taoist said:the BB theory says nothing about matter being eternal.
My theory also says, sadly, that beer is not eternal.....:cheers:
taoist said:the BB theory says nothing about matter being eternal.
This thread was so entertaining I just had to look at it again from the beginning, if only to see where Bob first put his foot in his mouth.Pastor Bob said:Would you do me a favor and drop those four words from your objection, so that you can actually present a position different than mine?Phy said:But considering [the] universe as we know it to have existed eternally is a scientific philosophy that has been abandoned...
Bob seems to have a fetish of some kind for looking closely at just four words at a time. Well, that's good to know.If you can drop those words, then I will be able to see that we actually disagree on this.
Also, to save time, can we agree that the universe = everything that exists? (Let's not consider anything spiritual, such as spirit beings, as part of the universe.)
Thanks, -Bob
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Denver's Bob Enyart Live talk-radio show also airs at KGOV.com. You're invited to call weekdays at 5 pm E.T. at 1-800-8Enyart.
Last edited by Bob Enyart : Yesterday at 12:48 AM.
Reason: added: "anything spiritual, such as"
taoist said:As a favor, because I've got a big time crunch on my posting right now, find the ThePhy objection and the Bob statement you're citing and repost.
Bob Enyart said:Either the universe was always here, or a creator made it. That is the only choice. Either an eternal God or eternal matter.
So, like I said, Bob may have been incomplete in not including in his statement the possibility of natural options for creation from nothing. But I think ThePhy's objection is also wrong in that apparently, the Big Bang really has nothing to say on the matter, so Bob's statement had nothing to do with it.ThePhy said:He restricts the purely scientific options to one choice – the eternal existence of matter. But considering universe as we know it to have existed eternally is a scientific philosophy that has been abandoned for nearly a half-century by over 95% of the tens of thousands of physicists in the world. Why did he elect to summarily disregard the idea that these same scientists feel there is strong and growing evidential support for, the Big Bang?
Thank you, Guy, that helps a lot. Give me a bit and I'll deconstruct this for you.GuySmiley said:This is the statement by Bob that ThePhy objected to:
This is ThePhy's objection to that statement:
So, like I said, Bob may have been incomplete in not including in his statement the possibility of natural options for creation from nothing. But I think ThePhy's objection is also wrong in that apparently, the Big Bang really has nothing to say on the matter, so Bob's statement had nothing to do with it.
When ThePhy says that 95% of scientists reject that the universe "as we know it" has existed eternally, I think he is mistakenly thinking that Bob was referring to the Steady State Model. The words "as we know it" lead me to believe this. Or does ThePhy really mean that 95% of scientists have a natural explanation for creation from nothing? I doubt it, but I'd love to see a theory about that.
So to sum up, when ThyPhy read Bob's statement that "Either the universe was always here," I think he mistakenly thought Bob was referring to the Steady State Model, and was ignoring the possibility of the Big Bang. And if he thought this way, all his posts make sense. But I think Bob actually meant that 'matter' has always existed, or it was created. He left out a possibility of a natural option for creation from nothing. Which in my mind is laughable and should be left out, but from someone else's perspective I suppose I see the point.
I'm with you in these questions. And I'm finding it just as difficult the see a "strait" answer from "ThePhy" as from Bob Enyart.GuySmiley said:OK, thank you, I see the point now. But since the BB theory also says nothing about matter being created either, ThePhy's objection was wrong in that he specifically pointed to the BB as what Bob is leaving out. Bob's statement was incomplete in that he did not allow for natural options concerning the creation of matter from nothing. Just curious, do natural explanations concerning the creation of matter from nothing exist? Is there actually something that Bob left out of the possibilities?
More than fair, as he's said publicly it takes only eight seconds to demolish my world view. Tick, tick, Bob ... two more weeks and counting for you to find the right eight seconds.I will exceed the rules of fair play by allowing Pastor Bob Enyart an original response without rebuttal appended to the end of our comments. He is allowed a submission not to exceed the 600-word limit imposed on me in my individual contribution to the Post Game Show. A longer submission will be truncated at that point.
It's not a question of incompleteness. Bob is contrasting physical theory with creationism by misrepresenting physical theory. It's like covering a white robe with mud and saying it's still white. Yeah, sure it is.GuySmiley said:So, like I said, Bob may have been incomplete in not including in his statement the possibility of natural options for creation from nothing. But I think ThePhy's objection is also wrong in that apparently, the Big Bang really has nothing to say on the matter, so Bob's statement had nothing to do with it.
No mistake about it, "eternal matter" is the Steady State Model through and through. It's the rejection of "eternal matter" that provides the contrast in the Big Bang theory now acknowledged by 95 percent of living, working physicists. If you'd really love to see a physical theory about the origin of our universe, jump in with both feet. Study physics and read the current research. Develop enough mathematical maturity to at least follow the developments in string theory. If you're really interested in that side, I can point you at the proper math to put under your belt. Start out with any text calling itself "Introduction to Topology." You don't even need calculus to start. Then come ask me questions.When ThePhy says that 95% of scientists reject that the universe "as we know it" has existed eternally, I think he is mistakenly thinking that Bob was referring to the Steady State Model. The words "as we know it" lead me to believe this. Or does ThePhy really mean that 95% of scientists have a natural explanation for creation from nothing? I doubt it, but I'd love to see a theory about that.
