The Kalam Cosmological Argument (Arguments For God Episode #4)

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  • Опубликовано: 11 апр 2017
  • The Kalam cosmological argument is always a popular one for religious apologists to pop out during debates. It's centuries old, but is a persistent one. Here's my take.
    LINKS:
    Frank Turek video: • From the Kalam to the ...
    Carneades.org on the fallacy of composition: • Russell's Objection to...
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Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @CosmicSkeptic
    @CosmicSkeptic  7 лет назад +426

    Sorry about the video cutting out twice. The video wouldn't export until I removed the beginning for some reason. . .

    • @victordanielcatalan1808
      @victordanielcatalan1808 7 лет назад +17

      CosmicSkeptic That shark though 🐬🐬

    • @vanamburgben
      @vanamburgben 7 лет назад +17

      CosmicSkeptic You should film on two cameras, then you could switch camera views and also have a backup video.Just saying man, itd help.

    • @estebangamez5695
      @estebangamez5695 7 лет назад +3

      CosmicSkeptic Loved the shark picture😂

    • @sethcaro76
      @sethcaro76 7 лет назад +2

      It is foolish to try to prove the existence of God. However, a first mover is still the simplest explanation for life, the universe and everything. Science is not going to reveal answers to questions that have no meaning, such as "what came before time?" or "what is outside of everything?"
      We'd need a hardware upgrade to understand better.
      Occam's Razor shows that the soundest thing we could do is behave as if God exists and pray for better understanding. That last part might be a joke, I'm actually not sure.

    • @giovannysilva7735
      @giovannysilva7735 7 лет назад +4

      yes pls, do one with the big bang, I never get tired of it, and hearing it from new angles is always fun

  • @cedricrobertson2893
    @cedricrobertson2893 7 лет назад +710

    That is certainly a cool shark

    • @adamas_dragon
      @adamas_dragon 7 лет назад +7

      cedric robertson NO where is the drawer

    • @turvytophat7470
      @turvytophat7470 7 лет назад +2

      Can someone name the shark though?

    • @vampyricon7026
      @vampyricon7026 7 лет назад +1

      What shark is that?

    • @mdove1803
      @mdove1803 7 лет назад +4

      TurvyTophat It's a mako shark

    • @SNORKYMEDIA
      @SNORKYMEDIA 7 лет назад +1

      Commander Salamander looks like a great white to me

  • @liyanadan6354
    @liyanadan6354 7 лет назад +407

    hey Alex, just wanted to say that you are cool as fuck😎

    • @theofficialwatermelon8583
      @theofficialwatermelon8583 7 лет назад +8

      Liya Nadan I completely agree with that

    • @sianball7664
      @sianball7664 7 лет назад +7

      Liya Nadan, your comment hit the nail on the head

    • @lewismurphy8078
      @lewismurphy8078 7 лет назад +14

      theofficialwatermelon and I'm sure the ladies find him not hard to look at

    • @mcmegz1520
      @mcmegz1520 7 лет назад +5

      preach it^^

    • @spilbeen5213
      @spilbeen5213 7 лет назад +2

      theofficialwatermelon i completely agree with you when you agreed with liya nadan when she (or posebly but probably not he)stated that alex is cool as fuck!. and that is not a single word to many!.

  • @godlessengineer
    @godlessengineer 7 лет назад +377

    I hate the cosmological argument. mainly because of the logical leap from something causing the universe to God.

    • @jordanw6918
      @jordanw6918 7 лет назад +18

      Godless Engineer it does not make that leap. The final conclusion is that the universe has a cause, not that god exists.

    • @godlessengineer
      @godlessengineer 7 лет назад +47

      No, that is not what their final conclusion is.Their final conclusion is that god is that cause.

    • @jordanw6918
      @jordanw6918 7 лет назад +6

      Godless Engineer I don't remember Craig or any other theist ever using that formulation of the argument.

    • @godlessengineer
      @godlessengineer 7 лет назад +23

      Ok... Just because you don't remember people making that case doesn't mean they didn't... People make that leap all the time. Frank Turek is notorious for that.

    • @godlessengineer
      @godlessengineer 7 лет назад +14

      lol it's called the Cosmological Argument for God's existence

  • @VicedRhino
    @VicedRhino 7 лет назад +108

    I would love to see a video on the big bang. Also more sharks.

    • @mateohedircortesvega955
      @mateohedircortesvega955 5 лет назад +1

      Holy shit, you watched this.

    • @knavesaria6715
      @knavesaria6715 4 года назад +2

      Why did nobody else reply to this? I know it happened, but it’s just strange.
      Anyway, what’s up Vices Rhino!

    • @leleltea8921
      @leleltea8921 3 года назад

      Hello sweetie 😁

    • @brightroarttttbbbb
      @brightroarttttbbbb 4 месяца назад

      Atheism, materialism, presented to people as a fashion trend, adorned with the name of freedom. Is a person who denies free? There is a God who will take account of what we do in the world. A person who provides benefits to people who do good will be rewarded in Heaven. A person who does cruelty and injustice will be punished. Most of the world believes in God, prays, prostrates and is at peace. It is Allah who gives. Islam says that Allah exists and is one. Muslims are brothers, they love each other and support each other.

  • @Lollypopgurl12345
    @Lollypopgurl12345 7 лет назад +712

    Please do a video on the big bang!! Too many of my theist friends claim its only a theory and there is no proof. I would love to send them a 10 minute video explaining why the big bang is scientific fact, since I'm no astrologist and I'm afraid of explaining it wrong or making points that are easily countered. Thanks Alex!

    • @G274Me
      @G274Me 7 лет назад +136

      Shiri Zeevi
      It is a theory. Your friend(s) just do not understand the difference between a theory and a hypothesis, and should maybe touch up on a high school science book.

    • @laurieanthony1556
      @laurieanthony1556 7 лет назад +1

      That would be epic!

    • @guytheincognito4186
      @guytheincognito4186 7 лет назад +48

      Shiri Zeevi
      Know this, a scientific theory is different from a theory.
      A *scientific theory* is an explanation of some aspect of the natural world that can, in accordance with the scientific method, be repeatedly tested, using a predefined protocol of observations and experiments. Established scientific theories have withstood rigorous scrutiny and are a comprehensive form of scientific knowledge.
      It is important to note that the definition of a
      "scientific theory"
      (often ambiguously contracted to "theory" for the sake of Brevity) as used in the disciplines of science is significantly different from the common vernacular usage of the word "theory". In everyday non-scientific speech, "theory" can imply that something is an unsubstantiated and speculative guess, conjecture, idea, or, hypothesis; such a usage is the opposite of the word "theory" in science. These different usages are comparable to the differing, and often opposing, usages of the term "prediction" in science versus "prediction" in vernacular speech, denoting a mere hope.

    • @adatta3046
      @adatta3046 7 лет назад +16

      Shiri Zeevi Unfortunately most people have absolutely no idea what the big bang is even about and then use strawmen to try and discredit it. These falsifications are then propagated through the general public and create this "just a theory" rationale and so the actual ideas behind the theory are not even offered to most school kids and most remain ignorant.

    • @404namemissing6
      @404namemissing6 7 лет назад +53

      Shiri Zeevi an astrologist predicts the future using the stars.
      An astronomer is what you call the scientist.
      Just to let you know.

  • @alph1526
    @alph1526 7 лет назад +354

    im always amazed by how smart and articulate you are, while stil sounding nice and respectful. I believe I'm about your age (im 18) and the students that I meet on a daily basis who are interested in science and atheism are incredibly arrogant. Most of them don't want to communicate or exchange, they want to show off their knowledge. Thank you for not being one of them!

    • @Chribit
      @Chribit 7 лет назад +16

      alphonsine Anders
      true. I find it most idiotic if some hardcore atheists start talking about religious people "forcing their beliefs on everyone" while forcing the atheistic viewpoint on everyone...
      like... I'm not religious... but I'll still listen to anyone as long as they talk in a clear respectful manner... which is something a lot of atheists can't do either.

    • @alph1526
      @alph1526 7 лет назад +13

      Im just talking about my experience here, of course extremists cannot be reasoned with kindness but most young people in western society are actually open to discuss these types of things. But they won't listen if we talk to them like they are a bunch of idiots

    • @BinShayor
      @BinShayor 7 лет назад

      Neptune ! this is why no one takes you seriously (i'm agnostic)

    • @lDanielHolm
      @lDanielHolm 7 лет назад +4

      He's 17, I believe. (Not aware of when his birthday is, so he might be 18 by now.)

