite.

  • @christaylor6574

    @christaylor6574

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@elihaitov1849 What do you mean by: "how the infinity itself is formed"? Under the infinite past hypothesis - there is no beginning - so there is no sense in which it is 'formed'. And that's the point here - your question even presupposes a start. "It is formed by the same process of one member after another. That is finite plus finite. So you can never form an actual infinite." That isn't a description of the infinite past. It's a description of *your view: a finite past. Which is why this is question begging. *Your conclusion that the past is finite is one of your premies.

  • @elihaitov1849

    @elihaitov1849

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@christaylor6574 actually infinite number of elements is not supposed to have been added all at once, but one after another. To repeat, a process actual infinite number of times, one needs to first proceed one time after another, but the problem is that the result of that process is always finite at any time, because ‘one time’ (‘finite’) after ‘another’ (‘finite’) implies finite + finite which is equal finite. Therefore, one cannot have been adding from an actual infinite past since this entails the impossible consequence that finite + finite can be infinite. This reply does not beg the question because there is an independent proof that natural (finite) number + natural (finite) number = natural (finite) number using mathematical induction

  • @elihaitov1849

    @elihaitov1849

    2 жыл бұрын

    Again this objection is circular because it presupposes that an actually infinite sequence of events has been traversed to try to show that an actually infinite sequence of events can be traversed. Hence, the objection amounts to saying that an actually infinite past can be traversed if it has been traversed! It is important to remember that we are dealing with a sequence of congruent events, whose members do not come into being or occur all at once, but occur one at a time with equal duration. In addition, because the set of events that must occur before the present event can occur is actually infinite, the process of events occurring before the present moment never ends. Therefore, the present moment can never be reached.

  • @Raydensheraj
    @Raydensheraj2 жыл бұрын

    Gamow had a incredibly interesting life and was such a charismatic personality with many great ideas in cosmology and Biology...

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    he certainly did .

  • @invisiblegorilla8631
    @invisiblegorilla8631 Жыл бұрын

    Even though my brain is too small to understand everything that was said here (my brain is, in fact, finite), WOW! Just WOW! Thanks Phil, you've given me something to view quite a few times - here's hoping that I can understand more than 10% of this!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks, if you have any questions I can try and answer them

  • @hemeraxo
    @hemeraxo2 жыл бұрын

    Amazing, as usual!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thats very kind cheers

  • @farmerjohn6526
    @farmerjohn6526 Жыл бұрын

    You cannot subtract infinity from infinity since infinity is not a number..its a concept describing never ending

  • @timwalling3101
    @timwalling31012 жыл бұрын

    the real point is that infinity is a concept of the mind and has no basis in reality even math dismisses it as a phantom with no proofs ever being resolved for such an imagined non existent thing.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    maths does no such thing, where on earth did you get such a notion?

  • @timwalling3101

    @timwalling3101

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 mathematical infinities are not measurable in reality they are simply loops that dismiss nature

  • @blaisenotpascal1052
    @blaisenotpascal10522 жыл бұрын

    I'm looking forward to it (and to Craig's fallacious response as well)

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks,

  • @dftknight
    @dftknight Жыл бұрын

    I feel like there's several misunderstanding. For example, Vilenkin says QM decay is indeterministic. Dr Craig says that is only true under the Copenhagen interpretation, but then you say that Vilenkin holds to Everett many Worlds interepretation of QM. But the Everett interpretation of QM is deterministic! You undercut your own point about QM indeterminism.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    no we dont and it is explained why in the video. Maybe watch the section of causality again?

  • @dftknight

    @dftknight

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 I watched it again. Under the Everett many Worlds interpretation radioactive decay is deterministic.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dftknight then you didn't pay attention

  • @stefanheinzmann7319

    @stefanheinzmann7319

    Жыл бұрын

    If several different interpretations are equally valid, they're both equivalent, and that means that they end up yielding exactly the same observable effects. They are the same for practical purposes. If one is deterministic and the other isn't, this determinism does not make any difference for you and me. And, indeed, since it is acausal, which of the universes you end up in, given the multiverse interpretation, you have no practical benefit of the alleged determinism. You still haven't got a situation where you can identify or even presume a cause. Craig seems to think that the Everett actually helps him for postulating his causal argument, but in reality it doesn't. In his hands it amounts to an intellectual shell game where he tries to make a problem vanish by shifting around interpretations of a theory that just doesn't yield what Craig would like it to yield.

