Does the Kalam Argument Work? w/ Dr. William Lane Craig & Jimmy Akin

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • Dr. William Lane Craig and Jimmy Akin discuss whether the philosophical version of the kalam argument works. Dr. Craig says yes, Jimmy says no.
    ⭐ Learn more about what Jimmy has to say on the Kalam argument here: jimmyakin.com/2...
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Комментарии • 868

  • @PintsWithAquinas
    @PintsWithAquinas  3 года назад +11

    You can subscribe to our clip channel, Sips With Aquinas here: ruclips.net/channel/UCuMg6A-lj1wnkTDcTZmRlbA

    • @iznon
      @iznon 3 года назад

      I shall leave a comment, lest I naught.

    • @maolsheachlannoceallaigh4772
      @maolsheachlannoceallaigh4772 3 года назад

      Baby Guinesses with Aquinas.

    • @_Dovar_
      @_Dovar_ Год назад +1

      The essence of this question seems to be about the nature of time itself.
      Disregarding more fantastical "theories" about time-space of modern science (which becomes less respectable every day) - time is just a change of matter in a space.
      Because we measure it by observing the almost impeccably regular cyclical changes in matter (revolution of the Earth around its axis, around the Sun, phases of the Moon, seasons of year) we've grown accustomed to think of time as some invisible, infinitely long ruler that measures all events, or as a hidden invisible camera, recording all material universe.
      If there is no matter, there is no time.
      Therefore, for a thing to be created, it means it has to have a beginning, so it cannot exist before its own creation.
      If an apple would be to exist in the hypothetical state of "having an infinite past existence" it would mean it wasn't created, so in some aspects it would be equal to God.

  • @coloradowebnerd
    @coloradowebnerd 3 года назад +122

    I'm a Catholic and I love both Dr. Craig and Jimmy Akin. The great thing about this debate is that we all win. They are both seeking the best way to show people that belief in God is reasonable. They are both a blessing. Thanks for setting this up, Matt.

    • @optimoprimo132
      @optimoprimo132 3 года назад +7

      Mr. Akin's philosophical training is very weak. As a philosopher it is a glaring hole ready to sink into error theologically.

    • @merlinx8703
      @merlinx8703 2 года назад +2

      @@optimoprimo132 how so?

    • @optimoprimo132
      @optimoprimo132 2 года назад +2

      @@merlinx8703 This is the correct Catholic Theology and Metaphysics,
      "There was no time before creation. There could have been no time before creation because time is the measure of change. Since God is unchangeable, there could have been no time because there were no changeable creatures before creation.
      God did not create from all eternity. We know this from divine revelation. But we can also conclude this from human reason. A creature without a beginning is impossible. Why? Because the succession involved in a change constitutes the essence of time. An unchangeable creature is a contradiction in terms. Change belongs to the very nature of a creature." - Fr. John Hardon SJ

    • @optimoprimo132
      @optimoprimo132 2 года назад +2

      @@merlinx8703 He is confusing theology and metaphysics but in such a way he ends up speaking incorrectly about both.
      Jimmy made a statement about it being part of Church teaching.. Dr. Craig knows better than that and if you notice he was really exercising charity by not 100% calling him out in it. Dr. Craig actually cited to him councils of the Catholic Church and Doctors/father's of the church which would contradict Jimmy's position that it is part of Church teaching.
      The fact is the Catholic Church in its philosophy and theology reiterates time and time again that God is Omnipotent but God's Omnipotence is limited only by His nature. God cannot go against His nature.
      For example God cannot sin against Himself, God cannot will Himself out of existence, God cannot "create" another God equal to Himself etc.
      God cannot create a universe that is infinite like Himself.
      Anyway.... The danger in Jimmy's notion is that he is brushing close to empirical science theories like an openness to some sort of infinite universe theory or the rubber band theory... Of infinite progression and regression of time and space.
      Or the aristotilean God which exists as the unmoved mover with creation for all eternity.
      He as Dr. Craig says in emphasising the Omnipotence of God he loses sight of the nature and meaning of creation as finite reality.

    • @JohnHansen-ej8nh
      @JohnHansen-ej8nh Месяц назад

      @@optimoprimo132 That's not true. Jimmy Akin clarifies that John Paul II clarifies whether God has a temporal existence, which Dr. Craig did NOT know about! You'd expect this given he's not a Catholic.

  • @JuanRPF
    @JuanRPF 2 года назад +18

    I am catholic, thomist and I like Jimmy but I am with Craig here. Infinite is only a word to refer something unlimited. It cannot be anything material, it is not a real quantity and God is infinite only as a quality way of being, not a quantity way.

    • @JohnHansen-ej8nh
      @JohnHansen-ej8nh Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, well that's like your opinion man. Which is Jimmy's point, that's just your intuition, which isn't shared by everyone. The debate is about whether that intuition you share with Craig is true. You can't just claim it's true, you have to argue for why that's the case. Then Craig brings up Hilbert's hotel, which Jimmy has legitimate objections to, but Craig doesn't follow up at all.

  • @shane9095
    @shane9095 3 года назад +43

    I love this. Two men that love Jesus arguing what is the most effective way to bring non believers to Jesus. Truly beautiful.

    • @ramigilneas9274
      @ramigilneas9274 2 года назад +1

      Obviously it can’t be the Kalam… because nowhere in the Kalam are gods, Christianity or Jesus even mentioned.

    • @TremendousSax
      @TremendousSax Год назад

      ​@@ramigilneas9274even better, the Kalam came from Muslims arguing for Allah. Assuming the argument works at all, the Kalam could be employed for any creator God of your choice

  • @introvertedchristian5219
    @introvertedchristian5219 3 года назад +83

    It's unusual to see a conversation like this in which each person doesn't interrupt and talk over the other. This went really well. I wish my conversations went that well.

    • @azrela8277
      @azrela8277 3 года назад +8

      I noticed the same thing. Refreshing.

    • @traceyedson9652
      @traceyedson9652 3 года назад +7

      Normal for these guys.

  • @pasqualecandelora2878
    @pasqualecandelora2878 3 года назад +32

    Feser and Craig would be a mind bender! Would love to see it!

    • @evidencebasedfaith6658
      @evidencebasedfaith6658 3 года назад +5

      I would love to see that too. I'm a Baptist, but Feser is without a doubt one of my favorite authors when it comes to natural theology.

  • @carniedph
    @carniedph 3 года назад +26

    Love dr. Craig, thanks for having him on!

  • @vaderetro264
    @vaderetro264 2 года назад +10

    I've been following Lane Craig since 2007 and the precision of his language never fails to impress.

  • @Blakedenenny
    @Blakedenenny 3 года назад +27

    As a Catholic I've defended both William Lane Craig and modern Intelligent Design proponents because I don't think probabilistic arguments are necessarily weak arguments, which people like Ed Feser (whom I highly respect) claim

    • @LilBitDistributist
      @LilBitDistributist 3 года назад +1

      100%. Both are useful and should be used together as well.

    • @sophiagomez5619
      @sophiagomez5619 3 года назад +1

      @@LilBitDistributist Dude, thank you. I've been meaning to read these books and I just remembered their titles.

    • @LilBitDistributist
      @LilBitDistributist 3 года назад

      @@sophiagomez5619 no problem. Pass the favor onto someone else. 😊

    • @suntzu7727
      @suntzu7727 3 года назад +3

      I don't think Feser's problem with ID is the probabilistic character of the arguments, rather he thinks that the ID position shares a common and flawed presumption with the position of guys like Dawkins. That is, a mechanistic view of life; Feser does not think it even makes sense to talk about design when talking about living organisms as they are not machines.

    • @LilBitDistributist
      @LilBitDistributist 3 года назад

      @@suntzu7727 ID isn’t mechanistic but it’s true that Feser views that as the issue and not probabilities even if he’s wrong.

  • @allioop8156
    @allioop8156 3 года назад +17

    Just as I've been listening to this and thinking about the concept of time and whether God exists in or out of it... I think it is really important to establish what time itself IS.
    Time is the unit in which we measure change. When "time stops" in movies everything freezes, no one ages, new memories are not made, plants do not grow, etcetera. Time is not just the hands in a clock spinning around, it is change itself and hours, minutes and days are the tools we use to measure that because something like a measuring tape is insufficient for such a task.
    Therefore change must occur in order for time to exist. However we know that by His very nature God is unchanging (that should be enough to say not only is He not bound by time, but it is impossible for him to be if He is to be understood as the Christian God). This means He must have existed in a reality which lacked all sense of time before he created anything at all, because there was nothing which could change until He created such a thing. His own existence is not dependent upon time to be observed. If He IS bound by time, his existence would be a changing one and He would be dependent upon something else which would have to be constant which could sustain His existence. Therefore our time-bound "God" would not in fact be God and would require another eternal, timeless Being to sustain him. This entrenches us in the same issue as long as we insist God is bound by time. The only way to reach the conclusion of a God as we know Him to be is to admit that He exists beyond time.
    With that established, I think Dr. Craig is wrong to say that God is bound by time. I actually do lean more toward Akin's perspective that if He desired, God could be working in creation now, constantly creating events that from our limited human perspective have already come to pass, as well as being active in the future we have not yet experienced. Although we know He has chosen not to do this, by virtue of Him being timeless I can't ignore the possibility. I actually think this is vital to the idea of a personal, infinitely powerful God who exists with us intimately in all moments of our lives. God could not be infinite if he was entirely bound by time.
    I love classical, Catholic theology so much. I hope I made sense.

    • @fetokai
      @fetokai 2 года назад +3

      I think you are absolutely correct here, I took much the same conclusion away from this debate and may I add that you communicated this fundamental distinction very beautifully.