    • @Amplifyafly
      @Amplifyafly 7 лет назад +1

      Beppe I'm almost certain he's second year A-levels, so 17 or 18. I'd be flattered if someone thought i was in my 20s as a 17 year old though

  • @DrMustacheQueen
    @DrMustacheQueen 7 лет назад +50

    As a Muslim it's really refreshing to be able to watch an atheist point of view about God without bashing etc. I think the world would be a better place if theists and atheists were able to have a calm discussion about this, just like this video. I really enjoyed this. This is the first video of yours I've come across, but I'm definitely checking out your other videos. You make great points :)

    • @alipk2633
      @alipk2633 9 месяцев назад

      You still a Muslim?

    • @----f
      @----f 8 месяцев назад +1

      Lol I'm Muslim too and Alex is absolutely right. He seems to be critiquing a Christian articulation of the KCA. For us, the KCA can only really prove some privative attributes of the necessary existence. It's just one argument for the cumulative case for God. Other attributes of God are revealed by revelation. I'm watching this video to supplement my Why Islam is True course by Hamza Karamali. I recommend it to you as well

    • @elprofesor8571
      @elprofesor8571 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@----f👍🏻

    • @redrob6026
      @redrob6026 7 месяцев назад

      I think most people are reasonable and can reasonably have a discussion. For example, I'm and atheist and work with many people who are religious. I don't throw mud at them, I'm interested in their beliefs and can comfortably talk about my views with them without offending them.

  • @rationalityrules
    @rationalityrules 7 лет назад +110

    Awesome as always. Great job Alex! : )

    • @jarl8815
      @jarl8815 4 года назад +6

      Alex doesn't think so anymore. 😆

    • @goktug5976
      @goktug5976 3 года назад

      @@jarl8815 what do u mean

    • @jarl8815
      @jarl8815 3 года назад +2

      @@goktug5976 He made a video about how this video is full of bad arguments. He debunked himself basically.

    • @goktug5976
      @goktug5976 3 года назад

      @@jarl8815 okay can u give me a link or type down the title

    • @jarl8815
      @jarl8815 3 года назад

      @@goktug5976 ruclips.net/video/MGJq5C9wuzk/видео.html

  • @carson3370
    @carson3370 7 лет назад +53

    Damn, that's one cool ass shark.

    • @emerydo5937
      @emerydo5937 7 лет назад +7

      a very fine specimen of the marine organisms, if I can say so myself

  • @jesuschrist6979
    @jesuschrist6979 7 лет назад +32

    How did he find me out...SHIT

  • @troyschulz2318
    @troyschulz2318 7 лет назад +26

    Just for the record Alex, you're quickly becoming one of my favourite skeptic channels.

  • @blubear1225
    @blubear1225 7 лет назад +47

    I miss the chest of drawers in the background

  • @evingmadeez5008
    @evingmadeez5008 7 лет назад +186

    YES... I'm always down for a big bang!!

  • @JoshuaPlays99
    @JoshuaPlays99 7 лет назад +6

    Yes I'd love to see a video on the big bang. I've watched everyone of your videos so far and I've loved each and everyone of them!

  • @cush6827
    @cush6827 7 лет назад +40

    "Whatever begins to exist has a cause"
    Example?
    No thing in this universe ever just begins to exist. Every thing is only a transformation of something existing before, including vacuum. The same may be true for the universe itself.

    • @cush6827
      @cush6827 7 лет назад +2

      You are missing the point.

    • @jignaio5762
      @jignaio5762 5 лет назад +14

      Boats begin to exist by people. Just because a boat is rearranged wood doesn't mean a boat and the tree it came from are the same thing.

    • @tadm123
      @tadm123 5 лет назад +6

      Anyone know what video is this objection coming from? I seen atheist repeat this so it must have come from somewhere else, even though it's a horrible argument ,essentially you would be saying that yourself always existed even before you were born.
      The stuff that a thing is made is not the same as the thing itself.

    • @SC-zq6cu
      @SC-zq6cu 4 года назад +4

      The things in this thread that are shown as examples of things that began to exist because the stuff that makes them is not the same as themselves and thus seemingly counteracting op's point are things that are defined by the arrangement/transformation of the stuff that makes them. The Universe unfortunately doesn't fall into that category. So, a better iteration of op's question:
      What is an example of something that doesnt owe it's existence to an arrangement/transformation to something else, beginning to exist ?
      There is none we know of, because such an example would violate the law of conservation of mass-energy.

    • @SC-zq6cu
      @SC-zq6cu 4 года назад +3

      @The True World
      Except universe isn't just objects of matter. You have to account for fundamental particles, space and time as well which unfortunately have never been seen to just begin existing. Among these only the first one has ever been seen to transform. Your amendment solves nothing.

  • @taterthot9639
    @taterthot9639 7 лет назад +1

    This channel has quickly become one of my favorites ❤️ great job on your videos. They're all great!

  • @Tracks777
    @Tracks777 7 лет назад +16

    Lovely content! Please keep going, one day you make it big

  • @dionysis_
    @dionysis_ 4 года назад +17

    Well, I think after Alex’s latest episode with William Lane Craig we all know that his refutation does not hold. Looking forward to his re-examining of the proof.

    • @joannagriffiths9405
      @joannagriffiths9405 4 года назад +2

      you literally predicted the future

    • @dionysis_
      @dionysis_ 4 года назад

      @@joannagriffiths9405 😂

    • @jejoisland9182
      @jejoisland9182 4 года назад +1

      Woooooooooow Dude mad respect! Predicting the future like it aint notthn but a thaaaaang

  • @TestTest-hl3em
    @TestTest-hl3em 5 лет назад +10

    Hi CosmicSkeptic,
    the contingency argument does not rely on cause and effect in the domain of time. this is a common mistake some people make. it relies on logical cause rather than temporal cause. i.e it utilizes PSR (principle of sufficient reason)

    • @joecurran2811
      @joecurran2811 3 месяца назад

      ​@skygardener7849Aristotle correctly predicted dolphins were mammals, not fish

    • @cdsmith0917
      @cdsmith0917 8 дней назад

      ​@@joecurran2811Aristotle also thought the lungs simply existed to cool the heart.

  • @sydneyburckert1016
    @sydneyburckert1016 7 лет назад +2

    When I see your videos it always makes my day. Keep being awesome!!

  • @kurisudeiru
    @kurisudeiru 7 лет назад +22

    What if the Big Bang happened not because of a force, instead by the sudden absence of contracting force, like when you release a compressed sponge from your hands? Doesn't it mean that force isn't actually needed for there to be a big bang?

    • @AliJr_MetalGames_MetalGuitar
      @AliJr_MetalGames_MetalGuitar 7 лет назад +1

      Christian Dale Faustino best food for my brain, I'm full. Now : D

    • @bp4freak
      @bp4freak 7 лет назад +6

      (Short version below)
      For the exact moment of the Big Bang, force wouldn't be needed. To get the exact circumstances to make it happen you need force. The problem is that time and space are linked. Time is a measure of the changes to matter. This means that without matter, you can't have time. Matter itself didn't exist until some time after the Big Bang, at the exact moment of the Big Bang, everything was pure energy.
      For a compressing force, you need something to apply it, that something takes up space, but space was compressed into a singularity of infinitely small size. Before the Big Bang, time didn't exist so there was no 'before the Big Bang'.
      Short version: There was no space (it was compressed into an infinitely small singularity, so there was no time (space and time are linked, time is defined as changed to space), so there was no 'before the Big Bang', so there couldn't have been anything applying force before it.

    • @TheGeneralJos
      @TheGeneralJos 7 лет назад +2

      SpiritWolf2K Well that's not definite. We don't know that for sure. In fact that concept is a proper hypothesis with a proper name. It's called the Big Bounce. This cosmological model was derived to find an answer to the origin and end to the universe. This hypothesis states the universe is in a constant cycle of expanding and contracting forever. This hypothesis, however, isn't supported by science. Currently, we know the universe is expanding. We also know by the Doppler effect that galaxies are moving away from each other. They're not just moving away from each other, they're accelerating away from each other, as if something is pushing (or pulling) galaxies faster and faster, and because of this, we know the universe isn't slowing down. If it isn't slowing down, there's very little chance the Big Crunch or the Big Bounce is true. Another hypothesis for the end of the universe is the Big Rip in which space will be expanding so fast that the fabric of space time will literally rip. This would be catastrophic and would end the universe. This is supported by String Theory, but not General Relativity which states that time and space can bend, twist, curve, etc. but not tear. The most supported hypothesis is Heat Death (the first one without the word Big in it lol). This hypothesis states that space will become so expansive, a photon of light will travel through space and never meet any other photon or particle or wave in its lifetime. Also, all matter will have evaporated into energy. We're talking a time so far away from now, all black holes will have evaporated into nothingness due to Hawking Radiation. But the reason for this universe ever expanding and never collapsing on itself is due to either Dark Energy or Einstein's Theory of General Relativity not being an accurate model of gravity.

