Originally posted by EMINEM
What? Are you seriously going to deny premise number 1, that "everything that exists has a cause?" It's one thing to say the premise isn't true, but another thing to disprove the established law of cause and effect.
Yes, I am serious, I won't deny premise 1, but I claim it is not necessarily true. The universe might not have began to exist do to any other cause than itself, see the Hawking quote in the other thread, or read some of his or other theoretical astrophysicists or cosmologists. It is of course only a hypothesis and it will be long before it is a practically testable hypothesis, but just as we can't claim it is impossible that god exists, it is also not impossible that the universe exists without a cause. In fact, the two are about equally likely presently.
The conclusion that God must have created the universe makes perfect sense because in order for space and time to be created, it must have been created by something that exists outside of space and time. If not God, then what?
It may make sense, but that doesn't mean it is correct. As I said it is possible that space and time came to be without a creator outside itself. And even if there was a creator outside of time and space, that is not necessarily the christian god - it could be many gods, or another godly being. Besides, the cosmological argument suffer from another unsolved problem: who or what created the creator? If everything that exists has a First cause, ie a creator, why is the creator excluded from this premise? Genesis 1:1 KJV says "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth" but where did god come from? Why should it be more likely that god came to be without a cause than that the universe came to be without a cause?