    • @tommore3263
      @tommore3263 2 года назад

      I love Aquinas' FINAL Cause which is BEING itself and transcendent. We participate in the ongoing ACT that is caused by God in all finite beings. The finite subsists in God not God in the finite. We as spatio-temporal beings come into being by God's transcendent act. Akin's view seems much more sensible to me. The church is Truth ,

    • @UMAKEMESMILESWACKIN
      @UMAKEMESMILESWACKIN 2 года назад

      the best argument for God is the shroud of turin

    • @jimothynimajneb622
      @jimothynimajneb622 2 года назад

      “Time is the unit in which we measure change.” I think you’re going to find a lot of disagreement with this definition. My issue with this is, say the entire cosmos hits absolute zero (I know this would never happen but just go with it for argument’s sake). Who’s to say time doesn’t elapse even if no change is occurring? I also feel like even if an object is at absolute zero, just because it is unchanging doesn’t mean time doesn’t pass around it. It’s an interesting thought but it seems to me that time is a prerequisite for change and not the other way around. I could be off base on this but those are my thoughts.

    • @allioop8156
      @allioop8156 2 года назад +1

      @@jimothynimajneb622 That is a really interesting thought and I honestly had not considered it beforehand, but I am still not convinced. If time is not the unit by which we measure change, then what IS time? And what does it measure? I am actually inclined to believe that if literally EVERYTHING stopped changing then time as we know it would cease. If all was completely still, then what would there be for time to keep track of? I am interested to hear alternate definitions of time if you have any.

  • @andrefouche9682
    @andrefouche9682 3 года назад +117

    Chuck Norris counted to infinity, twice. 😀

    • @michaellawlor5625
      @michaellawlor5625 3 года назад +9

      When Chuck Norris was born, he drove his mother home.

    • @john-paulgies4313
      @john-paulgies4313 3 года назад +2

      It would be a logical contradiction to say that Chuck Norris counted to ℵ1.

    • @john-paulgies4313
      @john-paulgies4313 3 года назад +3

      @Prasanth Thomas 😞
      This is why I'm leery of telling jokes: they can sweep you up into a joking mood and lower your guard... such that one can accidentally be irreverent to God, for instance.

    • @john-paulgies4313
      @john-paulgies4313 3 года назад +3

      @Prasanth Thomas It depends upon your intent.
      If the essence of the joke, the unspoken discongruity (that which makes all jokes), is something like, "Because Chuck Norris joke," "Because Chuck Norris joke is stupid," etc. then I doubt you have even accidentally stepped on God proverbial toes. 😋
      But if it is rather, "Because Chuck Norris is 'cooler' than God," "Because God is weaker," then, though venial, I would still call it sinful.😔
      But it also depends on your foresight as to how the RUclips public might read it: as a jab at His unutterable dignity, treating it as mundane, as fodder for humor... which is how it came across to me.

    • @michaellawlor5625
      @michaellawlor5625 3 года назад +1

      @@john-paulgies4313 come on, for goodness sake.

  • @Xgy33
    @Xgy33 3 года назад +39

    I would NOT like to debate WLC he is a beast 😂 love you guys

    • @optimoprimo132
      @optimoprimo132 3 года назад +7

      @Cosmic Tuxedo not true. He was giving sound metaphysical advice to Jimmy and Jimmy was just not getting it. As a philosopher and a faithful Catholic theologian I see clearly that Jimmy was making a classic error of basic metaphysics.
      Equating logical, potential or mathematical infinity with actuality and superimposing this into reality. He even gave examples of contradictions such as the impossibility of making a circle/square, yet he totally dropped the plot when this same contradiction is posited by him to be possible. By positing that God could create a reality with an infinite past... I advise Jimmy to get educated on Catholic/Christian metaphysics. I advice everyone to do the same and avoid errors.

    • @calson814
      @calson814 3 года назад +1

      @Cosmic Tuxedo like matt dillahunty?! Lmao.

    • @mattthomson942
      @mattthomson942 2 года назад +1

      WLC is another master of the word salad , and was destroyed by the great Mr hitchens years ago, but he's in America so plenty of gullible morons for him to keep confused and bewildered with big words 🙄 😉

    • @vaderetro264
      @vaderetro264 2 года назад +2

      @@mattthomson942 WLC dominated the debate with Hitchens. I don't like this sort of language, 'destroyed', 'dominated', but it may be necesssry to point out how distracted you were while watching that debate and how ignorant you are on this subject after so many years.

    • @meandtheboys3614
      @meandtheboys3614 2 года назад +2

      @@mattthomson942 WLC clearly won that debate. I will say that Hitchens was amazing in terms of rhetorical skill (as he always is), but he fell short in terms of presenting actual substantive arguments that refute the opposition’s stance.

  • @joziti
    @joziti 3 года назад +40

    As a catholic, the only thing I did not appreciate is the sneaking of "that's contrary to catholic teaching"... I think that borderlines ambushing Dr Craig, when the debate was supposed to be clearly outside anything of a catholic-protestant discussion. In my opinion it spoils the pleasure of having him in a catholic channel. Jimmy could have mentioned that if he wanted in a post-debate video or blog post.
    I truly wish Matt brings Dr Craig again for any topic

    • @sherwindique8518
      @sherwindique8518 3 года назад +12

      I don't really think that was Jimmy's intention. He was just trying to show that the historical catholic teaching on divine timelessness was not exactly in line with what Aquinas said since Dr. Craig seemed to assume that Jimmy agreed with Aquinas on that point.
      However, I do agree with you that those catholic/proteatant differences should have been avoided but it was also good that those presuppositions were made clear.

    • @slavicgypsy5535
      @slavicgypsy5535 3 года назад +6

      I don't think hes snuck in anything because a Catholic believes God is out time and space and Dr Craig does not.
      Huge fundamental difference.
      Personally Jimmy did it fairly.
      I've seen Dr Craig haughtily rebuke the holiness of our Virgin Mary and I was insulted.
      It wasn't even in a debate setting it happened on a stage with Bishop Barron.
      I was appalled that Bishop Barron let it stand.

    • @paolofresnoza4261
      @paolofresnoza4261 3 года назад

      Good observation. That's what makes this discussion dynamic. :) It would be tedious if not anyone of them would look at it in their respective worldviews.

    • @Shawn-nq7du
      @Shawn-nq7du 3 года назад

      I think Dr Craig also snuck his theological beliefs in as well. Isn’t his concept on how God relates to time a theological belief? Philosophy falls under theology. It is a superior wisdom

  • @tMatt5M
    @tMatt5M 3 года назад +35

    Jimmy Akin and David Lee Roth discuss the Kalam argument.

  • @fetokai
    @fetokai 2 года назад +12

    Incredible discussion that really brought absolute clarity to a fundamental theological difference of opinion that helps clarify to me at least what sets apart the Catholic faith and why it has come to make so much more sense to me after half a lifetime of reflection that started from Transhumanist Atheism in my pre collegiate years.
    Akin's take on divine timelessness seems to be a necessary property of an infinite intellect. Where as Craig's take that time asserts any kind of influence on God's intellectual scope would seem to contradict the guiding premise of an infinite scope or capacity for intellect which is the definition of a Godly intellect versus just any other finite intellect such as ourselves or any form of artificial intelligence we may give rise to.

  • @albertbenny431
    @albertbenny431 3 года назад +17

    Anyone think Dr. Craig's eyebrows have a K in the middle? K for Kalam?

    • @albertbenny431
      @albertbenny431 3 года назад +2

      You might have to watch in 144p

    • @kazumakiryu157
      @kazumakiryu157 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@albertbenny431😂😂😂 ok,ok u got me.

  • @pn3028
    @pn3028 2 года назад +7

    This was not a debate. It was a discussion. Both men were great.

    • @JohnHansen-ej8nh
      @JohnHansen-ej8nh Месяц назад

      I disagree. Jimmy Akin approached it as a discussion with open questions and counter examples. But I felt Craig treated it more like a debate with Ethos and even Pathos rhetoric. Craig did not need to talk down to Jimmy, it is obvious Jimmy knows and reads a lot about these things. and then Craig to make up a random rule "you can't bring Catholic thought into this!"
      Why not? Craig brings in his theological assumptions to some degree, as with God having a temporal being, since he would want to square that philosophical statement with valid interpretation with the Bible.

  • @JW_______
    @JW_______ 3 года назад +25

    Fascinating debate, and excellent performances by both Akin and Craig. I actually agree with Jimmy that there is no meaningful difference between logical contradiction and "strict" logical contradiction, yet I'm convinced that there is a logical contradiction in the existence of an infinite number of apples.
    EDIT: I don't think it's fair for Craig to say that Akin is leaning on theological presuppositions, given that Akins's theological arguments are driven by philosophical arguments regarding the nature of time, divine simplicity, etc. There's just not enough time in this debate format to flesh out all those points of disagreements.

    • @Shawn-nq7du
      @Shawn-nq7du 3 года назад +3

      I was pretty loss, but I do believe both of them injected their theological beliefs based on their theological understanding of time as it pertains to God.

    • @claymcdermott718
      @claymcdermott718 3 года назад +3

      Craig’s point there, I think, is: If your only response to an argument for the existence of some God, is to posit the existence of a God so powerful He can render the argument moot... well, then the argument still succeeds.

    • @JJ-zr6fu
      @JJ-zr6fu 3 года назад +3

      @@claymcdermott718 Yeah Jimmy's argument boiled down to well God could've done it differently and that's presupposing there is a god, but the argument is trying to prove there is one.

    • @joeterp5615
      @joeterp5615 Год назад +1

      @@claymcdermott718. I don’t think Craig said that… but it is a good insight you have.

  • @antoniopioavallone1137
    @antoniopioavallone1137 3 года назад +55

    Love it. I would love jimmy akin debating against some atheists for the existence of God.

    • @calebshort9082
      @calebshort9082 3 года назад +9

      I second this!