    • @tinybullfrog1955
      @tinybullfrog1955 7 лет назад +1

      +spiritwolf2k I actually like to think this cycle happens, because otherwise we are spiraling toward universal heat death, and that is terrifyingly inescapable.

    • @tinybullfrog1955
      @tinybullfrog1955 7 лет назад +2

      And the expansion of the universe is actually supported by general relativity: they aren't moving apart, space is stretching (a weird distinction).

  • @marshallkarl7956
    @marshallkarl7956 7 лет назад +9

    I'm 16 and also atheist! My parents raised me as an atheist but I enjoy how although you were brought up in a christian family, you do not bash or discredit believers in "God". I feel its people such as yourself that will help pull back the veil that seems to be put over atheists and our beliefs.
    Thank you loads for making these videos, and I can't wait for your channel to hit 100k subscribers!
    Marshall

  • @connormcflurry6708
    @connormcflurry6708 4 года назад +2

    Alex, you inspired me to learn new stuff and you taught me how to think about an argument to debunk it. I started using your thinking techniques and I saw very good results in my school debates when they threw an argument at me. Thank you, and I cant wait till you get to 1 million. I'll always watch your vids, thanks you very much. You are my hero and you inspire me soo much. All I want to say is
    THANK YOU.

    • @chandrajeet2315
      @chandrajeet2315 2 года назад

      A truly unsatisfactory argument against the kalam cosmology from Connor. Given the universe is finite it IS subjected to the same principle of causation and thus necessitates an uncaused cause. And of course you can't apply that to the god of Christianity who claims to have become flesh, similar for hindu concepts of God. The only two religions which claims this claim and still holds ground is Judaism and Islam where in God is the only eternal entity with a consciousness or will to choose universe(s). Now, someone just have to iron out which one of these two are more universal and the religion of the future

    • @lambsauce8937
      @lambsauce8937 Год назад

      @@chandrajeet2315 how do you know the universe is finite?

  • @loodlebop
    @loodlebop 7 лет назад

    nailed it again man! also thanks for making this so accessible to everyone and explaining yourself so well without being rude or patronising

  • @tylergarcia6335
    @tylergarcia6335 7 лет назад +9

    I still have a hard time understanding the Big Bang, so I would love for you to make a video about it.

  • @sexhaver6503
    @sexhaver6503 7 лет назад

    just finished binge watching your entire channel. great night man keep them videos coming please.

  • @stephenvanburen1818
    @stephenvanburen1818 7 лет назад +1

    I would really enjoy a big bang video! Also I love your work.

  • @gavsmith1980
    @gavsmith1980 7 лет назад +40

    We know that causality is universal, people defending the kalam are assuming that causality is EXTRA universal, so they need to defend that premise.

    • @arefallout
      @arefallout 7 лет назад

      gavsmith1980 Actually No. We know causality seems to only affect massive (relative to single atoms) objects. Single particals have been observed acting with no detectible cause. And beside how do you apply logic to a time when there was no kind of physics....

    • @gavsmith1980
      @gavsmith1980 7 лет назад +8

      "Single particals have been observed acting with no detectible cause"
      My point being, even for the sake of philosophical argument with people ignorant of quantum phenomena, you can make a mockery of the kalam even in the macroscopic world.
      "And beside how do you apply logic to a time when there was no kind of physics...."
      ...that was my point in the first place, except you've kinda made the same mistake as kalam apologists do - assumed there was "time."

    • @pilgrimpater
      @pilgrimpater 7 лет назад

      AreFallout
      "No kind of Physics"? Why not consider a totally different "kind of Physics" to the "kind of Physics" to that of our universe?

    • @gavsmith1980
      @gavsmith1980 7 лет назад +8

      The point remains - our logic is based on current physics, trying to apply that logic where those physics aren't true, is known as the fallacy of composition.

    • @clintonwilcox4690
      @clintonwilcox4690 7 лет назад +3

      That's not the fallacy of composition, at all. The fallacy of composition is arguing that what is true of all the parts is true of the whole (e.g. "Every musician on stage is an excellent performer; therefore, the orchestra must be an excellent orchestra").

  • @anthonia7930
    @anthonia7930 2 года назад +3

    "Even if the cosmological argument was true, which I'll try to prove you it is not, it still won't confirm the existence of your own particular God " Hands down, favourite sentence.

  • @MrMacD069
    @MrMacD069 7 лет назад

    I truly enjoy your videos. Thank you for sharing your knowledge! It revitalizes my faith in humanity to watch these!

  • @DocBree13
    @DocBree13 7 лет назад +1

    You are such an impressive, articulate young man - what a bright future you have in front of you! I just discovered your channel and I'm thoroughly enjoying watching your videos.

  • @jamiethegaymie
    @jamiethegaymie 7 лет назад +10

    I would love to see that Big Bang video! Please and thank you :3

  • @alexs.9912
    @alexs.9912 7 лет назад +4

    your channel is so entertaining

  • @lenaevess
    @lenaevess 7 лет назад +1

    I really like your outro, simple and calm. It's nice that you dont have some music booming in the end, birdsong is cool :)

  • @sonjahyvarinen7692
    @sonjahyvarinen7692 7 лет назад +1

    i love your channel, your videos are great, keep going💙

  • @dx-vc4kt
    @dx-vc4kt 7 лет назад +9

    A video on the big bang theory would be great.

  • @aidanwiseman1655
    @aidanwiseman1655 7 лет назад +26

    You actually look a little bit like Hitchens did - if you're destroying religion with naturally fluent and structured arguments at 18, your hitchslaps in 20 years will be fucking next level :')
    Keep doing what you're doing dude this is awesome.

    • @chandrajeet2315
      @chandrajeet2315 2 года назад +1

      A truly unsatisfactory argument against the kalam cosmology from Connor. Given the universe is finite it IS subjected to the same principle of causation and thus necessitates an uncaused cause. And of course you can't apply that to the god of Christianity who claims to have become flesh, similar for hindu concepts of God. The only two religions which claims this claim and still holds ground is Judaism and Islam where in God is the only eternal entity with a consciousness or will to choose universe(s). Now, someone just have to iron out which one of these two are more universal and the religion of the future

    • @ConsumeristScroffa
      @ConsumeristScroffa 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@chandrajeet2315Moreover, when you do a rebuttal you can't hide behind the fact that this is only a rebuttal. For if you claim that the universe didn't necessarily need a cause, you suggest that it's possible it didn't have one, aka it came from nothing, which is fallacious. The reason why I love the Kalam argument is that there is no escape from it. Atheists will either have to accept it or make fallacies to cope.

  • @Paratus.
    @Paratus. 7 лет назад +1

    Alex, your videos are fantastic. I can really appreciate the academic feel to them and the fact that you don't completely bash the theists that you cover. Great job!

  • @elliot20201
    @elliot20201 7 лет назад +1

    Alex, I love your videos so much! You're so calmly logical about it, and don't make it out to be a miserably, godless world. It feels so hopeful. I would love it if you made a video on evidence for the big bang!!

  • @randyohm3445
    @randyohm3445 7 лет назад +2

    I think a more succinct argument might be that despite the word games played by the Kalam version of this argument, it still argues for the existence of an uncaused cause. If it is possible for something to exist without actually *beginning* to exist and without a cause, then there is no reason to presuppose that the pre-big-bang universe doesn't qualify. If you allow for God to exist without cause, then you cannot effectively claim that the universe cannot perform the same trick. This argument is self-defeating from the get-go.

  • @maybe11349
    @maybe11349 7 лет назад +7

    I would love a video on the proofs of the big bang

  • @danielkaz7751
    @danielkaz7751 7 лет назад +1

    Love your videos watching for a long time, first time commenting sorry it's taken so long but please what do you have on the Big Bang, would love to see it. Again love what you are doing don't stop being you and one word of knowledge I have I share with everyone, laugh everyday! Your smile makes a lot of people happy including me, don't stop being you.