  • @dftknight

    @dftknight

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stefanheinzmann7319 Could you explain what you mean "acausal" under the Everett interpretation? There's many counterparts of me in the different Everett worlds and reality as a whole evolves deterministically, even though I can't observe my counterparts in the Everett world. Did you follow the argument: Craig: Everything that begins to exist has a cause Phil, quoting Vilenkin: In QM radioactive decay is indeterministic Craig (responding): That is only true of the Copenhagen interpretation. Other interpretations are deterministic Phil: Vilenkin holds to the Everett interpretation (which is a deterministic interpretation of QM) I think there's some equivocation between "acausal" and 'indeterministic" here too.

  • @Only1INDRAJIT
    @Only1INDRAJIT Жыл бұрын

    Amazing and exceptionally well put up arguments. By the way who is the physicist at around 24:41? I could recognize the rest but not him.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    Daniel Linford hes a phislopher of physics

  • @Only1INDRAJIT

    @Only1INDRAJIT

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 ok thank you for the information

  • @Anton_Kirillov
    @Anton_Kirillov2 жыл бұрын

    Great video! Thank you for your work!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    you are more than welcome

  • @christianidealism7868
    @christianidealism78682 жыл бұрын

    What I like about this the most is how near the end you made it clear that the criticisms of the Kalam don't just come from atheist or agnostics but come even from religious believers such as the great Richard Swinburne (probably the best living theistic philosopher today) and the mention of saint Thomas Aquinas who would also given his writings not be persuaded by the Kalam. Also the large number of cosmologist who are theist and write models of cosmology that propose an eternal universe/multiverse. I think what this shows is that these criticisms are to be taken seriously given that it is not just one side who is criticizing the argument and that you can reject the Kalam without rejecting one's deep religious commitments. Great work!

  • @jaskitstepkit7153

    @jaskitstepkit7153

    2 жыл бұрын

    There are better arguments out there but the Kalām is popular and understood somewhat easily by lay people. Ultimately theists should not put all their eggs in one basket.

  • @nemrodx2185

    @nemrodx2185

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jaskitstepkit7153 I still don't see anything to worry about in this answer. Not even regarding the Kalam.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks for your comment. Yes there are many theists who reject the Kalam . In fact I dont know of even one professional cosmologist that is a theist and thinks the Kalam is a compelling argument.

  • @badtaco14

    @badtaco14

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 Aron wall.

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nemrodx2185 Of course you don't. People like you and WLC will never accept that you're wrong, no matter how many times over the argument is thoroughly debunked.

  • @monkerud2108
    @monkerud2108 Жыл бұрын

    The obvious answer to my very direct analogy (because its in a way not even an analogy) concerning circles is the conclusion that circles cannot have an end, or that circles are contradictory, those are the two options, and personally i like circles that come back around to themselves completing the full circle, time is in this discussion exactly like a circle that is infinite in size, there is no end, wether you prefer to think of the infinite past and future meeting up at the other end is irrelevant because moving at a finite pace the circle or timeline just goes on forever in both directions, there is no need for or reason for talking about an end, unless you want to imagine one, presuppose one, which is fine but that remains a different kind of assumption than talking about a subject with absent ends and invoking properties of a subject with ends, gets you into endless trouble I would think, logically speaking 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @NA-ee8mt
    @NA-ee8mt Жыл бұрын

    What kinda physicists are these? I’ve seen Sabine Hossenfelder break down in a video why infinity cannot exist in reality, only in potential. These physicists are saying the opposite, but none of them actually back up this stance with anything tangible. Sabine Hossenfelders take on infinity makes a lot more sense to me, and she actually backs it up.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    we back ours us up too

  • @NA-ee8mt

    @NA-ee8mt

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PhilHalper1 Yes, you're right, my bad. This video is direct responses to Craig's specific arguments, which ARE backed up. But I am only focused in on the possibility/impossibility of infinity (especially in the context of time), and I don't see anyone back up the idea that it can be possible in reality (of course in theory it can be possible, we use infinity in math all the time). If I missed it, please let me know where. As far as I understand, if the universe is 13.7 billion years old that means we have to first wait for 13.7 billion years to elapse before reaching today. And so if the universe is infinity years old, then we would have to first wait for infinity years to elapse before reaching today, meaning we would never reach today. Yet here we are. This seems to be quite straight forward to me, it is not possible for infinity years to have elapsed before today. I didn't see anyone in the video challenge this concept of the impossibility of an infinitely regressing past.