He thought that way because it's the only way to make sense of Bob's statement consistent with the idea he's not deliberately lying but simply misled. No one believes in "eternal matter." Saying rejection of "eternal matter" implies belief in an "eternal God" is simply not the case. I don't mind if Bob likes painting pretty pictures in the dark. I object to him hanging them across the refrigerator and blocking the door. That path leads to intellectual starvation.So to sum up, when ThyPhy read Bob's statement that "Either the universe was always here," I think he mistakenly thought Bob was referring to the Steady State Model, and was ignoring the possibility of the Big Bang. And if he thought this way, all his posts make sense. But I think Bob actually meant that 'matter' has always existed, or it was created. He left out a possibility of a natural option for creation from nothing. Which in my mind is laughable and should be left out, but from someone else's perspective I suppose I see the point.
To me that is the general populous, who believe whatever is said if it is said enough times... so anyways it is up to "those at large" who are aware to sort of hash out this idea of what is "believable" - though anyone who does not seem to accept what is the argument that you suggest is mostly considered as someone who has something wrong with them.Of course I don't want to neglect to mention the "woo-woo lunatic fringe"...
Hey, wait a minute! I wrote:taoist said:More, despite PureX's latest contribution, this is not merely a differing emphasis ...
I wasn't suggesting this was a "differing emphasis", either.ThePhy is objecting to Bob's ignoring the BB because science never makes any claim whatever about longevity of the universe "before" the BB. So it is not true that scientists claim that matter is eternal. And this is a legitimate objection to Bob's assertions.
... or if he ...1. He insists on adding to existing scientific theory his interpretation of the world "as we don't know it" in his construction of "eternal matter."
2. He inserts the spiritual beliefs of all scientists into an "at large" community neglecting both the irrelevance and diversity of these beliefs.
3. He morphs a redirection onto "more correctly" describing how these spiritual beliefs effect scientific theory into a steering of the discussion into how his summary of these beliefs is "wrong."
He's on a divine mission. What methods are going to be out of bounds when you're on a divine mission?... twists and squirms in an attempt to turn objections from science into objections to religion all the while admitting duplicitously that scientific research is immune to religious belief.
Part of the humor of the situation will lie in that fact that calling a man like Pastor Bob (or me, for that matter) a religious zealot will just make us smile. We may correct you, and say that we are zealots for Christ, not religion, but we certainly would not be offended.You're arguing with a religious zealot, for cryin' out loud!
PureX,PureX said:I guess what I'm saying is that if you're going spar with the 'Spartans', you'd better bring more to the contest than reason and logic.
I was not intending to offend. It was a matter-of-fact statement.Lovejoy said:Part of the humor of the situation will lie in that fact that calling a man like Pastor Bob (or me, for that matter) a religious zealot will just make us smile. We may correct you, and say that we are zealots for Christ, not religion, but we certainly would not be offended.
No, I was not implying that were, not at all. I was just adding something to what you were saying, mostly to help outline the contrast you were describing.PureX said:I was not intending to offend. It was a matter-of-fact statement.
It is quite possible that this has been addressed already (I just stumbled on this thread), so excuse the potential redundancy.Turbo said:If you wanted to know why Bob dismisses the possibility that matter came into existence through natural means, you should have continued to listen for a few minutes.
It is because the laws of nature (namely, the first law of thermodynamics) logically eliminate the possibility that the matter/energy that makes up the universe came into existence naturally.
Also, Bob goes on to explain that the laws of nature (namely, the second law of thermodynamics) logically eliminate the possibility that the universe has always existed.
Therefore, since scientific discoveries about the laws of nature eliminates the possibility that the universe has always existed and the possibility that it came into existence naturally, yet the universe exists, we are only left with the possibility that the universe originately supernaturally.
taoist, I think PureX may be asking for even more than reason, logic, and whatever it is you're referring to here (sorry, I must not have a complete grasp of the immediate context). Debate with a capital "d" is a three-legged stool: argumentation (reason, logic, and evidence), communication, and persuasion. Many great debators prevail even when they don't have a lot of logical support for their position, because they know how to lean on the other two legs.taoist said:PureX,
I do. For every TOLer who's read the document I linked, there's an entire website hosting it to over a thousand members. Nor is my sharing it as widely as possible a secret. I've informed both Bob and Knight of this privately.
It pays to think numerately. Differing emphasis, indeed.
How is the BB theory not eternal matter? Seems to me it definitely is eternal matter just squished into a tiny space. At best, for ThePhy's side of the issue, you could say the BB doesn't address origins. And I would like to see a theory about a natural origin of the universe. I took plenty of calculus so dont worry (not as much as you probably, but who has? )taoist said:No mistake about it, "eternal matter" is the Steady State Model through and through. It's the rejection of "eternal matter" that provides the contrast in the Big Bang theory now acknowledged by 95 percent of living, working physicists. If you'd really love to see a physical theory about the origin of our universe, jump in with both feet. Study physics and read the current research. Develop enough mathematical maturity to at least follow the developments in string theory. If you're really interested in that side, I can point you at the proper math to put under your belt. Start out with any text calling itself "Introduction to Topology." You don't even need calculus to start. Then come ask me questions.