  • @victoriaQsevy
    @victoriaQsevy 7 лет назад

    Hey Alex,
    I just discovered your RUclips channel the other day and I am powering through all of your videos. I'm a big fan of Matt Dillahunty, and that's probably how you popped up in my recommendations.
    I just wanted to thank you for all of your thoughtful, well worded arguments. One of my favorite ways to pass time is listening to these types of videos, but only when done respectfully, which you definitely have done. I really enjoy listening to them, and I am really impressed with your knowledge of science. Keep up the great work! And keep the videos coming. ;)

  • @jaywhoisit4863
    @jaywhoisit4863 7 лет назад +3

    Would really enjoy a Big Bang video. But please discuss the multiverse and string theories that attempt to explain the possible causes.

  • @nicolestar756
    @nicolestar756 7 лет назад +3

    Hi, I've discovered this channel recently, and I'd like to say that I love your videos! I hope this does not sound too silly, but they've really helped me get over my past fears of hell. (I grew up in a Christian family.) Do you think you could make a video about your view on near-death experiences? I understand that there's scientific explanations for these, but they still make me uncomfortable and bring back my fears of hell. I'd like to see what you'd say about it. Thanks! :)

    • @mr.sneakyman1267
      @mr.sneakyman1267 2 года назад

      hey i would look into david wood or nabeel qurishi

    • @cilo6962
      @cilo6962 25 дней назад

      do you still uphold this view( im a christian myself, and apologize for what the church wrongly did to you doctrine wise)

  • @Sillidong
    @Sillidong 7 лет назад

    Hey Alex! I love your videos, and you just continue to amaze me. And yes, I would love to see a video on proofs of the big bang. I've already encountered some, but I think you have a great way of explaining stuff, so again; I would love to see a video on that topic :)
    Btw, coolest shark I've ever seen \m/

  • @theorycel
    @theorycel 7 лет назад

    Just wanted to say that I find your videos very refreshing and that I appreciate your work. I would also really like to see a video on the big bang.

  • @Saintly
    @Saintly 7 лет назад +4

    Please do the proof of the big bang video. So many people always say atheists have no proof for it and I'd love to be able to direct them to one of your videos than spend an excessive amount of time explaining it to each and every person

  • @budd2nd
    @budd2nd 7 лет назад +3

    Yes , please do a Big Bang video. As for the shark, it totally side tracked my brain. Brain was singing "Reggae shark" . Made listening to you difficult. Lol

    • @Shake69ification
      @Shake69ification 5 лет назад

      Better "Reggae shark" than "Baby shark" I suppose.

  • @DavidF-fe7zs
    @DavidF-fe7zs 7 лет назад +1

    I'd love to see a video focusing on the big bang or how our universe exists. It fascinates me, great work Alex :)

  • @charbelabikhalil830
    @charbelabikhalil830 7 лет назад

    It's amazing how much intellect you can compress into one video,I would love to see that in a video about the Turin shroud and the controversy around it.
    Love your videos Alex,keep it up

    • @oldpossum57
      @oldpossum57 2 месяца назад

      No offence, but what controversy. It is an anonymous medieval part work that may simply have been made as a devotional object, or could have been a fraud from the outset. (The pEmperor’s Last Suit of Clothes?) Who knows? It is excellent for fund raising. Failing a shroud, other businesses have found stains on walls, burn marks on toast to draw in the credulous.

  • @OryGold
    @OryGold 7 лет назад +10

    And yes please make a Big Bang video.

  • @anthonynuzzo9512
    @anthonynuzzo9512 5 лет назад +3

    Neither Thomas Aquinas, nor any of the Theologians of the Scholastic Tradition, nor Augustine nor any of the Patristics ever formulated a deductive argument where one of the premises was cast in such a way as to suggest that "everything has a cause...." as claimed by Cosmic Skeptic. He is patently incorrect. I'm not sure how an individual can take a position contra another position without first understanding what he is objecting to........

  • @alexhonk2447
    @alexhonk2447 7 лет назад

    hay man. haven't been around a lot, but i really enjoy your content :) keep it up

  • @SuperMegaBA
    @SuperMegaBA 7 лет назад +1

    YES!!! Please do a proofs of the big bang video I would love to see that. Thanks for your great content!!

  • @ubergenie6041
    @ubergenie6041 5 лет назад +3

    2;28 There is a world of difference between proving some kind of cause and God.
    Yes. That is why Craig always shares the causal analysis. We can't use time, space, matter or energy to create our universe since they began to exist when our universe began or later. He asks his audience do we have any being we know of that is uncaused? Abstract objects, and God. Abstract object are causally effete. God is the only timeless, spaceless, immaterial, being that is powerful enough to account for the creation.
    And if we want to punt to a universe generator multiverse we have only punted the problem backward according to Borde Guth Vilenken.

    • @oldpossum57
      @oldpossum57 2 месяца назад

      “God is the only timeless, spaceless, immaterial, being that is powerful enough to account for the creation.” Except that is defining god into being. You can’t motivate a God by assuming it.
      BGV say that WLC Misunderstands the theorem,.
      I respond at length to the problems of WLC and Kalām elsewhere.

  • @jordanw6918
    @jordanw6918 7 лет назад +37

    Love your channel Alex, but I do want to say a few things about your objections to Kalam:
    1. The argument has never been an argument for the existence of any god, specific or not. It has always been an argument for a first cause, which is later given reasons why this first cause is personal and necessary. So the objection that it does not prove "god" is not a substantial one.
    2. The objection to premise one using the leaf analogy presumes a natural existence (gravity), which is part of the natural world and must be explained based on Kalam unless you are appealing to some infinite physical law.
    3. Craig argues for why any existent universe must be finite. The borde, guth, vilenkin theorem proves why any universe in expansion must have a beginning, no matter how many there are.
    4. The fallacy of composition objection is not applicable unless the proponent justifies the first premise with our experience of things beginning to exist, and neither Craig nor Turek, nor al Ghazali did. They justify the first premise from a metaphysical principle, that nothing can come into being from nothing without a cause.
    I think to avoid any possible objections to objections of Kalam, you have to play by the theists rules. But there are good reasons why the Kalam argument fails other than the fallacy of composition.
    1. The problem of a temporal absence prior to the universe. For any change to occur, in any world, a temporal dimension must exist. This means that for any cause I initiate, there is an infinite number of temporal points leading successively to a point of creation and an infinite number of temporal points leading after the location of creation. The point of creation we shall call t=0, and before any such point there does not exist the cause and after there does exist the cause. Now, as a free agent who makes choices before he actualizes any cause, god chooses to create. Now, for god to choose to create, he would have to do so before creating, otherwise he could never freely choose to do so. But for god to choose to create and then causally act, he would have to traverse a moment in time, for there is an obvious change in the steps of not choosing to choosing and from not creating to creating. However this poses an immediate problem: there exists no time beyond our four dimensional universe, and therefore god literally could never have chose to create or cause anything.
    [before the theist objects, ask why the universe could not have brought itself into existence? The answer will be that the universe did not exist before it existed, and to create itself, a being necessarily must exist prior to its existence or creation. If this is the case, then the theist has justified the objection because this conclusion puts temporal restraints on god.]
    2. Any thing which is caused to begin existing is done so by affecting a thing or things which are not yet what is being caused to begin existing, but what will be the thing in question. For example, if I want to make a pizza, I cannot act upon nothing to create the pizza. Think about it, how absurd would it be for me to, instead of hearing the oven and rolling the dough, just cup my hands and say "I really want a pizza," then poof a pizza is born? This would mean that I have causally affected the absence of any thing to become something. But the absence of any thing remains in absence. You cannot cause a not existent being to do anything, a nonexistent being remains nonexistent.
    The second problem can be summarized in my counter cosmological argument, which is the basic principle that no being, no matter how powerful, can affect nothing, the absence of anything, to become something. I will leave the argument for last.
    So when theists point to a magic trick like "a flame poofing in your hand" (a reference to a discussion Richard Dawkins had once when a caller used an analogy to cupping your hands and creating fire out of nothing, stating that it was absurd to believe her atheists believe it. I thought it was a perfect argument for atheism) and comparing this to the atheist worldview, they are essentially providing a perfect argument for atheists.
    3. The immediate reaction to such argument (counter cosmological) is to say atheists believe the universe began to exist from nothing and by nothing and that this is more unreasonable. Let me explain why this is a false conception of the atheist view: if it is the case that the Big Bang was the boundary before which nothing existed, then it is incoherent to speak of any temporal, spatial, or material state prior to. This implies, then, that the universe did not "begin" to exist, rather it has always existed. It is eternal . It exists at every point in every direction at every time. This means, then, that when you look at the history of the universe is look into the past infinite: every temporal step leading infinitely into the past. This is not an actual infinite, that should not be mistaken, but a potential infinite. Think of it as an asymptote on a graph reaching a limit. It approaches, but never reaches the line. So, we can say then that every event leads infinitely into the past to a limit (the limit being the singularity), and each event is caused by earlier events (past seconds, and fractions of seconds, and fractions of fractions of seconds), and each and every one of these states is causally explained by earlier events. Because the universe as a whole is equal to its composite parts, and each part is causally explained by a prior state, then the universe is sufficiently explained without an external cause. Thus, the universe is explained without god.
    *Counter-cosmological argument*
    1) nothing which exists can cause that which does not exist to begin existing out of nothing.
    2) given (1), anything which begins to exist from nothing was not caused to do so by something which exists
    3) the universe began to exist from nothing
    4) given (2 and 3), the universe was not caused to exist by anything which exists
    5) god caused the universe to begin to exist
    6) from 4 and 5, god does not exist.