  • @NA-ee8mt

    @NA-ee8mt

    Жыл бұрын

    @Physics Dude 1. From what I gathered, she basically made the argument that infinity has no place in science, as it will never be observed or measured as a characteristic of reality, and so based on this she made the point that when constructing theoretical models in physics or cosmology, scientists shouldn't just assume an infinite universe in their math. 2. Well I should first state that I don't necessarily buy Craigs argument in full, because I don't necessarily even understand it in full. He seems to speak from a philosophical viewpoint, whereas my mind thinks more from a scientific view point. For example, when he says everything which begins to exist must have a cause, I don't really even know what that means, but translated into science he essentially seems to be pointing out the law of conservation of energy, which I completely understand. Having said that, I do believe the argument of actual infinity vs potential infinity is legit. 3. This makes no sense, how could an infinite number of events already exists? The only way that could be possible is if the number of events already taken place is continually growing (in a regressive manner). But that's just not how the past works, the past is set in stone. And even if time were moving in two directions, that would still imply a start point.

  • @NA-ee8mt

    @NA-ee8mt

    Жыл бұрын

    @Physics Dude 1. She says infinity exists in math, but not in science. Which seems to allude to what I said, it exists in concept but not in reality. She says in reality it can only exist as a limit (or potential). Its in her video called "is infinity real" on youtube. 2. I don't understand how conservation of energy can be DERIVED FROM Noether's theorem given that a) Noether's theorem requires the law of conservation of energy to have already been realized since it makes a claim built upon the claim of conservation of energy and b) this theorem came to be in the early 1900's and the conservation of energy came to be in the mid 1800's. 3. I never mentioned anything about a countdown, I'm not sure what you mean regarding that. If the number of past events exists as a set/static number at any given point in time, then that directly tells us that the number of past events cannot be infinity, as infinity is not a set/static number. Its a number which is continuously changing. If I hit pause right now, how is it possible for the number of past events to continuously change?

  • @NA-ee8mt

    @NA-ee8mt

    Жыл бұрын

    @Physics Dude 1) I see, I'm not sure I agree with you. What's an example of something else which exists in reality, but not in physics? 2)a/b) Ok, so if I am understanding this correctly, you are saying the expansion of the universe violates the law of conservation of energy? Is this due to the change of the universes shape with time, or is it due to actual changes in physical laws? 2)c) Regarding what came before space and time, it is hard to say, because we as humans cannot actually comprehend this as space and time are the two bounds of our intellectual capacity. Referring to something as timeless is beyond the grasp of the human mind, which is precisely why god is so often described as such. 3) Well, I refer to infinity as a changing number because again, if we push pause today, then a set number of events has taken place already. This set number of events is less than the number of events which will precede tomorrow. If this is the case, how could the former number be infinity?

  • @HarryNicNicholas
    @HarryNicNicholas2 жыл бұрын

    i think the statement at the end is important and ought to be obvious, science is doing science and trying to get it right, so we can utilise it for our benefit, it's a lovely instance of paranoia from craig that he thinks science is out to get him. i continue to wonder at the religious, they pick fights where there is no need, plenty of believers are okay with current cosmology, evolution, the whole nine yards, why craig has to stick to his aldulterer stoning god instead of a telescope using god i have no notion, it makes his position worse. still, not a bad thing, he's driving folks away, just annoying to have to keep arguing things that should be fixed. another great vid, keep em coming.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    and one thing we didn't mention, is that this bit at the end that he claims shows the real motive of of the atheists is an ad hom.

