Nope. "Nothingness" does not have density, temperature, or spatial size.also called nothingness!!!
'Nothingness' literally has nothing.
Nope. "Nothingness" does not have density, temperature, or spatial size.also called nothingness!!!
I don't agree that first cause is strictly a philosophical question, but I see no reason to debate that now.It's very convenient for you to equate what I've been talking about with your cartoon of a wizard in a white robe. I haven't asked you any questions about wizards, Viking gods, or a god of Abraham in a white robe.
The big bang is a scientific theory that explains how the universe started to expand.
It is not a theory of what actually caused the universe.
There is no scientific theory of first cause, and there never will be because it is a philosophical question.
Religion makes very specific claims that directly conflict with what we know about physics and biology.Science and religion are asking different questions.
Nope. I addressed it multiple times. What you call a rational and lawful design based on mathematics is actually just writing equations to explain things after the fact. As I mentioned multiple times, I could drop a bucket of tennis balls off my roof and someone, with sufficient knowledge, could write an equation for every bound and movement of the balls. That doesn't mean the movement of the balls was the result of a creator's design.You're ignoring the question of why matter and energy follow mathematically rational and lawful rules.
No. I'm saying that logically explaining things after the fact doesn't mean that the thing being explained had an intelligent creator. Again, see tennis ball example.Math is a system of pure logic. Surely you're not saying something as foolish as logic and rationality just suddenly appeared by chance from the inanimate and irrational.
Ok.Einstein was famously amazed that the universe is comprehensible, mathematical, rational.
Bucket of tennis balls.The fact that you just take it for granted that the universe is lawful and rationally intelligible just suggests your education was limited to rote memorization - and you never thought about the really deep questions of ultimate reality.
It has repeatedly.Science has not disproved religion.
Meh. Ok.The fact that we can make accurate predictions of velocity, momentum, energy, and conservation tell you nothing about ultimate first cause, purpose, or meaning.
Great. A lot of people have thought a lot of things throughout history. Doesn't mean they're right.Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein both thought the rational intelligibility of the universe pointed to something really marvelous. For Newton, it was evidence of the Christian God. For Einstein it was a revelation of some type of universal Pantheism.
Nope, but even if you were right, that doesn't mean the flaws disappear. I could have read the flaws in sky writing. They're still flaws by a creator that YOU claim is so concerned about detail that it literally put rules into place to dictate how microscopic particles move.You only are aware of "design flaws" because of some atheist article you read.
The fact that I appreciate my ability to see also doesn't mean the human eye has a design flaw. The fact that I appreciate my ability to walk/move doesn't mean that the human spine and knees aren't flawed.Prior to that you took extreme delight in your eyesight and body when watching sunsets or playing golf. It didn't occur to you anything was seriously wrong.
This is all just more misdirection. It simply doesn't make sense that your creator/god would make the mistakes I mentioned.You are not thinking about the deepest level of physical reality, in which the universal physical constants and fundamental forces of physics converge at the edge of a razor blade to make complex atomic matter possible.
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The temperature at Planck density is at the upper theoretical limit of known physics, around 10^30 Kelvin from what I remember.what is the temperature of the "Planck state of reality"?
so that's a whole universe crammed into a super dense hot hair?The temperature at Planck density is at the upper theoretical limit of known physics, around 10^30 Kelvin from what I remember.
nothingess is often infinite and very hot.Nope. "Nothingness" does not have density, temperature, or spatial size.
'Nothingness' literally has nothing.

I don't think heat can precede the universe itself.Nope. "Nothingness" does not have density, temperature, or spatial size.
'Nothingness' literally has nothing.
YARPRCAA
This part is true.If you can't test it, it's not science.
This part is not. You have already denied logic multiple times. You also provide little reasoning, preferring to preach and depend on buzzwords and paradoxes instead.Almost all the decisions and choices you make in life are based on reason, logic, inference, or intuition.
Science is not an experiment.Almost none of the decisions you make in life are based on a scientific experiment.
Buzzword fallacies (rational, lawful, universe, cause, irrational, inanimate, immaterial, purposeful).You have sufficient information to tell me which of these two options makes more sense logically:
Either a rational and lawful universe was somehow caused by the irrational, inanimate, and immaterial. Or the rational and lawful can only be caused by the rational and purposeful.
Argument from randU fallacy. You deny logic. Buzzword fallacies (reason, logic, reality, matter, energy, rational, lawful, universe, higher rational, agency, organizing principle).I told you 1,000 posts ago that reason and logical inference inform me that there was more to reality than matter and energy, and that a rational and lawful universe must have some type of higher rational agency or organizing principle.
Buzzword fallacies (militant atheist, extreme, form of confirmation bias). Try English. It works better.And you are militantly atheist and practice an extreme form of confirmation bias to support your worldview. It's obvious that your reading choices are based on what you already know beforehand are going to support your worldview.
He is not an atheist.At least I have read some of the most important atheist intellectuals and authors of the 20th century.
He is not an atheist. Go learn what 'atheist' means.Until you read an article by some atheist complaining about how flawed our eyesight and joints were, if never occurred to you that anything was seriously wrong. So you are so committed to atheist belief systems that you are willing to believe an atheist article over your own intuition and daily experience of life.
Argument of the Stone fallacy. At least you agree on that one.That's the first correct thing you have said on this thread.
There is no such thing as a 'quantum field'.It is correct that science only makes accurate predictions of the effects of gravity, of quantum fields, of dark matter. It explains how nature works.
Science is not philosophy.Science does not answer the deeper philosophical questions of ultimate cause or purpose.
WRONG. It is not possible to prove any theory True. A theory of science must be testable to see if it is False. Science does not use any supporting evidence. Only religions do that."Testing is the cornerstone of the scientific method, ensuring ideas are grounded in evidence rather than dogma. To be considered scientific, a hypothesis must be testable and falsifiable."
-National Institute of Health
Science is not a method or procedure.but all science is not the scientific method.
hypothesizing is a preliminary stage of scientific thinking.
Buzzword fallacies. Go learn what these mean and where they are used. YARPThere is only the rational and the irrational.
Cliche fallacy.There is no middle, intermediate option. One can't be just a little pregnant.
Buzzword fallacies (reason, logic, rational, lawful, irrational, inanimate, immaterial). Try English. It works better.The question that keeps getting studiously avoided, is I'd like some to explain to me if it is reasonable and logical to believe the rational and lawful could be caused by the irrational, inanimate, and immaterial.
There is no such thing as a 'hypothesis of science'.Speculation and informed guesswork are not unique to science. They happen in all human thought processes.
What is unique to science is that all scientific theories and hypothesis have to be testable. Otherwise, they are not science. They are just fancy, unsubstantiated guesses.
A theory of science MUST be falsifiable, that means it MUST be testable. That test must be practical, available, specific, and produce a specific result.I didn't say they were unique science.
I said they are scientific.
theories can be scientific yet untestable.
you're an idiot who only has word games.
Redefinition fallacy.Nope. A scientific theory by definition is a hypothesis that has been tested and confirmed....or one might say it was not falsified depending on the scientific lexicon one chooses to use.
Hypothesis are not testable.I'm talking about an untestable hypothesis.
Science is not any hypothesis.that can exist and can be scientific.