    • @pipsdontlie3031
      @pipsdontlie3031 7 лет назад +9

      1. Why does God play by the rules. He's (at least supposedly) omnipotent. Why does he need to take time to act? Isn't that limiting his (supposed) omnipotence.
      2. Once again, omnipotence. You're limiting God by saying God cannot make something from nothing or cause something from nothing.
      3. I do think it is more unreasonable, but that isn't why these objections are false. As for the eternal thing. Eternal means without beginning or end. If the universe, as we know it, began to exist, which if we say the Big Bang is the beginning of it's existence, we are admitting. It is not "eternal" because it exists at the same moment time does, as it still begins to exist. As for it being possible for an infinite regress, well sure, if the second law of thermodynamics didn't exist. Are you proposing that either A) The universe (being defined as literally all that exists) is not an isolated system, or B) That at one point (infinite ago) there was infinite amount of heat, though that sort of defies the concept of absolute hot. Even if you say the Universe were infinite, that still doesn't mathematically stop heat from infinitely filling it up. It seems rather impossible to me, unless of course the laws of the universe
      haven't always been around for the universe to have always been around. You can't really have infinite cause and effect if there is nothing for cause and effect to happen to.
      Your argument is good, except the first premise is false according to most believers in God. You can't logically say that an Omnipotent being cannot create something from nothing.

    • @jordanw6918
      @jordanw6918 7 лет назад

      Galvanized Gamer 1. To be a free, thinking entity who chooses to create, god must choose before he acts. God can cause the universe and the universe can be caused at the same time, but it is logically impossible for god to choose to create at the same time he creates. A choice necessarily comes prior to the action. This is a logical necessity, which means god is bounded by it. Omnipotence only means he is able to do all that is logically possible, not possible and impossible.
      2.I justify this with an argument, and so you must dispute the argument before you say that it is possible for ex nihilo creation to occur. The metaphysical intuition that nothing remains nothing no matter how much any all-powerful entity wants it to become something is as strong to me as the fact that 1+1=2, and I see no justification for the opposite.
      3. Here you completely misunderstand my justification for a "self-caused" universe (Quentin Smith). I am not arguing for an ACTUALLY infinite universe, that would violate the second law of thermodynamics and it would go against modern cosmology. But I am not arguing for that, rather I am arguing that since there is no first moment in time before which there is another smaller moment, and sincere sum of all moments of time and causal intervals in the universe equal the whole of the universe, it follows that every interval is explained by a prior one, and there is no interval which is not explained by a prior one given the physical and mathematical implications of what's called the "singularity" (a thing which itself does not possibly exist, at least as a part of the universe). I said in my comment that it should not be mistaken: this is not an ACTUAL infinity, but a POTENTIAL infinity, I even gave an analogy for it.
      Read "Theism, Atheism, and Big Bang Cosmology" by William Lane Craig and Quentin Smith, or for a short version, this philosophical paper:
      infidels.org/library/modern/quentin_smith/self-caused.html

    • @pipsdontlie3031
      @pipsdontlie3031 7 лет назад +1

      1. You are still arguing that God is bound by something. You are making the same silly argument that other theists make in response to the Omniptence paradox, that God cannot do the logically impossible. I do not see why that assumption is at all true. If God is omnipotent, he should be able to do anything, that includes making rocks so heavy he can't lift and making square circles. If God is bound by logic, he is not A) Omnipotent and B) Supreme, as logic precedes him.
      2.I don't hold to this metaphysical intuition. I hold to the intuition that there was nothing and that there is now something and that obviously there must have been Someone to bring that change about. It isn't intuition, it is rationalization. Omnipotence means one can do anything, including the impossible. To negate that is to limit omnipotence, which is of course making omnipotence not omnipotence.
      3. I apologize, I clearly didn't read thoroughly enough before rebutting your argument. Do you then assume then that there is no smallest interval of time? I don't really make this assumption, but if you want to, I guess you can assume this. I just wouldn't really use theoretical limits to try to disprove non theoretical knowledge, especially when it is not generally accepted.

    • @turvytophat7470
      @turvytophat7470 7 лет назад +3

      I'm sorry but I'm not going to read all that on a school night, I'm shore it was grate

    • @ashygfriend6784
      @ashygfriend6784 7 лет назад +5

      The concept of omnipotence is illogical from the beginning. And if we aren't going to use logic and reasoning to prove the existence of God, what else can we use? (And notice how this is only beginning to address the POSSIBILITY of a God, it's nowhere close to definitively PROVING a SPECIFIC God.)

  • @markrischowsky5610
    @markrischowsky5610 7 лет назад

    Great job as always! I would love to see that Big Bang video if you find the time!

  • @coolguy9869
    @coolguy9869 7 лет назад

    A big bang video would be awesome! I love your content, by the way.

  • @bavarianpotato
    @bavarianpotato 7 лет назад +5

    sure do a video about the big bang
    Maybe that could start a series about science.

  • @yeahnahatheist9776
    @yeahnahatheist9776 5 лет назад +4

    What I can't understand about theists like Turek who argue that "in order for something to transition from nothing to something, there needed to be a conscious being to initiate that transition", is that they are quite literally stating that there WAS something before the Big Bang, that something being the conscious deity responsible for the comeuppance of the universe. How can the very principle of 'nothing' exist at all if 'something' already does? I don't think it can.
    No one knows what came before the big bang, so it's not at all dishonest to simply say 'we don't know' and leave it at that until a great scientific discovery informs us further.

    • @eroszakos9042
      @eroszakos9042 5 лет назад +1

      Your problem can be cleared up if you just know what exactly they mean by "something."
      When a theist says there was at one point "nothing" what they mean is that there was nothing "physical" (including empty space.) When discussing "God" we're not talking about a physical thing. God exists outside of the universe and the argument is that God made the universe from outside of any sort of existence He specifically exists in.
      So it's "nothing natural existed before the big bang, but something supernatural did."

    • @yeahnahatheist9776
      @yeahnahatheist9776 5 лет назад +3

      I always saw something/nothing as antonyms, just like black/white, odd/even, etc. so does a conscious supernatural being still qualify as 'something'? Simply being non-physical doesn't constitute 'nothing'. If God is something, such a being cannot exist alongside nothing as he in himself is 'something' and any further creations he completes are derived from an already exisiting 'something', that being himself. Even if his creation is seperate from his existence, it still ultimately traces back to him who is 'something'. If he is nothing, then he doesn't exist, there isn't any other way to look at it.

    • @eroszakos9042
      @eroszakos9042 5 лет назад +1

      @@yeahnahatheist9776 I think you've created a false binary here, and as philosophers like Nietzsche would tell you, it isn't doing you any favours.
      So, yeah, you're right, something does always exist (God) but other things that are not God (such as the universe) don't have to exist.
      I guess an analogy would be that certain things come into existence from others. Like if you take pieces of wood, the pieces of wood can be made into a chair, but the chair doesn't exist just because of the wood. So, with God and the universe. God can make using His power the universe, but the universe does not have to exist. You get what I'm saying?
      "it still ultimately traces back to him who is 'something'. If he is nothing, then he doesn't exist, there isn't any other way to look at it."
      You're right here. But when somebody says the universe was created "ex nihilo" it means that it wasn't created out of anything physical already in existence, just God.