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Жыл бұрын

    God is a dual concept. The observed is dual to the observer -- David Bohm. The future is dual to the past -- time duality. We predict the future (syntropy) and remember the past -- time asymmetry. Absolute nothing is dual to relative nothing. Lacking is dual to non lacking. Being is dual to non being creates becoming -- Plato's cat. Alive is dual to not alive -- the Schrodinger's cat superposition (duality). Thesis (alive, being) is dual to anti-thesis (not alive, non being) creates the converging thesis or synthesis -- Hegel's cat or Fichte's cat, the time independent Hegelian dialectic. Schrodinger's cat is based upon Hegel's cat and Hegel stole it from Plato (and Socrates). Everything (all things) is dual to nothing. The one is defined in terms of the other. Antinomy (duality) is two truths that contradict each other -- Immanuel Kant. If you choose nothing then this implies that something or everything already exists! The concept of nothing is inherently dual, nothing requires something to already exist in the first place. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant. Brahman (creator god, thesis) is dual to Shiva (destroyer god, anti-thesis) synthesizes Vishnu (preserver god) -- Hinduism or the Hegelian dialectic. You can derive the Hegelian dialectic from the Hindu religion. Action is dual to reaction -- Sir Isaac Newton (the duality of force). Cause is dual to effect -- forces are correlated. Forces are a by product of conserving the duality or correlation of cause & effect. Attraction is dual to repulsion, push is dual to pull (forces and hence energy are dual). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Absolute truth is dual to relative truth -- Hume's fork.

  • @HarryNicNicholas

    @HarryNicNicholas

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hyperduality2838 i wonderr what you're talking about.

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Жыл бұрын

    @@HarryNicNicholas Reducing the number of dimensions or states is a syntropic process -- teleological. In homology hypervolumes become volumes, volumes become surfaces or planes, planes become lines and lines are reduced to points, 4D (D= number of dimensions), 3D, 2D, 1D, points are zero dimensional. Co-homology is a dual process to homology so that the number of dimensions is increased, points become lines, lines become surfaces, surfaces become volumes and volumes become hypervolumes -- increasing the number of dimensions or states is an entropic process! Points are dual to lines -- the principle of duality in geometry. Homology (convergence, syntropy) is dual to co-homology (divergence, entropy) -- topology. Syntropy (prediction) is dual to increasing entropy -- the 4th law of thermodynamics. Teleological physics (syntropy) is dual to non-teleological physics (entropy). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Dimension reduction is a syntropic process. There are patterns of duality hardwired into physics, mathematics and philosophy. Noumenal (rational, analytic, mathematics) is dual to phenomenal (empirical, synthetic, physics) -- Immanuel Kant. Mathematics (deductive inference) is dual to physics (inductive inference). Inference or making predictions is therefore dual (a priori, a posteriori).

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Жыл бұрын

    @@HarryNicNicholas Thesis (God) is dual to anti-thesis (the Christ consciousness) synthesizes the holy spirit or the mind/soul -- the time independent Hegelian dialectic. The concept of God is therefore dual according to the Hegelian dialectic. Duality creates reality!

  • @elihaitov1849
    @elihaitov18492 жыл бұрын

    At 1:09:05 Daniel Linford says “if The entity is changeless, if it is essentially such that it cannot enter into change well then it couldn’t act with libertarian free will because to do so is to undergo a change” Linford has confused changelessness with unchangeability.

  • @kiralight6661

    @kiralight6661

    2 жыл бұрын

    yeah, I noticed that one too.

  • @Hello-vz1md

    @Hello-vz1md

    2 жыл бұрын

    What's the difference?

  • @elihaitov1849

    @elihaitov1849

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Hello-vz1md Changeability is a modal claim, changelessness is a factual claim. The claim is not that a first cause cannot change, the claim is he didint change factually sans (without) the universe.

  • @toddtaylor1238
    @toddtaylor12382 жыл бұрын

    Is WLC simply a slave to his own deeply held biases, or is he deliberately dishonest? He's caught in so many contradictions it's hard to tell.