    • @ruthnoelmarie...9061
      @ruthnoelmarie...9061 3 года назад +2

      I “third” this... 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

    • @anniebanderet
      @anniebanderet 3 года назад

      He’s not well educated enough

    • @antoniopioavallone1137
      @antoniopioavallone1137 3 года назад +9

      @@anniebanderet I don't think so

    • @anniebanderet
      @anniebanderet 3 года назад +7

      @@carolinafine8050 that may be, though I am trained as a philosopher. My point is that it really was not a debate, as Jimmy was making theological assumptions (a priori) in a philosophical debate, which Craig kept repeating. The debate was whether Kalam was philosophically defensible, not whether it was theological sound! This meant they were not truly debating. While theology is my avocation, and I have pursued it in a highly disciplined manner for more than 40 years, these assumptions made by Akin belong in a different discussion, where the argument is theological rather than philosophical. Ed Feser and Craig would have made for a far superior debate.

  • @theophilus3793
    @theophilus3793 3 года назад +40

    Get Ed Feser on!

  • @bluecollarcatholic8173
    @bluecollarcatholic8173 3 года назад +7

    Wow! Two of my favorite Apologists . Great job Matt.

  • @drbkjv
    @drbkjv 3 года назад +44

    I agree with Dr. Craig, and follow Dr. Craig, etc, BUT Akin gave very good ideas and had Dr. Craig thinking a lot. More than i’ve seen Dr. Craig have to organize his thoughts and really think a rebuttal through.

    • @drbkjv
      @drbkjv 3 года назад +12

      Meaning, Dr. Craig typically responds as if he has heard that argument before and calmly debunks it, Akin had him think on his toes. Good convo. But yes, I agree with Dr. Craig 👌🏻

    • @optimoprimo132
      @optimoprimo132 3 года назад +4

      No, I think WLC was blown away by the glaring holes in Jimmy's philosophy.

  • @Seanph25
    @Seanph25 2 года назад +4

    34:16 Matt has me so dead when he just shows up and wants to jump in but is trying to bite his tongue 💀🤣

  • @johnbruening252
    @johnbruening252 3 года назад +12

    It boggles the mind...I am resting in Christ's "bring the children" as that about sums up my faith and intellect..

  • @obakillaking5643
    @obakillaking5643 3 года назад +14

    Thank you very much Matt for this discussion!
    1. I don't think Jimmys objections were theological, they were more of the form:
    1. You claim x is metaphysically impossible
    2. God can do anything metaphysically possible
    3. God can do x
    4. Therefore x is not metaphysically impossible
    Jimmy should have formulated it this way I think.
    2. Unfortunately they didn't discuss the Grim Reaper Paradox. Nicholas Shackel in his paper "The Form of the Benardete Dichotomy" shows a clear logical contradiction in Paradoxes like the Grim Reaper Paradox, so Jimmy, there is your clear logical contradiction.
    I think it was an interesting discussion, unfortunately way to short. Thank you Matt, Jimmy and Dr. Craig!

    • @matthieulavagna
      @matthieulavagna 3 года назад

      Could you please link the paper? 😀

    • @obakillaking5643
      @obakillaking5643 3 года назад

      @@matthieulavagna I tried to link it, but maybe youtube autodelets comments with some links? Just search for it and copy the doi into scihub

    • @matthieulavagna
      @matthieulavagna 3 года назад

      @@obakillaking5643 ok!!

    • @jeremysmith7176
      @jeremysmith7176 3 года назад

      Here is a podcast where Jimmy does discuss the grim reaper and other ideas.

    • @VABJMJ
      @VABJMJ 3 года назад +1

      One problem I see with the Grim Reaper Paradox (and please elucidate why it isn't a problem if any of you know) is that it seems to explain something different from what it tries to prove. It sets itself to prove that you cannot have an infinite regress in time. In other words, that yesterday cannot be followed by infinite "yesterdays". But to do so he tries to show that you can't infinitely _divide_ a specific portion of time in a way that doesn't create a contradiction. Thais seems simply to be a rehash of the old "Heraclitus and Parmenides" discussion, to which Aristotle has already convincingly explained it through the existence of potentiality and actuality. You can't have an infinite division of time in actuality because time only exists actually in the Present (when seen inside of time, that is) and only Potentially in infinite subdivisions. So this case of an infinite actual number of grim reapers fitting themselves in an infinitely smaller division of time simply doesn't actually happen. And even so that is different from saying that time regresses infinitely. The paradox argues that time cannot be _divided_ infinitely, if anything. So I do not feel it is a valid argument against an infinite regress. But I would be very happy to be proved wrong (simply because I like it when my errors are corrected). I do not believe that the universe is infinitely old, by the way. I think science has shown clearly enough (as well as Scripture) that the Universe had a beginning. I'm just saying I haven't seen any philosophical argument that makes that necessarily true.

  • @25esimpson
    @25esimpson 3 года назад +3

    This was great! I'm a non-Catholic Christian and have been truly blessed by Dr. Craig's work. This is my first time interacting with Akin's ideas and he also seems like a sincere and thoughtful apologist and person. I do think there is a lot riding on theology here in these disagreements. Dr. Craig's views on God's timelessness sans creation but temporal with creation does make sense to me, but even he admits elsewhere that (theologically speaking) his view (even amongst us protestants) isn't a majority position.

    • @JJ-zr6fu
      @JJ-zr6fu 3 года назад

      Yeah Jimmy Akin essentially argued its false because God could've done it differently, but the argument is for a god not what god is. Jimmy is a lot better explaining theological questions that philosophy.

    • @traceyedson9652
      @traceyedson9652 3 года назад +1

      Does Craig believe God travels with us time, even before the incarnation?

  • @pigetstuck
    @pigetstuck 2 года назад +2

    This seemed like a mismatched debate. I'm not sure that Jimmy had a firm enough grasp on the philosophical workings to engage properly.

  • @PintsWithAquinas
    @PintsWithAquinas  3 года назад +41

    Wow! That was amazing. What are your initial thoughts? Who made the better case?

    • @Damian1975
      @Damian1975 3 года назад +10

      Jimmy came out more convincing
      The apples argument lost me I’m not that sharp. I found Jimmy explained his point of view especially concerning God existing outside of time. William was respectful and did make some convincing points also. Hopefully the two of them can have a pint together.

    • @RobRod305
      @RobRod305 3 года назад +1

      I don’t understand the distinction of what constitutes a STRICT Logical Contradiction, perhaps someone can explain it to me below. It seems to me that William’s case of the absurdity of the apples/people example was a legitimate reason to have an infinite set number of things be a strict logical contradiction in actuality. If Jimmy’s argument from omniscience is that God cannot create anything that is a strict logical contradiction, wouldn’t the infinitude of a set number of things constitute a strict logical contradiction, thus rendering the Kalam as valid according to Jimmy’s view of omniscience?

    • @obakillaking5643
      @obakillaking5643 3 года назад +2

      @@RobRod305 I think Jimmy would say logical impossibility is the same as metaphysical impossibility but under logical impossibility he would not just include strict logical contradictions like "a and not a", but also of the form "a and b", where after further analysis you would see that "b iff not a".
      Dr. Craig would make a further distinction of metaphysical impossibility where even after further anaysis of a and b there still wouldnt be a contradiction like "a and not a". This would include things like "an effect cannot precede its cause". Even after analysing the definitions these wouldnt be like "a and not a", but they would still be impossible.
      I think the main argument should be "How good of an indicator of metaphysical impossibility is prima facia absurdity"

    • @jonathansmith4712
      @jonathansmith4712 3 года назад +16

      I used to think that I knew stuff, until I listened to this.

    • @RobRod305
      @RobRod305 3 года назад

      @@obakillaking5643 Hmmm interesting. Thank you for responding. How would that distinction then apply to the set of an infinite amount of things? It seems to me that a set of an infinite amount of things actually is indeed a strict logical contradiction. Could you explain if that is or isn’t true, and why?

  • @CMBradley
    @CMBradley 3 года назад +32

    A discussion on God and time seems to be due for future episodes. (Please get Bill on again!)

    • @renjithjoseph7135
      @renjithjoseph7135 3 года назад +1

      I think Trent Horn has a short episode on this @Counsel of Trent

    • @ob4161
      @ob4161 3 года назад +2

      Good idea. I'd really like to see a debate or discussion with Craig on the tensed/tenseless theory of time; he's written a lot on that.

  • @mnaigemu2239
    @mnaigemu2239 3 года назад +7

    Incredibly interesting debate. Thank you.

  • @Jayce_Alexander
    @Jayce_Alexander Год назад +1

    If we could only engage in all forms of discourse like these two gentlemen do.

  • @porticusthepoet
    @porticusthepoet 3 года назад +6

    The issue here is set definitions, a huge obstacle of late because people make up their own. The only way to have a legitimate debate is by an agreement to definitions. To that, a is a and b is not a, therefore a is not b. A person is a person, and a number is not a person, therefore a person is not a number. I'm going to go pray... haha

    • @AetheriusLamia
      @AetheriusLamia 3 года назад +1

      Yes, it's regrettable how much time was wasted over trivial semantics.

  • @gregmatthews7710
    @gregmatthews7710 3 года назад +6

    Amazing. Don’t think there is a clear winner. But what amazes me about Akin is the fact he has never lost a debate imho and the fact that he is basically an autodidactic who can take on the best with such comfort.

    • @Netomp51
      @Netomp51 8 месяцев назад

      Jimmy is a cyborg lol

  • @Shinigami00Azael
    @Shinigami00Azael 3 года назад +7

    I thought it will be interesting conversation. I was wrong. It was very interesting conversation :D

  • @crazyedswonderfulworldofso9370
    @crazyedswonderfulworldofso9370 3 года назад +20

    Is it possible these two gentlemen have a theological difference over the meaning of God's "omnipotence"?