    • @yeahnahatheist9776
      @yeahnahatheist9776 5 лет назад +2

      @@eroszakos9042 "I think you've created a false binary here, and as philosophers like Nietzsche would tell you, it isn't doing you any favours."
      Bit of a meaningless statement, but please explain why you think something/nothing is a false binary?
      "Like if you take pieces of wood, the pieces of wood can be made into a chair, but the chair doesn't exist just because of the wood."
      But the chair does exist because of the wood? I think I see what you're saying, but I don't think you've worded it right. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think you're saying "the wood exists independent of whether the chair exists, but the chair is dependant on the wood existing" and therefore "God is independent on the universe existing, but the universe is dependant on God".
      "But when somebody says the universe was created "ex nihilo" it means that it wasn't created out of anything physical already in existence, just God"
      Ex nihilo means 'out of nothing', so are you saying God is that 'nothing' or is he still 'something'? This is also a God of the gaps fallacy, just inserting God as an explanation for what we don't yet comprehend.
      I think you may have slightly missed the point of my original comment. My point was to highlight that something and nothing cannot coexist, whereas I think you are arguing that things that do exist are dependant on it's components, which if not together results in the non-existence (nothing) of the object (your chair analogy). This is a seperate argument. I should also point out that the components of the chair are still 'something', and this reasoning simply results in an infinite regress, a result that even a God would not be exempt from. Our best answer for the question of what began the universe is still "we don't know", as we well and truly don't know.

    • @eroszakos9042
      @eroszakos9042 5 лет назад

      @@yeahnahatheist9776 "Bit of a meaningless statement, but please explain why you think something/nothing is a false binary?"
      I mean that you have this binary "something/nothing" and are insinuating that it must be true. Why does something have to exist for there to be nothing? Is not "nothingness" independent of somethingness?
      "But the chair does exist because of the wood? I think I see what you're saying, but I don't think you've worded it right. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think you're saying "the wood exists independent of whether the chair exists, but the chair is dependant on the wood existing" and therefore "God is independent on the universe existing, but the universe is dependant on God"."
      The chair only exists as a *potentiality* not as an *actuality* of the wood. So yes, the universe exists because God made it but not because He had to.
      "Ex nihilo means 'out of nothing', so are you saying God is that 'nothing' or is he still 'something'? This is also a God of the gaps fallacy, just inserting God as an explanation for what we don't yet comprehend."
      I answered that question. God is "something" but a "something" that is not the or within the universe. God created matter and energy and space when there was none of it to begin with. Also, saying "we don't know therefore there must be a natural explanation" is also fallacious because you're assuming that you know the nature of the explanation. Which is why making claims about the nature of the universe and asserting "there must be a natural cause" is just a belief the same thing as saying "there must be a divine cause. If we're talking about the creation of the universe, there can't be a natural cause because "nature" didn't exist prior to the universe, at least not in any way that we could replicate or study.
      "I think you may have slightly missed the point of my original comment. My point was to highlight that something and nothing cannot coexist, whereas I think you are arguing that things that do exist are dependant on it's components, which if not together results in the non-existence (nothing) of the object (your chair analogy). This is a seperate argument. I should also point out that the components of the chair are still 'something', and this reasoning simply results in an infinite regress, a result that even a God would not be exempt from. Our best answer for the question of what began the universe is still "we don't know", as we well and truly don't know."
      But again, when speaking of the universe and God we are talking about two different types of "somethings" that do not exist in the same framing. And when you say "we don't know" what you're actually saying is "We have no scientific model to explain it (at least not at this time) and a scientific model is the only way we could know what caused the universe." There is a major problem with that though in the last part in that you're assuming that scientific experimentation is the only way we can know things; which is called "scientism."

  • @ErikJohnsonFMA
    @ErikJohnsonFMA 7 лет назад +1

    patreoner here, yes. big bang video please. love all your content.

  • @laurajarrell6187
    @laurajarrell6187 7 лет назад

    Your video's are SO good, they're even good when the video cuts out! I'll say, as I said to Professor Stick and Hiith, your motto should be 'Audeo, (I dare), Audio!'

  • @internetnonsense1771
    @internetnonsense1771 7 лет назад +6

    The shark would have been cooler with a laser on its head. Or in a tornado. Or a laser and a tornado.

  • @matthieulavagna
    @matthieulavagna 4 года назад +4

    35 seconds and he already shows he doesn't understand anything. "everything has a cause" NO. That is not what the first premice says!

    • @MrWick-oe5ij
      @MrWick-oe5ij 4 года назад +2

      Yeah cosmic skeptic you're so stupid. Ask this guy here. He will tell you how the universe works with hardcore evidence he found on facebook meme page.

    • @Steelmage99
      @Steelmage99 4 года назад

      @Matthieu You didn't watch the video, did you?

    • @Steelmage99
      @Steelmage99 4 года назад

      @lemon island But you did watch the video, and therefore know that Matthieu's criticism is entirely unwarranted, right?

    • @matthieulavagna
      @matthieulavagna 4 года назад

      @@Steelmage99 yes .

    • @Steelmage99
      @Steelmage99 4 года назад

      @@matthieulavagna How can that be? You do realise that 35 seconds in, Alex is talking about Thomas Aquinas original cosmological argument, not the Kalam version, right?

  • @marksgiggle8895
    @marksgiggle8895 7 лет назад

    I just noticed your so close to 100,000 subscribers. You deserve way more.

  • @brunoarruda9916
    @brunoarruda9916 7 лет назад +1

    Hey, Alex! Dr. Craig has responded to the objection claiming that the Kalam commits the fallacy of composition: (watch?v=BtfRuZ7gCi0). I was wondering if you've seen it and how you would respond. (if you could also comment on Occam's razor shaving away multiple gods, that'd be nice. Thanks!

  • @wishlist011
    @wishlist011 7 лет назад +5

    "Our observable universe did have a beginning"
    For something to "begin" to exist couldn't it be argued that there needs to have been a time when it didn't? Isn't this vaguely what Stephen Hawking is getting at when he said something to the effect of "Asking what caused the Big Bang might be a bit like asking what is north of the north pole"?

    • @jignaio5762
      @jignaio5762 5 лет назад

      To begin to exist is not to go to a state of existence from a state of non-existence, because "not existing" is not a form of existing. For a thing to begin to exist simply means that it's false that that thing existed before that point.

    • @Shake69ification
      @Shake69ification 5 лет назад

      @wishlist011 yes, that's precisely it. Causality needs a temporal framework, and since time too, as part of our 4-dimensional space-time, was created then, to speak of a "before" is meaningless.

  • @AlexEvett55
    @AlexEvett55 7 лет назад +9

    Thats a really weird coincidence. I just uploaded a video on the big bang lol.

    • @tiuhti__
      @tiuhti__ 3 года назад +2

      (low key self-advertising)

  • @simonsemchenko3056
    @simonsemchenko3056 7 лет назад

    Let's see that big bang video my dude

  • @jinn_1891
    @jinn_1891 7 лет назад

    Once again an excellent video 👍

  • @superone8533
    @superone8533 7 лет назад +7

    I was following your comments right up until I was blinded by a cool shark. Then I lost focus.

    • @emerydo5937
      @emerydo5937 7 лет назад +2

      the shark is very captivating with its beauty

    • @StarryxNight5
      @StarryxNight5 3 года назад

      That shark was so cool that I'm surprised we aren't living in a ice age

  • @LimiTLesSGaming9mm
    @LimiTLesSGaming9mm 5 лет назад +3

    Isn't he the kid that WLC responded and owned?

    • @andrerocks8424
      @andrerocks8424 5 лет назад +2

      When did he own him?

    • @LimiTLesSGaming9mm
      @LimiTLesSGaming9mm 5 лет назад

      @@andrerocks8424 There is a video named "William Lane Craig responds to CosmicSceptic" or something close...

    • @oldpossum57
      @oldpossum57 2 месяца назад

      Maybe. WLC gets owned plenty. He is a BS artist. Can’t get a philosophy/theology chair anywhere but a bible college.