  • @holytrinity2510
    @holytrinity251011 ай бұрын

    The concept of “nothing” cannot have the ability to act, otherwise it would exist as a “potential act” and be one of many things that exist. If the universe came from “nothing” then this nothing would have had the ability to become the universe. But the concept “nothing” as we previously explained, cannot have the ability to act, therefore, the universe could not have come from nothing on its own. Since there are things that do exist, then “something” must have always existed, because as we just proved, things cannot come from “nothing” on their own. If time had ever proceeded at an infinite rate, which is like fast forwarding through a motion picture, we would not be here today because all events would have already occurred in a single instant. Therefore, time has always progressed at a finite rate and any mathematician can prove that time could never have progressed over an infinite time interval. The proof goes like this, pick any number no matter how great. You can always add one to it and thereby make it greater in value, therefore you can never reach infinity. And you cannot say that all we need to do is to wait an infinite amount of time and then we would reach infinity, because then you are assuming that you can wait an infinite amount of time. However, this is what you were trying to prove and so that is not proof at all. You cannot assume to be true, that which you are trying to prove to be true otherwise you can prove anything to be true, even that which is false. Therefore, time could not have started an “infinite” time ago and therefore had a beginning a finite time ago. Since “something” always existed as we previously proved, it had to have existed before time started. Since space and time are one entity called the space-time continuum as Einstein pointed out, then this “something” had to have existed before space and time existed and therefore caused space and time. Since this “something” existed outside of space and time it cannot be made up of material things, because material things can only exist in space. And this “something” could not be just chaos which has no order, because as we previously proved, something cannot come from nothing on its own, hence order cannot come from pure disorder. Therefore, this “something” had to have had the ability to cause order, space-time, material things, beauty, life, everything in our universe, including our universe and natural laws and rules. Since we call ourselves beings, then we should at least call this “something” a Being, who we call God. Since only God always existed, and the universe is not made of God as we just proved, then God must have created the universe out of “nothing”. Since “nothing” does not even exist, then God must have infinite Power in order to have created the universe from “nothing”. Since all people desire happiness, then God must have created us to be happy out of love for us. Naturally, all creatures should love their Creator. For us to love God from our heart, God had to create in us a free-will, because no person can be forced to love, otherwise this would not be true love from their heart. With our free-will, we can choose to do good or bad to our neighbor and this is why there is sin in the world, because some people have chosen to hate God and their neighbor and are only interested in pleasing themselves. God did not create evil, nor does He desire evil, but he does allow sin to happen because He had to form us with a free-will, in order for us to love Him and others from our heart.

  • @kimwol9885
    @kimwol98852 жыл бұрын

    Excellent documentary. Next time consider inviting Graham Oppy. He makes very good cases and WLC and others are afraid of him.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks for your suggestion

  • @Andrew-pp2ql

    @Andrew-pp2ql

    2 жыл бұрын

    How do you know WLC is afraid of him? Has he ever stated anything to that effect or is just an opinion?

  • @plasticvision6355

    @plasticvision6355

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Andrew-pp2ql Craig is on record saying that Oppy is one of the most capable atheist philosophers he knows. If I remember rightly his words, were something like ‘[Oppy] is frighteningly intelligent/ capable”.

  • @Andrew-pp2ql

    @Andrew-pp2ql

    Жыл бұрын

    @@plasticvision6355 thanks for that. That seems quite plausible as many people will speak highly of others they don’t agree with but respecting their intellect or debating skills etc. Of course respecting one’s ability not the same as being afraid of him. I never heard Oppy talk on issues so that would be enjoyable though I don’t know much of WLC actually outside his use of the Kalam which I assume which made him a household name in respect to defending Christianity.

  • @plasticvision6355

    @plasticvision6355

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Andrew-pp2ql Here is Craig commenting on Oppy where he describes Oppy as ‘scary smart’ Watch Andrew Loke, reckoned to be Craig’s protégé on the Kalam trying to defend the claim he argues which is that god uses freewill, and all this acting in timeless nonsense. Unusually, Oppy gets cross with Loke - the first time I’ve seen this - because Loke tries to redefine a brute contingency. What’s interesting and very telling in this exchange though is how Loke tries to misrepresent Oppy on a discussion he had with Craig where he argued the case that the initial conditions of the universe was not god but a brute contingency. Oppy stands unshakable against Craig’s and Loke’s profoundly misguided attempt to show god as a cause as opposed to brute contingency. That is Oppy corrects both Loke and Craig on how they fail to address his objection, which is almost identical to one of the arguments made in this film, namely the universe just is what it is and does what it does in ways that are perfectly explicable. kzread.info/dash/bejne/mn5nz5ttYcqegqg.html

  • @RodrigoOshiro
    @RodrigoOshiro2 жыл бұрын

    omg, i always listen to mindscape!