    • @billyhw5492
      @billyhw5492 3 года назад +2

      It seemed that they differed more specifically on what qualifies as a logical contradiction.

    • @optimoprimo132
      @optimoprimo132 3 года назад +2

      I assume they agree on God's omnipotence in a strict sense. However Jimmy was failing to understand a basic philosophical principle and failed to distinguish between logical being (meaning that which can be conceived in the mind) with actual being(meaning that which exists outside the mind).
      God cannot do the absurd or that which would contradict His nature.
      To posit God creating an infinite universe or an infinite past is a complete and utter error.
      You cannot even apply the term infinite to created reality.
      Created=finite, Creator=infinite.
      Jimmy's thought leads to..:
      God alone is Infinite,
      But creation is infinite
      Therefore creation is God.

    • @jimothynimajneb622
      @jimothynimajneb622 2 года назад

      @@optimoprimo132 that’s like saying a dog is brown and a bear is brown, therefore a dog is a bear. That conclusion doesn’t follow

    • @zorrobatman1
      @zorrobatman1 Год назад

      @@optimoprimo132 I totally agree with you. That 's exactly what I was thinking.. and I'm catholic!
      But here's a doubt that I have: if actual infinite succession of time doesn't exist.. how is eternal life possible?
      Maybe because the eternal life that Jesus describes in the Bible is not boud in time, I mean not of this world/creation? but in the timeless dimension of God?

    • @optimoprimo132
      @optimoprimo132 Год назад

      @@jimothynimajneb622 exactly. That is the point. It doesn't follow.

  • @justinpanlasigui1331
    @justinpanlasigui1331 3 года назад +13

    Love both Jimmy and WLC but at about the 41 min mark, WLC nails the coffin shut for this particular discussion. The debate was supposed to be about the philosophical soundness of Kalaam, and Jimmy retorts with only Christian theological arguments. WLC was in the right discipline (logic qua logic; metaphysics qua metaphysics), and Jimmy kept trying to argue from a different discipline (metaphysics of the Catholic Tradition).
    Love em both, though! Vivat Jesus!

    • @cartesian_doubt6230
      @cartesian_doubt6230 3 года назад +4

      Precisely. The truth is Akin is completely out of his depth with Craig. Craig is philosophical juggernaut whose work is cited in textbooks. He's also a logician of the highest order. Akin's appeal to Catholic tradition was a cop-out. That isn't how you debate. It was his way of saying "I lack both the formal education and the vocabulary to properly address your arguments". For Jimmy Akin, a man without a single academic credential in the field of philosophy, to think that he was going to out-logic such an eminent philosopher and academic debater as Dr. Craig was incredibly foolish.

    • @justinpanlasigui1331
      @justinpanlasigui1331 3 года назад +2

      @@cartesian_doubt6230 In the follow up that Fradd and Jimmy recorded right after the debate, Jimmy offered his defense for relying on Catholic teaching in a philosophy debate and I found it to be an insufficient defense.

  • @williammcenaney1331
    @williammcenaney1331 3 года назад +6

    During some debates, I've heard Dr. Craig say that sans creation, God is timeless and after creation, he's inside time. Dr. Craig confirms that in this video. He also rejects divine simplicity, that God has no parts of any sort. St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that since God is purely actual, he can't change in any way. But Dr. Craig implies that God changes when he, Craig, says that sans creation, God is timeless and after creation, God is in time. If God is the first cause, he can't change, since change is the actualization of a potential. If something that's already actual needs to cause a change and God can change, he can't be the first cause. So Dr. Craig's theism suggests a vicious infinite regress.
    But Mr.Akin can agree that merely Cambridge is possible for God. If I "shorten" because my nephew grows five inches taller than me, that's a merely Cambridge change in me. My nephew grew when I maintained my height. I didn't change. My nephew did.

    • @claymcdermott718
      @claymcdermott718 3 года назад

      This isn’t exact a “change” in God though, Craig would say. strictly speaking, when WLC talks about “before creation,” he means, “considered sans creation,” since it doesn’t make much sense to talk about “before time began.”

    • @williammcenaney1331
      @williammcenaney1331 3 года назад

      @@claymcdermott718 Okay. But if classical theism is true, it's logically impossible for God to undergo change. So if God is purely actual as we Thomists believe is, he has no potential, no ability to undergo change. When the Bible says that God gets angry or changes his mind, Thomists takes those expressions figuratively.

    • @williammcenaney1331
      @williammcenaney1331 3 года назад

      @@claymcdermott718 Alright, but he still seems to believe that God can undergo change. If he believes that, his belief implies that God has one or more metaphysical parts. So that implication would be enough to show that WLC is not a classical theist. Instead, he would be what Fr. Brian Davies calls a "theistic personalist.""When God began to create" is the most literal way to translate the first part of Genesis 1:1. If that's true, I don't understand that verse,

    • @Anthony-vm9gz
      @Anthony-vm9gz 3 года назад

      If God cannot change, how do we as Christians account for the Incarnation, in which God became man at a point in time?

    • @traceyedson9652
      @traceyedson9652 3 года назад

      @@Anthony-vm9gz Ah, but “the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world” - the incarnation was already a reality.

  • @adennyh
    @adennyh 3 года назад +3

    Jimmy made an argument that "prime minister is a person not a number", and hence in itself is not logical. I think this makes perfect sense. I don't understand why Dr. Craig still insisted that the statement is not "strictly illogical"..? Isn't that just a common sense..? I feel like sometimes learned people can be too theoretical to a point where they are detached from real world/common sense..

    • @nthdegree1269
      @nthdegree1269 3 года назад

      Stricly logically, is just that ..strict...broadly logical broadly speaking. You can formulate things with strict logic.

    • @AetheriusLamia
      @AetheriusLamia 3 года назад +2

      WLC was being obtuse over the trivial detail that Akin wasn’t going a few steps farther to the obvious conclusion “number and not a number”, “A and Not A”. WLC prefers to “win” debates on technical grounds rather than admit when he’s wrong.

    • @emiliawisniewski3947
      @emiliawisniewski3947 2 года назад +1

      @@AetheriusLamia - No, WLC is just being a philosopher, he's being accurate. Jimmy made the argument that God can do absolutely anything except that which is a logical contradiction. He then proposed an example that was not a strict logical contradiction and WLC pulled him up on it. Even if WLC was sympathetic to Jimmy's view, he wouldn't have let it slide. WLC did throw him a bone by suggesting that the examples that Jimmy was proposing were metaphysically impossible, even if they were not a strict logical contradiction. We can infer from that that God is not is not in the habit of making tables of ice say, because it would be broadly logically non-sensical.
      Jimmy is making a very good point that requires consideration, and WLC simply disagrees. It's not really a matter of winning or losing necessarily.

  • @gilsonrocks4740
    @gilsonrocks4740 3 года назад +17

    Craigs concern about offering theological arguments in response to philosophical problems seems odd since that’s precisely what he did at SES during a discussion on God and abstract objects.
    Jimmy brought up thoughtful points, but hard to outgun Craig on these issues. Good discussion!

    • @deschain1910
      @deschain1910 3 года назад +3

      I'm not certain exactly what you're referring to re: the SES discussion, but I think Craig's concern in this specific instance makes sense only because the KCA is meant to be a faith agnostic argument limited to proving some kind of creator. If you object to it on theological grounds from specific faiths, it feels somewhat irrelevant.

    • @ob4161
      @ob4161 3 года назад +1

      But the "God and Abstract Objects" video was a theological or inter-theist discussion about how best to solve the philosophical problem of God's relation to abstracta. The Kalām Argument is an atheist-theist debate which (unlike the abstract objects talk) doesn't assume God's existence.
      I think I agree that it's hard to outrun Craig on the Kalam argument, though.

    • @JJ-zr6fu
      @JJ-zr6fu 3 года назад

      @@ob4161 Exactly and Jimmy Aiken never addressed it.

  • @ReginaldPierce
    @ReginaldPierce 3 года назад +5

    I don't know why Dr Craig has such a hard time with subtraction working differently with finite vs transfinite numbers. Scalar multiplication is different than vector multiplication, but that does not make either form of multiplication metaphysically impossible

    • @yohanessaputra9274
      @yohanessaputra9274 3 года назад

      Can you explain that more thoroughly?

    • @ReginaldPierce
      @ReginaldPierce 3 года назад +1

      @@yohanessaputra9274 5x4=20 is an example of scalar multiplication. In scalar multiplication, it doesn't matter whether you have 5x4 or 4x5,it is always 20. If you have two vectors, e.g. A= and B=, there are actually two ways to multiply them, the dot product and the cross product. The dot product takes two vectors and makes a scalar and order doesn't matter. In this example A dot B = B dot A = 1. The cross product gives a vector result and order does matter. In this case, A x B = and B x A = . It is all called multiplication (with good reason) but the nature of the numbers being operated on changes how it works, just like the trans-finite subtraction problems. I think that it makes sense that a trans-finite number subtracted from another trans-finite number could yield either a finite or trans-finite number, just as vector multiplication can result in a scalar or a vector. It would be a logical impossibility if a finite number subtracted from a trans-finite number resulted in a finite number, but that's not what the Hilbert problem illustrates

    • @caiomateus4194
      @caiomateus4194 3 года назад

      @@ReginaldPierce
      To be possible, it is not enough to be consistent. In fact, it is consistent to maintain the falsity of arithmetic sentences based on the Dedekind-Peano axioms (since they are not reducible to logic). And, most importantly, there are developments in paraconsistent mathematics, making room for Priest's metaphysical position called dialetheism.
      There's nowhere to run, you have to appeal to your intuition in order to make philosophical judgments, even the most basic ones. And it is unanimous that the notion of transfinite is counter-intuitive, to say the least (not to mention the higher orders of transfinites, and large cardinals)

    • @ReginaldPierce
      @ReginaldPierce 3 года назад

      @@caiomateus4194 I'm not saying that it is simply consistent, I'm arguing that it is non-contradictory. Specifically it is a contradiction to say that one cannot count from zero (or any other natural number) to the infinity of natural numbers and also be able to get a finite residual by subtracting a natural number from the infinity of natural numbers, BUT it is not a contradiction to say that subtracting a different infinity from the infinity of natural numbers could yield a finite result. Dr Craig asserted that the latter is a contradiction, but I disagree. It does not contradict the nature of transfinite numbers.