  • @kevinmitchell9151
    @kevinmitchell9151 5 лет назад +2

    Great video! A couple comments however...
    1) To be fair to William Lane Craig, I believe you've misrepresented his implementation of the kalam cosmological argument. If I recall correctly, he uses the argument merely to argue the universe has a cause and only links this to Christianity as one node in a network of arguments he uses to ultimately "prove" Christianity. He wouldn't argue in a million years that you could jump from the conclusion of the kalam cosmological argument to "Christianity is true". To be clear, I don't agree with Dr. Craig in all matters but you shouldn't misrepresent his position just like you wouldn't want your position misrepresented and logically speaking (and I mean in the mathematical sense of the word) you've done nothing to dismantle the truth of the argument itself.
    2) You questioned the impossibility of infinite regression. The issue from my understanding of the topic is, how do you arrive at this current moment in time or even this current universe in an infinitely recursive string of universes? If the universe is just one universe in an infinite string of universes, you would have to cover an infinite amount of universes to reach this one which seems logically absurd.
    Anyways, good video again but these were two things I couldn't help but notice.

  • @laurajarrell6187
    @laurajarrell6187 7 лет назад

    Cosmic Skeptic, I forgot, in my first comment, to say how cool your ending (planetary ring thing!) is. Also, Love and Peace!!!

  • @thefeonx9751
    @thefeonx9751 7 лет назад +10

    Yassssss! Big Bang video please!

  • @maj.peppers3332
    @maj.peppers3332 7 лет назад +5

    Defs want a video on the proofs of the Big Bang

  • @taylorthomas2522
    @taylorthomas2522 6 лет назад

    What would be the some of the best or most reasonable explanations for cause of the universe? Can there be an infinite regression of matter or time? Thoughts?

  • @ripley69
    @ripley69 7 лет назад +1

    Yup I'd love to see the big bang video!

  • @jesperburns
    @jesperburns 7 лет назад +5

    I personally believe that leprechauns were fucking around with the kettle and they accidentally created our universe.

    • @bp4freak
      @bp4freak 7 лет назад +2

      'Oh crap Connor, I created a universe'

    • @jesperburns
      @jesperburns 7 лет назад +2

      'Dammit Frank, another? What are we going to do with 13 fucking universes!'

  • @stevenbaumann8692
    @stevenbaumann8692 7 лет назад +30

    I wonder if his followers know it has an Islamic origin. Their heads would likely melt.
    The biggest failure of this argument is that I could use it to claim our universe is just the child of another universe.
    Convenient to claim god has always existed to worm around it. God also admits in his book of fairytales that he is not the only god.

    • @guytheincognito4186
      @guytheincognito4186 7 лет назад +5

      Steven Baumann precisely, if he was the Only God the first commandment would'nt be what it is.
      First Commandment:
      Thou shallt not have other Gods before me.

    • @bp4freak
      @bp4freak 7 лет назад +6

      It's the best part about their so-called proof of God, all they do it show that a deity might be the cause of it, although it is only one possibility amongst many and it doesn't specify which deity. Might as well be the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

    • @stevenbaumann8692
      @stevenbaumann8692 7 лет назад +1

      Yep

    • @stevenbaumann8692
      @stevenbaumann8692 7 лет назад +4

      Guy The Incognito yep. Like psalms 82:1-2
      God has taken his place in the divine council; in the midst of the gods he holds judgment: "How long will you judge unjustly and show partiality to the wicked?

    • @jonnyw82
      @jonnyw82 7 лет назад +5

      If a God does exist it doesn't mean it's the God of the Bible.

  • @cynthost
    @cynthost 7 лет назад

    I love. your videos and wish I could have donated more. How. do I locate the most recent video... Will it post on FB? Please keep going, I learn something new with every one. Thank you. Oh, FYI you are one handsome young man. :-)

  • @noobyone565
    @noobyone565 7 лет назад

    Hey CosmicSkeptic:
    How do you think about Alternative Universes?
    Wouldn´t you agree that it is POSSIBLE that in SOME KIND of universe A god exists?
    And if this GOD is truly omnipotent wouldn´t he than therefore exist in EVERY universe?
    I stumbled about this question in my philosophy class and would like you to reply somehow ;-)
    Thanks in adance

  • @jahovashalom17
    @jahovashalom17 4 года назад +3

    @CosmicSkeptic
    You lump all 5 ways of St.Thomas Aquinas that he spent a life time to develop into one easy to debunk strawman of his position.... checkmate theists...

  • @skeptical.bricks7098
    @skeptical.bricks7098 7 лет назад +4

    I'm an atheist and I always hear "why did the Big Bang happen?" so a vid would be great:)

    • @commandar88
      @commandar88 4 года назад

      That's a philosophical question that unfortunately a naturalist atheist would have no explanatory power to answer. However if you use your reason and the world around you, you can look at the signs around you and within you to reflect and contemplate upon

  • @TuringMachine001
    @TuringMachine001 4 года назад +2

    Proponents of the Kalam cosmological argument need not resort to the fallacy of composition. They can, for example, take premise 1 -- that everything that begins to exist has a cause -- as a self-evident truth. In that case, if your intuition does not lead you to believe in that premise, you simply won't be convinced by the argument. It's up to you to be honest with yourself and find out what you truly intuit about that premise.
    Remember: every argument has premises. If every premise of every argument requires an argument, then we get an infinite regress of arguments. That means we must at some point take something as self-evident. If that self-evident truth is not deemed so by opponents of the argument, there really is nothing the proponent can do.

    • @oldpossum57
      @oldpossum57 2 месяца назад

      “everything that begins to exist has a cause -- is a self-evident truth”.Nope. There are physicists who say time does not exist before the universe’s expansion, and some say that while there has always been time, there has always been a universe. WLC uses B-G-V theorem to claim the universe has a beginning. Both G and Zv have said he is wrong. Te theorem says the expansion has a begging pm not the Singularity, about which the theorem says nothing.
      You retort of course that it is contrary to sense for something to exist with out a cause. Contrary to human sense. What we know about cause annd effect applies to most things in the universe…except at the level of the very small. But Kalām is a claim about how the realm outside the universe behaves, and no one can know. (You can’t define something into existence, ad that is all Kalām and WLC’s cheater version do.) In this realm outside the universe, there would be empirical reason NOT to have an infinite regress of Causes causing the next. In the absence of time, space, dimension a Cause could “exist” prior to AND subsequent to AND simultaneously with the effect, rendering the cause non-causative. Then how does the Immaterial act on the Immaterial? Then WLCs unmotivate claims that the Cause is Intelligent, Impersonal, endowed with Will are unmotivated nonsense.
      Kalām is patently incoherent.

  • @kierananthony25
    @kierananthony25 3 года назад

    This is my favourite. The "moving the goal posts" argument.

  • @kristina5108
    @kristina5108 7 лет назад +4

    You get cuter and cuter every time😭❤️

  • @OryGold
    @OryGold 7 лет назад +15

    God is not appreciating your videos, Alex. He keeps cutting off your videos.

  • @gabrielhowardMKE
    @gabrielhowardMKE 7 лет назад +2

    you are such a brilliant young man.
    keep it up, you will go very far in life.

  • @MrtinVarela
    @MrtinVarela 7 лет назад

    So... you haven't found any royalty free stock nature footage you could have used to make this issue less prominent?

  • @DB6195
    @DB6195 7 лет назад +3

    This argument fails due the fact that Cause/Effect only apply to the confines of our space time. Which began as we understand it with the Big Bang.
    Therefore the idea of applying Cause/Effect to logically deduce factors from outside our space time (before the Big Bang) is ludicrous and simply impossible.
    Perhaps effects preceded cause or an entirely different process was about. It's impossible to tell. And even to dumber to assume you could.

    • @yellowmellow9265
      @yellowmellow9265 3 года назад

      That's the point what he said in video is that . Out side this universe /time /space/matter how you know there is one god and not many likes him and it's Odin not thor .
      But he have to accept god do exist

  • @TheHiss55
    @TheHiss55 7 лет назад +3

    This guy is my hero

  • @jordanartistlibrary
    @jordanartistlibrary 5 лет назад +1

    The argument for the existence of God is that without Him you cannot make sense of everything you know, and that without Him you cannot anything to be true.

  • @brianpearlwilliams4605
    @brianpearlwilliams4605 Год назад

    Thanks for taking the time to speak about the cosmological argument. I listened to your podcast with William Lane Craig, enjoyed your questions and his answers.