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    i do too

  • @treyquattro
    @treyquattro2 ай бұрын

    how do we explain -1/12 as the sum to infinity of all integers?! (Requires subtraction)

  • @natmanprime4295
    @natmanprime4295 Жыл бұрын

    Infinity consumes what it numerates. The quality of "countable infinity" is different, it's indefinite, not infinite. True infinity is just a characterless grey area

  • @moesypittounikos
    @moesypittounikos Жыл бұрын

    Craig must have hit a nerve somewhere with this admittedly amazing documentary. Go on William Lane Craig! I'm always for the underdog in any fight.

  • @radishpineapple74

    @radishpineapple74

    Жыл бұрын

    What happens if the underdogs happen to be white supremacists or other unsavory individuals?

  • @thetannernation

    @thetannernation

    Жыл бұрын

    @@radishpineapple74 shut the hell up. “White supremacy”

  • @BrettCoryell

    @BrettCoryell

    Жыл бұрын

    Say you want to dig a well. Some nut with a forked stick comes out and says there is water under your driveway and it's impossible there is water anywhere else on your property. Then, a dozen trained and experienced civil engineers come out to your property and agree you could put it at one spot in your backyard. They also explain why you can't use a divining rod to find water. Do you say to yourself, 'Hey, that guy wiggling a stick really struck a nerve. I'll dig up my driveway and put the well there?' Root for the underdogs in sports if you want. It's not a reliable way to learn the truth about really. In fact, it's the opposite.

  • @knyghtryder3599

    @knyghtryder3599

    6 ай бұрын

    The kalam-ity is the worst argument of all time , false and pointless

  • @Khawalidmi
    @Khawalidmi2 жыл бұрын

    This is really going nowhere. They are looping around the main issue. The main issue that have existed since Aristotle between atheists and theists is basically what is infinite: the universe or god. Kalam argument purpose is to show that the universe is not infinite but finite as it must have been caused by something and that something is infinite, by definition, and we call it god.

  • @christaylor6574

    @christaylor6574

    2 жыл бұрын

    An atheist isn't committed to think the universe is infinite. Atheism doesn't entail that. ie: a person can hold the belief that God does not exist and be undecided as to whether the universe is infinite or finite. The two are unconnected.

  • @Khawalidmi

    @Khawalidmi

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@christaylor6574 Yes, but what I am saying is that this is the general sentiment among atheists who argue against the Kalam argument or the Prime mover argument (the same thing really) since ancient time.

  • @shaccooper
    @shaccooper Жыл бұрын

    “Why is he so sure?” But why are you so sure that only the physical exists?

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    Жыл бұрын

    this film inst about naturalism .At least one of the interviewees is not a naturalist and maybe others.

  • @martinwilliams9866

    @martinwilliams9866

    Жыл бұрын

    Physicalism, the Philosophy that only the physical exists, includes matter, energy, space-time & information, it has falsified materialism, & doesn't mean that certain things ie God, the soul etc can't exist even though many use it in that way, what I call elimative Physicalism, all it means that if those "things" do exist, they must be physical, whatever that means.

  • @TurdFerguson456
    @TurdFerguson45611 ай бұрын

    I'm not a betting man, but I'm willing to bet any amount that this fella hasn't changed any of his views. The problem with trying to fit reality into your view(odd or not) means you're biased right from the start, rather than being completely objective, & following the evidence.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    11 ай бұрын

    I think we all have confirmation bias though

  • @Cat_Woods
    @Cat_Woods2 жыл бұрын

    Really brilliant, skillful, and -- I have to add -- brave. Demagogues such as Craig bring a lot of unfair flak. My gratitude to all those involved in this project.