    • @caiomateus4194
      @caiomateus4194 3 года назад

      @@ReginaldPierce Subtracting identical quantities from identical quantities and obtaining non-identical results is contradictory. They are not "infinite different", any infinite subset of the natural numbers has the same cardinality as the set, aleph-0, and it is the cardinality we are subtracting, not the sets. In fact, that's why this type of operation is considered indeterminate, just like zero divided by zero. It just doesn't make sense to have an answer, because if there were, there would be a contradiction.
      Consistency is synonymous with non-contradiction, at least I used it that way in my comment. What I meant was that the fact that something is not contradictory doesn't mean that it can be metaphysically possible or that there is no problem, because to say that 2+2 is different from 4 is also not contradictory (just deny Peano's axioms). I also pointed out that even to say that something contradictory is metaphysically impossible we need intuition, since there are logicians who argue that there are contradictions in reality (like Graham Priest). What we must do, then, is rely on common sense to determine what is impossible and what is not, rather than betting all the chips on a single criterion (non-contradiction).

  • @toddgruber5729
    @toddgruber5729 3 года назад +32

    I didn’t understand the details of much of anything they said but it was still somehow really interesting. How does that happen? Maybe like going to a Latin Mass when you don’t speak Latin. Ha!

    • @jonahspitzer4066
      @jonahspitzer4066 3 года назад +2

      thru time and practice one can learn the beauties of the Ancient Mass. Expecting to understand the Mass immediately is like a protestant opening the Bible and expecting to understand everything immediately based on sola scriptura. U r right to make the comparison, such theology also takes time to digest

    • @NeonShadowsx
      @NeonShadowsx 3 года назад +2

      It’s a good comparison because it makes you want to learn more!

    • @thewalruswasjason101
      @thewalruswasjason101 3 года назад +2

      These guys have read and studied these subjects for YEARS, thousands of hours of time dedicated to it. Of course it’s hard to follow. It should be

    • @DanielWoike
      @DanielWoike 3 года назад

      I am about a half hour through and I feel you so much.

  • @heatherjaracz
    @heatherjaracz Год назад +1

    Dear Dr. Craig, in Hubert's Hotel, it isn't the same number subtracted from the same number that results in different numbers. It is different subsets of numbers being subtracted. So it's ok that there are different answers. I love this discussion!

    • @jackplumbridge2704
      @jackplumbridge2704 Год назад

      But it is the same number.
      In both cases you have Aleph_0 being subtracted from Aleph_0 resulting in different numbers.
      Aleph_0 is a number, not a concept.

  • @jkellyid
    @jkellyid 3 года назад +6

    Had to parse the disagreement in this discussion it would be a disagreement of whether or not you form apologetics first on Revelation, or first on logic / reason/philosophy.
    What was very unexpected for me in this podcast was my perception that Revelation took a back seat for the Protestant position and was the lead justification for our classic Catholic faith.
    What a great discussion very enlightening. I want to thank everybody who participated immensely.
    Well I do think that in the broad argument William Lane Craig appear to be more concise I really appreciated and agreed with Jimmy's orientation of Revelation first apologetics where we use Revelation as the basis for our reason and argue a reason that is not in conflict with any aspect of Revelation.

    • @deschain1910
      @deschain1910 3 года назад +1

      The only problem I have with the "Revelation first" position is that I don't see how it would work for apologetics, because apologetics is by definition defending your arguments against those who generally do not accept Revelation. I can understand keeping Revelation in mind so you don't argue things that are in conflict with it, but I'm not sure how it could actually ever be involved in your argumentation.

  • @joelmontero9439
    @joelmontero9439 3 года назад +8

    ¡Viva Cristo Rey!
    Btw... we need another one with Dr. Rob Koons and or Dr. Gaven Kerr

  • @rotorblade9508
    @rotorblade9508 3 года назад +1

    Everything that begins to exist has a cause
    First problem is, from what we know we don’t have examples of things that begin to exist except for abstract things like ideas or different arrangements of entities like atoms, molecules that we call them new.
    Then the second part of the argument the cause, on our world we can see and effect in action, basically they are interactions which occur in time. So cause and effect works within our universe following the laws of physics. We can record a period of time and add the 3d space and create a 4d block. Within the block there is cause and effect but nothing can be said whether the block itself has a cause or not
    About infinities, they don’t make sense in physics, potential infinities are ok, but then the universe doesn’t need an infinite past. Time may have started at the Big Bang but it doesn’t mean it started from nothing. If we analyze the 4d block we can see a beginning with the first frame of the block. Before the first frame there are no other frames, it’s nothing there but the universe didn’t evolve from a nothingness state, such state didn’t exist. also the 4d block is still there.
    What about the infinity of space? It could be that in the initial phase the energy of the universe was all concentrated into a small space. Outside the space there was nothing so no infinity there. Then space expanded at the speed of light so if you are at the edge of space and shine a flashlight the beam will still travel at the speed of light as space expands with it.

  • @tommore3263
    @tommore3263 2 года назад +9

    What an interesting show. I used to think I had a fairly good grasp of the Kalam argument. This disabused me of that notion. Great show. Thanks. A final thought is that it is wonderful as a Catholic to have the assurance of apostolic teaching for confident guidance.

    • @TremendousSax
      @TremendousSax Год назад +1

      You mean it feels good to rely on an argument from authority fallacy?

    • @tommore3263
      @tommore3263 Год назад +2

      @@TremendousSax I studied logic at a pretty good university. Explain your accusation.

    • @kazumakiryu157
      @kazumakiryu157 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@tommore3263this guy won't. He barely understands what he's saying himself. He just want to pretend to be smart.

  • @_Dovar_
    @_Dovar_ Год назад +1

    The essence of this questions seems to be about the nature of time itself.
    Disregarding more fantastical "theories" about time-space of modern science (which becomes less respectable every day) - time is just a change of matter in a space. Because we measure it by observing the almost impeccably regular cyclical changes in matter (revolution of the Earth around its axis, around the Sun, phases of the Moon, seasons of year) we've grown accustomed to think of time as some invisible, infinitely long ruler that measures all events, or as a hidden invisible camera, recording all material universe.
    If there is no matter, there is no time.
    Therefore, for a thing to be created, it means it has to have a beginning, so it cannot exist before its own creation.
    If an apple would be to exist in the hypothetical state of "having an infinite past existence" it would mean it wasn't created, so in some aspects it would be equal to God.

  • @uptop3711
    @uptop3711 3 года назад +3

    I seem to be in the minority, but Akin won IMO. Craig spent much more time trying to invalidate Akin’s arguments by calling them theological or otherwise trying to hand-wave them away then he did actually responding to the arguments that were presented.
    Appreciate the debate though! Thank you Matt for hosting and thank you to both Jimmy and Dr. Craig for participating!

    • @JJ-zr6fu
      @JJ-zr6fu 3 года назад +1

      Jimmy himself said they were theological and they weren't relevant to the debate the argument is to try to prove there is a god. And what Jimmy was saying is my god disproves the argument.

    • @vaderetro264
      @vaderetro264 2 года назад +2

      Lane was sharper and more coherent, towards the end Jimmy was all over the place.

  • @KerryLiv
    @KerryLiv 6 месяцев назад

    Two gifted and fascinating minds - One God - Bravo!

  • @mikeysmachineryandmischief1364
    @mikeysmachineryandmischief1364 2 года назад +2

    my favorite guy was clearly right, and my second favorite guy was less right but still really cool!

  • @Quantum1008
    @Quantum1008 2 года назад +1

    Coming back to this intentionally today and thought of this. Akin says if God can imagine a number line composed of all the positive integers why could he not make a line of hydrogen atoms, one for each positive integer.
    Here is the thing. Infinity is not a number you count up to or add to until you get it. It is a size of a set which is composed of an indefinitely large number of items.
    Everyone knows this, so I don’t mean to bore you, but Cantor famously compared different sizes of infinity. He proposed a mental experiment where you write down all the real numbers, all infinity of them. Then you compose a new number. The first place is taken from the first place of the first number on the list plus one. The second place from the second place of the second number plus one and so on. This new number will differ from each number in the list. Cantor showed that you could always add new real numbers to the set of the real numbers even though you started out with the set of all infinite real numbers.
    I think that there is a prima fascia case that an infinite set of abstract items such as real number is logically possible but that it is metaphysically impossible to have a set of an infinite number of physical hydrogen atoms. For these reasons: 1) No matter how many hydrogen atoms God creates, even if we assume God created an infinite number of them, one can always imagine that God could create one additional hydrogen atom, or two extra, or an infinite number more, or an infinite number more hydrogen atoms an infinite number of times, and still you could imagine he could create one more. There is a logical contradiction since the infinite number of hydrogen atoms at any step is not actually infinite since you could always add one. 2) An infinite number of hydrogen atoms would take up an infinite amount of space. But even if you had enough space required to house an infinite number of hydrogen atoms you could always add a few cubic meters. 3) The point is that infinity is, by definition, not a definite quantity, it can never be reached by adding physical items or units of space or time or anything measurable. Because it is by definition the size of a set with an indefinite and unmeasurable quantity. 4) In the above examples, because we are adding up measurable quantities, our first infinity turns out not to be infinite after all. Thus, the size of our infinity is always going to be both infinite and not infinite at the same time and in the same respect. A logical contradiction. 5) if you simply say that all the initial infinities were not actual infinities, this would save the logical consistency of the claim, but whatever set of hydrogen atoms you claim are the final infinite number of hydrogen atoms, one more could be added. There is no stopping point. There is no realistic actual quantity of hydrogen atoms that would satisfy the definition of a final infinite number of measurable hydrogen atoms.

