I don't know if matter has a cause. I know, or I am confident that some things that happen to it have apparent causes. And I could be utterly mistaken. What is your point?
My point is that you are capitulating on your so-called "O-lets-be-obejective and objective-is-predictability". I guess that was just a line, though.
What is everything that is known about matter? I don't feel like we know much about matter.
Here we go again, who accused you of knowing everything about matter? And since when did that become an obstacle to forming logical deductions about what we
DO know? Science can dump theories and stick to collecting data then, and you can quit going on about the "scientific method" being the only "objective" way to know anything about reality.
Scientific faith is not necessarily more justifiable. It is dependent on feedback. Under this principle religious faith can be more correct than scientific faith. But it is dogmatic.
Irrelevant. We can start a debate on another thread about who is meaner than who, but on this thread and countless others, you have made claims that God is illogical. On the same basis, so is your science. If you are admitting that then hats off to you.
While at it, show me the "facts" that theism supposedly abhors.
An immediate example that comes to mind is the assertion that Adam was at the tail end of the evolution of man. And that his parents were not people.
Excellent. First of all, that has nothing to do with "theism", which knows no Adam and Eve. Secondly, as soon as you show the "facts" this supposedly contradicts, you should be about ready to actually answer the question.
It has been asked a couple of times now. Saying everything has a cause is a confident assertion[/color]. There must be confident basis for this claim. What is it?
Indeed, there must. It's called simple basic logic, consistently proven in universal human experience. What is your justification for you "skepticism"? Why doesn't it kick in---this God-specific skepticism---when you are looking at scientific theories or any other area in your life, for that matter?
What happens with matter is not the same as what is matter. A bouncing ball is not the same thing as bouncing.
What is matter is not a relevant fact to how/why matter does anything. Existing is one of those things it
does. If you like,
did.Atheism does not concern itself with the issue of whether matter began to exist or exists eternally. It's about an absence of belief in a deity.
Indeed. If anyone rationally considered that question, being an atheist would be out of the question.
Science on the other hand says something about the nature of the matter. The closest it comes to addressing the state of its existence is the principle of conservation of energy. It says it can neither be created nor destroyed.
And yet it
WAS created. You call it the big bang, remember?
Now, do you need science to give you permission to observe the universe, including what science discovers about it, and "notice" if something is consistent or not?
I have added a third sentence. None of them makes any sense. The third one makes the least sense.
First of all, this is false. The existence of this entity is an inference deductively drawn using the most consistently proven principle of rational thought: causality. On what basis did you to decide that something can come from nothing is a viable proposition? You are right that the two statements don't make sense, yet...excuse me, haven't you been making those arguments for 7 pages?
Now Something coming from nothing; it is admitted that this is senseless, yet the continued assertion that it being senseless must be proved. I am being asked to establish the self-evident. Nothingness is
non-existence. It can do nothing...its just "not there", period! I being asked, "prove why non-existence cannot dance". In other words. "Prove that non-existence is non-existence". Non-existence is non-existence. It is not emptyness, or a vacuum...it AINT there. Now the demand that "prove what
aint there can't do A, B, C, D..." Apparently this needs more proof than itself. Wonders never cease.
That we have something and not nothing, can only mean there was never a true non-existence. Matter could
do nothing either, before it was there itself. Yet, something happened, for sure! Not only that, our own common experience tells us matter does nothing by itself, without a cause. So if we are about the so-called "objectivity", why decide with no facts to the contrary, that non-causality is the thing that went down? If someone is being consistent, shouldn't they assume causality until he has facts that give him justification to presume otherwise? Shouldn't this be presumed for the same reason any other theory is presumed?