  • @PhilHalper1

    @PhilHalper1

    2 жыл бұрын

    thanks

  • @_JRA_

    @_JRA_

    2 жыл бұрын

    No

  • @hyperduality2838

    @hyperduality2838

    Жыл бұрын

    God is a dual concept. The observed is dual to the observer -- David Bohm. The future is dual to the past -- time duality. We predict the future (syntropy) and remember the past -- time asymmetry. Absolute nothing is dual to relative nothing. Lacking is dual to non lacking. Being is dual to non being creates becoming -- Plato's cat. Alive is dual to not alive -- the Schrodinger's cat superposition (duality). Thesis (alive, being) is dual to anti-thesis (not alive, non being) creates the converging thesis or synthesis -- Hegel's cat or Fichte's cat, the time independent Hegelian dialectic. Schrodinger's cat is based upon Hegel's cat and Hegel stole it from Plato (and Socrates). Everything (all things) is dual to nothing. The one is defined in terms of the other. Antinomy (duality) is two truths that contradict each other -- Immanuel Kant. If you choose nothing then this implies that something or everything already exists! The concept of nothing is inherently dual, nothing requires something to already exist in the first place. Concepts are dual to percepts -- the mind duality of Immanuel Kant. Brahman (creator god, thesis) is dual to Shiva (destroyer god, anti-thesis) synthesizes Vishnu (preserver god) -- Hinduism or the Hegelian dialectic. You can derive the Hegelian dialectic from the Hindu religion. Action is dual to reaction -- Sir Isaac Newton (the duality of force). Cause is dual to effect -- forces are correlated. Forces are a by product of conserving the duality or correlation of cause & effect. Attraction is dual to repulsion, push is dual to pull (forces and hence energy are dual). "Always two there are" -- Yoda. Absolute truth is dual to relative truth -- Hume's fork.

  • @enio17
    @enio172 жыл бұрын

    Craig: Having an Infinite number of things is absurd!! Also Craig: Life has to have an infinite number of days, otherwise it is absurd! Craig again: I did mean that, but I didn't mean that. You atheists are so contradictory.

  • @Hello-vz1md

    @Hello-vz1md

    2 жыл бұрын

    You are confused on Actual infinity vs potential infinity. Both are different kind of infinity. Craig argue that actual infinity is impossible but potential infinity is possible

  • @_JRA_

    @_JRA_

    2 жыл бұрын

    Confusion of infinities. I do not blame you. The video is full of confusion. It is a product of the intellectual laziness of reading the work and staying with only clips.

  • @_JRA_

    @_JRA_

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Hello-vz1md That's how it is. So throughout the video, they were juggling words with small changes, based on sheer ignorance. Today more than ever you have to train with Socrates to detect the sophists and their little puns, changing here and there for your convenience. Ignorance is bold.

  • @Hello-vz1md

    @Hello-vz1md

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@_JRA_ I disagree. Although i don't argee with everything in this video but this is a mostly fair/good *response* video .if you want a more in-depth responses/discussion on KCA I highly recommend you to watch Majesty of reason's kalam playlist and that 6 hours long video with james fodor,Nathan mentioned in the beginning of this video

  • @enio17

    @enio17

    2 жыл бұрын

    Science|math|philosophy deniers: You're confusing potential infinity with actual infinity!! Real experts: There's no confusion, no contradiction, to accept one is admitting the other one too. Science|math|philosophy deniers again: You're confusing potential infinity with actual infinity!!

  • @toreoft
    @toreoft Жыл бұрын

    Suggestion: The empty (as quantum theory permits) and chaotic space does nothing by itself, had it done so it would not have been empty and chaotic (tautology). When something happens in the empty chaotic space, something rather than something else in one of all possible directions, then it is not a result of randomness, (random is just what we call that we do not understand why or how) but a result of Free Will. A law of some physical process (physical law) is reflected as a description of what happened. The law was not the first cause (empty, chaotic space do not generate gravity). The first cause was Free Will. So then we are left with the 2 extreme opposites; The empty and chaotic space - and - Free Will. And any structure in that space is formed by Free Will ALONE, working. Not someone who has it or something that uses it; only: Free Will.

  • @keithmcgarrigle2653
    @keithmcgarrigle2653 Жыл бұрын

    Just a thought in the beginning there was a perfect vacuum no energy, and no magnetic or electrial waves? A perfect vacuum has potential energy? Temperature was also absolute 0 Kelvin. The Bose Einstein condenstate though Quantum fluctuations Could be produced in many parts of the Universe. That condenstate could be neutrons and anti neutrons being produced? If a small fluctuation allowed some neutron and anti neutrons to decay into protons and anti protons, then they could anililate each other starting of energy? Time is not the problem?

  • @hm5142
    @hm51422 жыл бұрын

    I am always concerned when a "researcher" has a preferred answer rather than the truth.

  • @glennsimonsen8421

    @glennsimonsen8421

    Жыл бұрын

    When Dr. Peter Atkins (of chemistry textbook fame) was asked what incontrovertible evidence he would need to believe in God he answered, none at all, because if he encountered such evidence he would only believe that he had gone mad. So I think your comment is key, and probably applies to many or perhaps most of the researchers in this video.

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