  • @motivesofcredibility3788
    @motivesofcredibility3788 3 года назад +8

    I'm with Jimmy on this one. I think Craig failed to grapple with Jimmy's challenge of Craig's distinction between logical & metaphysical contradiction. Jimmy refuted specific examples given by Craig & Craig only responded by repeating "that's not a strict logical contradiction". &, overall, Craig kept falling back on "that just seems inconceivable to me!" responses, despite Jimmy pointing out he (& others) have no issue conceiving such things. & Craig pulling the "I can follow the arguments where they lead because I don't share Jimmy's theological presuppositions" was annoying & offensive. Jimmy gave strictly philosophical refutations, not just theological ones.

    • @AetheriusLamia
      @AetheriusLamia 3 года назад

      Akin at least gave him pause when he delivered his trademark line. Hopefully he'll go read St John Paul II's audiences and Boethius, realize what Christians meant by eternal, and rethink his view of God.

    • @motivesofcredibility3788
      @motivesofcredibility3788 3 года назад

      @@AetheriusLamia We'll see. Is there any evidence Craig has ever changed his mind on one of his philosophical &/or theological positions? Just curious. I really don't know.

  • @TheRoark
    @TheRoark 3 года назад +37

    Matt at the beginning: This is not a protestant vs Catholic debate.
    Jimmy later on: Dr. Craig believes things that are not taught by the catholic church and so he is wrong.

    • @TheRoark
      @TheRoark 3 года назад +5

      @Justin Orrock Haha no, I was saying that Jimmy made the crux of the debate about the difference in their theological presuppositions rather than the Kalam argument. But I said that opinion in the form of a joke, sorry if that seemed disrespectful or anything.

    • @jstevo1349
      @jstevo1349 3 года назад +2

      @@TheRoark jimmy do be right tho

    • @friendly_user1233
      @friendly_user1233 3 года назад +3

      I don’t think it’s good to straw man Jimmy’s position like that. He basically stated that he has certain theological understandings which happens to fit his philosophical understandings. Dr. William Lane Craig, for example, would say that he, as an apologist, would defend the Christian faith as revealed in the Bible, and so, cannot believe in a God that doesn’t fit the description of YHVH.

    • @LaFedelaIglesia
      @LaFedelaIglesia 3 года назад +2

      @@TheRoark The Church preserves the fullness of the Faith, so it makes sense that contradicting the Church's teaching on this point would cause you to be wrong. Why would it be otherwise?

    • @matthewmayuiers
      @matthewmayuiers 3 года назад +1

      Although that’s true, it’s not very convincing unless you’re catholic. Divine simplicity would be better sorted out philosophically and theologically rather than citing church authority.

  • @ianb2107
    @ianb2107 Год назад +1

    Great job and clear thoughts from William Lane Craig. Great philosophical discussion.

  • @gor764
    @gor764 2 года назад +2

    I really enjoyed this. Surprised how philosophically well-versed Jimmy was.

  • @lt5231
    @lt5231 3 года назад +2

    This might be glossing over some of the technical aspects of the discussion, however, I would be happy to acknowledge with Dr. Craig that the nature of the physical universe as we observe it does not support the existence of actual infinities and therefore, from a natural perspective, the universe must have had a beginning. However, I would also be happy to acknowledge with Mr. Akin that the miraculous is possible and God is not confined to act only according to the laws of nature. Therefore, "actual" infinities are possible for God in some sense (that I personally can't conceive of). However, either argument points to the necessity of a force outside of nature to explain the existence of nature, which is normally the point the Kalam argument is trying to make anyway.

    • @JJ-zr6fu
      @JJ-zr6fu 3 года назад +2

      Yeah I was disappointed in Jimmy Aiken the argument is looking the universe and its laws and saying it must've been created by a god. Jimmy was saying well God could've done it differently that doesn't disprove the argument though because the argument is proving god and Jimmy's is presupposing there is a Catholic God. Also I question if he grasps infinity.

    • @optimoprimo132
      @optimoprimo132 3 года назад

      No, Jimmy was wrong in his metaphysics and consequently in his theology. Although God is not confined to the physical laws of creation He is limited in regards His very nature. God cannot create an eternal world or let us say an infinite created past.
      A miracle is something that defies the nature of physical creation but a miracle can never exceed the nature of God.
      God cannot create a rock so big that even He cannot lift.
      God cannot sin against Himself.
      God cannot go against His nature and will Himself out of existence.
      God cannot make 1+1=3.
      God cannot make a circle/square.
      God cannot create an eternal or infinite creation.
      God is eternal and infinite by nature. He cannot not exist. He is without change needing nothing to complete Him.
      The very nature of creation by definition is FINITE. creation has a beginning and will have an end unless God wills its continued existence.
      God=creator, infinite, eternal
      Creation=finite, beginning, changing, not eternal.

  • @user-dj6rk2yv7i
    @user-dj6rk2yv7i 3 месяца назад +1

    How exactly is metaphysically impossible for gold to have different atomic number??? Same with the table being from ice. It's certainly contingent.

  • @JordonHill
    @JordonHill 3 года назад +2

    Jimmy is so coherent to listen to.

    • @nthdegree1269
      @nthdegree1269 3 года назад

      Because he ending up talking more. Its basically Craig responding to Akins thoughts, but, its difficult to disect each one in limited time.

    • @IM-tl7qv
      @IM-tl7qv 2 года назад

      Yes, no wonder mysterious world is so successful

  • @widdershins7628
    @widdershins7628 3 года назад +2

    What I found most interesting was that a great scholar like Dr. Craig was more visibly perplexed by a Catholic council's defining God being outside time. "It wasn't definitive" he said or something rather. Hmm. Anyone else catch that? Why would a Baptist care what Lateran said? and why would he feel it, the council, left him room to speculate on his position on God being temporal? I hope Mr Frad can comment on this. Is the good Dr on his way Rome-ward? God bless both of them, and a special thanks to Jimmy who helped my faith heaps back in the day.

    • @JJ-zr6fu
      @JJ-zr6fu 3 года назад

      Well that wasn't what was being debated. Jimmy threw that out there as a point of clarification for Catholics but I think also to try to when the argument through ad hominin. They were arguing Kalam and I found Jimmy's argument unconvincing because it presupposed a god when the argument is trying to prove a god.

  • @SquishMe
    @SquishMe 2 года назад +1

    Craig was very concise and logical, i must say he persuaded me to concede that the argument does in fact work, great debate

    • @MoNtYbOy101
      @MoNtYbOy101 2 года назад

      How can you confidently state the universe had a beginning?

    • @kenandzafic3948
      @kenandzafic3948 Год назад +1

      @@MoNtYbOy101
      We have two scientific and two philosophical arguments for the beginning of the universe.

    • @MoNtYbOy101
      @MoNtYbOy101 Год назад

      @@kenandzafic3948 care to elaborate? There is no scientific evidence confirming the universe had a beginning.

    • @kenandzafic3948
      @kenandzafic3948 Год назад +1

      @@MoNtYbOy101 1. That is not true.
      2. The standard model of the big bang confirms that the universe probably had a beginning.
      3. The second law of thermodynamics confirms that the universe probably had a beginning.
      4. Philosophical arguments are still valid and confirm that the universe had a beginning even if we have no scientific evidence.

    • @MoNtYbOy101
      @MoNtYbOy101 Год назад

      @@kenandzafic3948 you’re wrong. Big bang theory only tells us that the Big Bang is the earliest time in the existence of our universe that we can investigate. It tells us nothing about wether our universe had a beginning or not.
      It confirms that the universe probably has a beginning? Weird phrasing to start with and it actually does the opposite.
      I’ve yet to hear a single philosophical argument that proves the universe has a beginning, if you know any feel free to share them.

  • @CatholicWithaBiblePodcast
    @CatholicWithaBiblePodcast 3 года назад +10

    It’s funny, because the Kalam always gave me pause for reasons I couldn’t quite put to words, but of course Jimmy comes through for me. Not entirely happy about it, but good for you sir.

    • @ironymatt
      @ironymatt 2 года назад +2

      The thing with the Kalam is that, strictly speaking, it's only intended to show that the universe has a cause, not that the cause must necessarily be God. Even though I'd agree personally that only the classical understanding of God could be said cause, the argument can nevertheless only arrive at that conclusion on a probabilistic basis, which isn't sufficient to convince anyone predisposed against God's existence.
      Plus, the second premise is presented as a brute fact.

    • @kazumakiryu157
      @kazumakiryu157 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@ironymattto be fair, there are defenses of individual premises and an analysis of the cause of the universe will bring you to something that is very similar to what we normally think of God.

  • @eugenehvorostyanov2409
    @eugenehvorostyanov2409 8 месяцев назад

    I find W L Craig’s view a more effective in presenting this argument to unprepared people, because he intentionally avoid unnecessary concepts which surely could bring more confusion (such as omnipotence), leaving solid and easy to understand ones.

  • @Nonreligeousthiestic
    @Nonreligeousthiestic 3 года назад +2

    I wish David Bentley Hart had a better attitude to participate like this, he is sorely missed around the way. So much to contribute and he hardly ever does. It is terrific that both Dr Craig and folks like Graham Oppy make the time as they do much appreciated.