  • @kongfwoo
    @kongfwoo 7 лет назад +3

    Big bang

  • @covenantsoul8027
    @covenantsoul8027 5 лет назад +5

    The self-existent first cause, suggested by the KCA, is not an arbitrary choice for someone to invent so as to have a god to believe in. It is the very frame of reference from which our world begins and from which thinking itself can proceed. It clarifies what needs to be explained about reality and thus clarifies a lot of people’s misconceptions about what God has to be.
    The self-existent first cause just happens to be consistent with the God of the Bible. But it is there for any religion to claim as apparently Islam did at least in the middle ages, although few other religions have. Thus the KCA’s discrediting of non-theistic religions is merely a side benefit. The self-existent God has to “still be around.” Such is part of what it means to be the self-existent first cause. He also has to be one (a Trinity being included) as opposed to many, and I’ll go along with Him needing consciousness so as to be a causal agent, but the KCA is not intending to address all of God’s attributes. Most of the attributes of the God of the Bible are, well, revealed in the Bible.
    It is not just any cause that needs to be conscious - just the first cause. A self-existent non-conscious thing, prior to any cause and effect, is not going to be causing anything. The first cause is going to need free-will in order to cause something, and a will is possessed by a conscious mind.
    You seem to be a bit possessed by the need for “proof.” Sometimes you just have to go with how things seem instead of making wild speculations by invoking what we can or cannot know as though there was some form of non-conscious reality that existed eternally prior to the big bang. The skeptic who questions everything begins by denying God, eventually denies the existence of the universe, and in the end, himself. The KCA is not representing itself as “proof” for God. It is showing that it is reasonable to believe in God.
    The burden of proof doesn’t belong with the atheist until atheism enters the culture and brings its chaos into everyone else’s life.
    I have hope that you’ll be gaining more wisdom after you turn 14.

    • @oldpossum57
      @oldpossum57 2 месяца назад

      Your argument here is that god must exist in order for god to exist. You are the child here, my friend.
      You have watched a little WLC. He is a bible college dog and pony show,

    • @covenantsoul8027
      @covenantsoul8027 2 месяца назад

      @@oldpossum57
      No that's not it. The statement is more along the lines of - if you have a house, you know that you also have a foundation. Perhaps the problem is not just your thinking, it's also that you cannot find God with a prideful, scornful, hate-filled heart.

    • @oldpossum57
      @oldpossum57 2 месяца назад

      @@covenantsoul8027 You are arguing using an analogy. In other words, you compare the universe to a house, which requires a foundation. A universe requires a “foundation”. But why should anyone accept your analogy. I do not see how a universe is at all like a house.
      The failure of the WLC version KCA is precisely because he assumes he can have knowledge about a realm outside of the universe. Inasmuch as what ever knowledge we have is based entirely on our existence within a universe, it should appear obvious to anyone that WLC is claiming knowledge he cannot have.
      Recall that the KCA and WLC’s version of it, are both intended to “prove” the existence of gods without assuming the existence of a god. The KCA cannot do this, not even with the help of WLC.
      You can leave the personal comments out of your contributions. They don’t advance your argument.

    • @covenantsoul8027
      @covenantsoul8027 2 месяца назад

      ​@@oldpossum57
      "Why should anyone accept your analogy."

    • @oldpossum57
      @oldpossum57 2 месяца назад

      @@covenantsoul8027 Out of politeness, I will respond.
      1) You say there must be a First Cause for the Universe. This is the Argument from the First Cause. It has the following problems, which WLC cannot solve.
      A) Mathematicians and physicists say that it is quite possible that the Universe is infinite. Although this possible is “counterintuitive”, it could none the less be true. Counterintuitive does not mean incoherent, illogical.
      B) Even if one were to grant (for the sake of argument), WLC’s claims that the universe must have a cause, and that there cannot be infinite chains of causes inside a finite universe, WLC cannot argue that the First Cause must itself be uncaused. Outside the Universe, WLC cannot claim that there could not be an infinite chain of causes each causing the next. This of course means that he is wrong that the First Cause must itself be uncaused.
      C)in (B) above this is another case of WLC applying a rule from inside his universe to the realm outside it, a realm no one knows anything about. He makes this error a few separate times just in the Kalām syllogism, and then in all of the unargued premises he sneaks in: that the First Cause must be uncaused, that it can be causal, that it must be intelligent, that it must be Personal, that it must have Will or Desire. One could, for the sake of argument, grant his conclusion in the Kalām, and these conclusions would still not be allowed: he doesn’t have an argument. He just plays semantic games, defining things into existence.
      2) WLC DOES make knowledge claims about the realm outside the universe. I don’t believe science does so. There are theories that predict a Multiverse, and thereby address the anthropic principle, but inasmuch as there is no empirical way to test Multiverses, they are just “artifacts of theory”. Whereas WLC wants to able to claim that this realm is timeless, dimensionless, immaterial. He wants to claim that in this timeless realm there cannot be present or potential infinite sets of causes). He wants to claim that even there is no timeframe, that a Cause which may be (all at once) Prior To AND Subsequent To AND Simultaneous With its Effect is nonetheless a Cause, even though it is uncausative. He wants to claim that Immaterial Cause can act on Material, and does not explain how. He claims to know that a Mindless Cause cannot cause a Universe. He claims to know that an Intelligence can exist outside of time, space and material substance. He claims to know that this Intelligence has Personality (Anthropomorphic Personality at that!) and Desireor Will. But he never explains how these things are possible, nor how he alone knows.
      The reason is that WLC is constantly “begging the question”, assuming the truth of the existence of gods before he has argued for their existence.
      3) Deductive reasoning is not creative. It just tells you what you already know. There is a lot that WLC pretends to know that he doesn’t. In my second set of reasoning, I explained all the errors that come from his unreasonable claims of knowledge about a realm outside the Universe, when all we could ever hope to know rationally comes from our experience within the Universe. He makes more mistakes.
      A) He claims that the BGV theorem proves that the Universe must have a beginning. G&V have both stated quite public ally that WLC misunderstand the BGV Theorem. It states that the expansionary phase of the Universe must have a beginning. It says nothing either way about the Singularity, which could have existed for an Infinity. As I have said in (1), mathematicians do not rule this possibility out. It is “counterintuitive”, but so are a lot of things. I will refer you to two YT videos that explain why the WLC Kalām is mathematically and physically incoherent.
      B) One of the things you begin to understand about rational thought when you run into “counterintuitive” facts in math and quantum physics and cosmology is that your brain may be pretty remarkable for a social ape species, but it is still three pounds of ape-meat. We evolved as a hunter-gatherer species. By mutations (one appears to be gene mutation TKTL1) we ended up with an excess of neocortex. As a species (not me, of course) we have done a remarkable good job of creating knowledge. But even though we know by experimentation that the predictions of our theories are accurate, the model of the universe is not intuitive to us.
      Both you and WLC may want to claim that god gives us knowledge of god. But I am afraid that before anyone accepts your claim, you need to be able to prove god’s existence.
      WLC pretends to do it by deduction, but you cannot make deductions about a realm you cannot know anything about, the realm outside Reality, outside the Universe.
      In simple terms, as I and many others have said before, WLC is trying to define Things into existence with Words. It can’t be done. You are likely familiar with Occam’s Razor: WLC actually misuses it once in his argument supporting the Kalām, in an ineffective argument about the First Cause needing to be uncaused.) William of Ockham was also famous for another philosophical position, that WLC and evangelicals generally tend to forget. Ockham was a Nominalist. He was opposed to the Realists who claimed that if you could conceive of something, it must exist. Ockham said, quite the contrary, if you have a concept, all you have essentially is a name. You cannot Name entities into existence.
      There are two YT videos that gather mathematicians, cosmologists and philosophers together to show how WLCs Kalām is unfounded, based on erroneous premises and invalidly argued (not the bare syllogism, but the added on unproven claims) I will attach in a part two comment.

  • @TheLasase
    @TheLasase 7 лет назад +1

    Give us that big bang video!

  • @barbaros8735
    @barbaros8735 4 года назад

    I know it's an old video, so you might not respond but nevertheless here's my question: (If anyone else can respond ,thanks!)
    You said that the big bang is actually obervable with the right kind of telescope. However, when the big bang happened,
    protons did not exist, and actually after 300,000 years, the universe cooled enough for atoms to even form.
    Therefore it should not be possible to observe the big bang with a telescape, no?
    Or are you talking about the space-radiation which is observable with radio telescopes?