    • @anniebanderet
      @anniebanderet 3 года назад

      Hart is a phenomenal thinker and addresses these issues in his books.

    • @Nonreligeousthiestic
      @Nonreligeousthiestic 3 года назад

      @@anniebanderet Some of them he does. But there is something that is drawn out by dialogue, a revelation.

  • @terryjohnson6761
    @terryjohnson6761 3 года назад +2

    but... but... infinity isn't a quantity... it just means there's no end. You can have the infinity of whole numbers, subtract the infinity of odd numbers and still have an infinity left over.

    • @AetheriusLamia
      @AetheriusLamia 3 года назад +1

      Akin made that point ("it's not a number in the same sense of other numbers") ...

  • @Martin4Mary4Ever
    @Martin4Mary4Ever Год назад

    Laplace has an answer to the infinite series between a current point and an initial point.

  • @alexs.5107
    @alexs.5107 Год назад +1

    A fascinating charitable discussion.

  • @Martin4Mary4Ever
    @Martin4Mary4Ever Год назад

    There is an issue here.
    Not all infinities are equal, thank you Dirac!

  • @trevoradams3702
    @trevoradams3702 3 года назад +4

    It’s worth noting in this debate that one could hold to the idea that actual infinites exist (although I don’t) and still hold that the philosophical premises of the Kalam are correct using the newer paradoxes like the grim messenger and grim reaper paradox developed by Pruss and Koons that do get you to a logical contradiction.

  • @seanneal9406
    @seanneal9406 Год назад

    Actually, the Kalam argument is valid. Aquinas stated in the Summa Theologia : A multitude is said to be infinite absolutely, when an infinite multitude is necessary that something may exist. Now this is impossible; because it would entail something dependent on an infinity for its existence; and hence its generation could never come to be, because it is impossible to pass through an infinite medium.

  • @jamesarmani4066
    @jamesarmani4066 3 года назад +4

    I love Jimmy Akin

  • @xavier.abraham
    @xavier.abraham 3 года назад +3

    The debate I wanted to watch. As a Catholic, who loves St. Thomas Aquinas, I however support Kalam argument. My reasoning is simply that if universe has an infinite past, then present is infinity realized (actual infinity), but then present elapses into past, meaning it's only potential infinity, not actual. I have read Akin's argument on his blogs, but really not able to comprehend it well enough. May be I need more time to digest Akin's thought.

    • @jstevo1349
      @jstevo1349 3 года назад

      just think of the present differently. rather than the present being a completion of the past, realise its just part of the past and the future and neither really exist except conceptually in our minds as we are inside of time. the past can go forever just as the future does, because time goes forever. being at a point in it is not the end of all the past points but part of all the past points and part of all the future points.
      also realise that in the present there are infinite points of time, and for it to move forward at all into the next moment is nonsensical and yet it happens. there is an infinite amount of periods between each second and still seconds pass. each second is the end of an infinite second, but also a point in an infinite amount of seconds, and is itself a new infinite.

    • @xavier.abraham
      @xavier.abraham 3 года назад

      @@jstevo1349 This is where I'm puzzled. Though past and future are of same substance - time - and we can thus perform arithmetic operations between past and future, there is also real distinctness because past has been actualized and future is only potential. This distinctness of past and future as it relates to the realized/potential is where I think it's wrong to apply *infinity* without the distinctness of potential infinity and actual infinity.

    • @AStoicMaster
      @AStoicMaster 2 года назад +1

      @@xavier.abraham Seems to me this rests on a mistake, because Craig instead of focusing on the question 'how many future events *will* there be if the future is endless?' To which the answer is infinitely many. Craig instead switches to "How many future events will *have* been?" And that it's true is always finite and increasing over time & approaching infinity, but never getting there...The problem is that those two things are compatible with each other. For one thing, it's changing the subject if you say "how many events will there be?" and to answer in terms of how many events there will have been; it's changing the subject. But also, they're both true. I mean, even though there will have been finitely many events; it's also true that there will be infinitely many events. In the infinite future, those two are not incompatible with each other. Therefore, Craig's point just doesn't land unless he can give a symmetry breaker that doesn't rely on changing the subject.
      Furthermore, mathematicians do not think infinity is contradictory. What may be contradictory is claiming that infinity is both a contradiction and not a contradiction. Claiming that the infinite past is incoherent, whilst the infinite future is embraced. And claiming the beginning of time is confirmed by the big bang singularity, which itself involves infinities.

  • @notdisclosed
    @notdisclosed 6 месяцев назад

    If a small number is a nearby fence, and very large number is like a distant fence, infinity is the lack of a fence. An infinite number is a contradiction in terms.

  • @daman7387
    @daman7387 2 года назад +1

    Haven't watched much yet but if only we could have an Aquinas - Pruss discussion on causal finitism 🥺 That would be so epic

  • @darrenjennings7
    @darrenjennings7 3 года назад +19

    🍿 Super Kind Discussion. Didn’t understand a word but looked great. I’m a visual learner so if you could get them to draw out their arguments next time?

    • @paxchristi1661
      @paxchristi1661 3 года назад +2

      🙂

    • @SuperrBoyful
      @SuperrBoyful 3 года назад +1

      That would be tough for the complexity of the argument.

    • @bryanwirthlin4444
      @bryanwirthlin4444 3 года назад +2

      Better use bright colors. It's the only thing that catches my eye. I'm not that smart.

  • @JohnEButton
    @JohnEButton 2 года назад +1

    I really wish this could have been extended another hour instead of artificially cutting it short.

  • @giovannidaza4574
    @giovannidaza4574 3 года назад +2

    Oppy and Craig on Kalam please!

  • @ruthnoelmarie...9061
    @ruthnoelmarie...9061 3 года назад

    I love that music prior to this discussion.. been enjoying the music on “The Hallow application well...” 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
    Good Day to all and the rest of the day to you... 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @beefalo37
    @beefalo37 3 года назад +4

    Terrific discussion. Craig seemed a tad rattled at points, perhaps from being presented with some arguments he'd never considered. He seemed to resort to just repeated himself more insistently without addressing the content of the points.

    • @ironymatt
      @ironymatt 2 года назад

      WLC did seem to fall into special pleading somewhat re: Akin utilizing theological considerations in his philosophical argumentation. I thought the points he brought up were pertinent to the subject at hand - his intent was clarity in the pursuit of truth rather than obfuscation - and Craig even conceded the value of a holistic methodology (philosophy isn't a monolith detached from all other fields).
      It rang a touch hollow, but it was a tremendous discussion nevertheless.

  • @kelvinvillegas5310
    @kelvinvillegas5310 3 года назад +1

    St. Thomas makes a distinction between something existing in God vs existing in his knowledge. This is important for example when he argues for a multitude of Divine ideas. There are many ideas in God's knowledge but it is not regunant to God's simplicity.

  • @alebeau4106
    @alebeau4106 3 года назад +1

    That was awesome ! Hope I can see those two wonderful apologists again on your channel!

  • @Dogheadedchris
    @Dogheadedchris 3 года назад +12

    "All this would prove is Christians shouldn't use the argument"
    cue kenobi...that's why I'm here
    Akin is an unsung hero

  • @rickfilmmaker3934
    @rickfilmmaker3934 6 месяцев назад

    Lane is committing the sin, or error of Idolatry of his own thoughts. Man's thought is not God's thought. God Bless both of them and Matt.

  • @kiwicoproductions2828
    @kiwicoproductions2828 3 года назад +3

    It’d weird how Matt prefaced at the beginning of the debate that this WOULD NOT be a Protestant vs. Catholic argument. Akin himself acknowledged mutual agreement and respect for Craig’s methodology from the onset. And yet, due to Akin’s more integrated theological approach to the Kalam…it ended up inadvertently becoming a Catholic vs. Protestant issue. Great conversation regardless but still weird. Lol.

    • @AndyReichert0
      @AndyReichert0 2 года назад +1

      how it typically goes, unfortunately. even if an argument is valid, sound, and consistent with all scientific data, mathematical proof, and scripture itself, it's no good just because pope bob says so? that is truly heartbreaking, both in terms of intellectual honesty and as a christian. the church won't be united until christians grow beyond this nonsensical tribalism.

    • @lilwaynesworld0
      @lilwaynesworld0 2 года назад

      @@AndyReichert0 what you talking about no pope has spoken on these issues in fact gives you the freedom to accept the St Anselm Kalaam or the St Aquinas proofs or Molinism or Aquinas predestination there is a freedom on such complicated issues where multiple theories are involved that don’t contradict scripture. Now there are dogmatic truths where there is only one possible answer where councils and popes do speak with an infallible voice or else all madness and relativity would ensue.

  • @tonyl3762
    @tonyl3762 Год назад +1

    I don't think it's fair for Craig to peg Akin's objections as _merely_ theological. God, His attributes/powers, and the nature of time/eternity and of the universe are all subjects of philosophy. Just because Catholicism embraces a certain view of God's omnipotence, eternity, and relation to time does not mean that that view is _merely_ theological. As I'm sure some atheists/agnostics would agree, such a view of eternity and the universe can make sense from a purely philosophical perspective too, and so the Kalam argument may appeal to premises that seem intuitively true to many from the human perspective but not strictly logically necessary.

  • @tflics
    @tflics 3 года назад +2

    Wow. Very good debate. They are both excellent debaters.

  • @JohnHansen-ej8nh
    @JohnHansen-ej8nh Месяц назад

    57:55 what a terrible time for Matt to jump in on. I really wanted to hear Jimmy's response to Craig's non-response.

  • @cachinnation448
    @cachinnation448 Год назад

    I LOVE both Jimmy and William (Brit Prot here)!!!!

  • @thousandmiles1341
    @thousandmiles1341 3 года назад +6

    Jimmy Akin needs to read WLC's book Time and Eternity.

    • @brando3342
      @brando3342 3 года назад

      @thousandmiles I totally agree, great book!

  • @e.witover4222
    @e.witover4222 2 года назад +1

    Aw dang! I was using that word Kalam in a science fiction book to represent an object. Now I have to change it! Do you know how hard it is to come up with a word that hasn't already been used in science fiction!? ROFL!

  • @mattkosta9755
    @mattkosta9755 3 года назад +7

    Jimmy Akin is the most slept on Catholic mind in the English speaking world

    • @IM-tl7qv
      @IM-tl7qv 2 года назад +2

      Too right.

    • @charlescarter2072
      @charlescarter2072 8 месяцев назад

      What does ‘slept on mind’ mean ?

    • @Djessie11
      @Djessie11 3 месяца назад

      @@charlescarter2072underrated mind. Someone who should be honoured and/or respected more than he already is.

    • @charlescarter2072
      @charlescarter2072 3 месяца назад

      @@Djessie11 thanks

  • @Vic2point0
    @Vic2point0 Год назад +1

    Whether actual infinites lead to what is technically considered a *logical* contradiction or not, saying that infinity minus 1 gives the same exact amount as infinity minus 1,000 is a contradiction, if you take infinity seriously as an amount. Just because you can type the word "infinity" (or draw a symbol) in both equations doesn't reserve it as a coherent idea in the face of trying to do any actual mathematical work with it.
    "God knows the set of all natural numbers which is infinite."
    That's begging the question, saying that there *is* an actually infinite amount of numbers, but the possibility of an actual infinite is what's in question. Similarly, saying that God can imagine an actual infinite is assuming that's a possibility. But if for some reason its existence isn't possible, then it would not be the case that God could imagine it. It's like saying "God knows that Elvis Presley was a kangaroo". He wouldn't and couldn't know that, since it's not true. Nor could he imagine that who we know of as Elvis Presley was a kangaroo, because it would then be an entirely different entity.
    Moreover, when it comes to talking of "natural numbers" and counting, what people don't realize is that this is only demonstrating the notion of a *potential* infinite, not an actual infinite. The act of counting forever in either direction (past or future) doesn't prove that there can already *be* an actually infinite amount of something.
    "All infinite means is it's unlimited."
    No. If we're taking "infinite" seriously as an amount of something already in existence, we need to distinguish between potential infinity (an unlimited process of counting, or getting apples, etc.) and actual infinity which means more than that. It means that we can observe the total all at one time, no successive counting or taking necessary.
    Akin actually gives a great argument to show the logical contradiction Craig was talking about. He admits that both counts of him "giving an infinite" number of apples to Craig would be different procedures. But how can one thing (the act of giving an infinite) be two distinctly different things at one time?

  • @insanedrummer1572
    @insanedrummer1572 3 года назад

    Need this but longer! :) great discussion

  • @acephilosopher9186
    @acephilosopher9186 3 года назад +2

    Something that wasn’t clear at first is that Jimmy is an eternalist about time, for theological reasons, because God is outside of time and therefore sees the temporally infinite 4D universe as real. Because God’s perspective on reality is surely more veridical than our finite temporal perspective, it would seem to follow that timelessness implies eternalism…
    But there are views that try to make sense of divine timelessness with presentism. I don’t necessarily agree with them but I just want to raise awareness that those types of views are out there, and they are endorsed by Catholics no less. I think maybe Brian Leftow, and Eleonore Stump/ Norm Kretzman defend views like this? Someone double check for me.
    So, Jimmy’s inference from divine timelessness in Catholic theology to eternalism is too quick.
    But anyway, does Catholic theology really require timelessness? I am a new Catholic and this is news to me…

  • @hyrow6054
    @hyrow6054 3 года назад

    Mind,body,soul.
    This is also the thought process.
    First comes the mind witch is impulse.
    Then comes body witch it a Libra scale of good and bad decisions.
    Last comes soul pure of heart thought for the greater good.
    The more you sit back and think the conclusion will become clearer.
    You must pick witch path to walk down as you go further into thought.
    Persuasion is the minds greatest enemy.
    The longer the thought the more free will is put into the though. the persuasion is conjured up during said thoughts.
    (Example) in the middle of praying you think of something bad because your putting all your free will thinking into something so pure of heart your mind body and soul come into play.
    The FIRST thing you pray about is all the things you impulsively need and want.
    The SECOND thing you think about is all the decisions you have or had to make.
    The THIRD thing you pray about is pure of heart and true thought wether it’s good or bad it’s truly what you desire.
    Personally the first thing I ask for is forgiveness
    The second is guidance.
    The third is happiness.
    The one and only thing that can last forever consciously is the last thing I pray for because it’s the end of everything and the beginning to life.
    (HAPPINESS) true peace and prosperity,pure of heart and eternal joy.
    We are all good and bad it’s base upon our decisions that we listen to and act upon.
    We are little pieces of our father and his son/daughter
    We must obey our fathers rules as a path to HAPPINESS and fight with our brothers and sister to achieve these goals don’t get persuaded to leave your path of right for wrong.
    Hard work is a lesson in life to achieve one of two things
    Transcendence
    Or
    Persuasion.
    If you read this all the way threw your already in the right mind set for change

  • @nthdegree1269
    @nthdegree1269 3 года назад +3

    I agree with Akins position but the absurdities that arise from an actual infinite as opposed to a potential one have to be dealt with and till now I don't think they have and it's quite difficult.

    • @antoinnelamah6949
      @antoinnelamah6949 2 года назад +1

      Actual infinities are not possible look at Hilbert hotels problem. Actual infinities always lead to contradiction

  • @temptemp961
    @temptemp961 3 года назад +3

    Catholic here. As a listener, it's going to be really difficult (philosophically) to push forward Jimmy Akin's arguments from God's eternity without giving some argument for the B theory of time. He states that this model is consistent with the councils (it's unclear to me if that gives B theory the status of dogma), but the problems of B Time are very difficult to solve. I don't have a flag in either theory since the question is so difficult, but ultimately, it seems like that's the foundation this argument reduces to.

    • @don7502
      @don7502 3 года назад +1

      If God is outside of time then the nature of His existence has no bearing on what theory of time one wishes to adopt. If A theory or B theory it doesn't apply to God (bc He's outside of time).

    • @temptemp961
      @temptemp961 3 года назад +1

      @@don7502 Well, if B Theory is true, then it's going to be logically difficult for God to interact with created nature until the entirety of time has transpired. That's a problem, and if apologetics matters (and I think it does), we need to be able to answer for this. I'm not saying Theory B is true (or that Theory A is false), but both have implications, and defenders of the faith need to account for this.

    • @don7502
      @don7502 3 года назад

      @@temptemp961 On Catholicism God is outside of time. All of His interactions with creation are within His one timeless act and don't invoke any change in Him. The change (and thus time) is all on the side of creatures. This is the case no matter what view of time what holds. Theories of time have implications for us. I agree with that. And if this is all you're saying then we agree. Theories of time have no implications for God though, because He's outside of time.

    • @temptemp961
      @temptemp961 3 года назад +1

      @@don7502 Problem is that Christ and the Holy Spirit are clearly operating in temporal time given the gospels, so this one timeless act needs to be coherent with the other Persons of the Trinity when they are acting within creation itself. It's not clear how this is possible with Theory A. And again: Catholic here. Not disagreeing with you theologically... but this a problem, and defenders of the faith are going to have to do the heavy lifting. If we have to address the problem of evil (and I think we both agree we do), then it's not left field to say that we catholics must also address this, too. If we can't answer each other, we're not going to do a good job of answering the atheist.

    • @don7502
      @don7502 3 года назад

      @@temptemp961 All God's temporal interactions are effects on the side of creation. God remains outside of time. You can look up Aquinas and mixed/real relations. Also Gaven Kerr has tons of youtube discussions and he often discusses things touching this topic. I would *HIGHLY* recommend watching any youtube discussions he's involved in. I agree with you that this appears very puzzling. Aquinas and many Catholic theologians/philosophers have dealt with this throught history. Gaven Kerr is the best I've seen at explaining it and many other puzzling issues.

  • @dynamic9016
    @dynamic9016 Год назад

    Thanks much for this video.

  • @TheRoark
    @TheRoark 3 года назад +13

    I find it odd that Akin made this a debate about the possibility of an actual infinite, rather than about the soundness of the Kalam argument. Even if the universe could be hypothetically infinite in the past, Akins own presuppositions presume it isn't so there shouldn't be any problems with this. Just an odd use of time in the debate if I am honest.

    • @marvelator8303
      @marvelator8303 3 года назад +5

      The Kalam relies on the premise "whatever begins to exist has a cause". If someone were to show the universe never began, then the Kalam argument fails.

    • @TheRoark
      @TheRoark 3 года назад +2

      @@marvelator8303 But Akin was willing to bring his other Catholic presuppositions in, why not presuppose the universe began to exist from his perspective?

    • @Tdisputations
      @Tdisputations 3 года назад +3

      @@TheRoark The debate was about whether the philosophical arguments Craig used to support the second premise succeed.

    • @TheRoark
      @TheRoark 3 года назад +4

      @@Tdisputations it’s odd to me for him to simultaneously claim his objections are purely from the Catholic worldview and then also argue that the universe could be infinite in the past. If he was doing one or the other it would be consistent but not both.

    • @friendly_user1233
      @friendly_user1233 3 года назад

      @@TheRoark
      I don’t think Jimmy would claim his argument is purely off of his presupposition from the Catholic faith. To show that there had to be a first causer, you don’t need to look at God’s natural economy through a linear series of causes (ordered per accidents), you can rather scope through the lens of hierarchical series of causes (ordered per se). (Dr. Edward Feser explains this in his book Five Proofs of the Existence of God.) The Kalam heavily relies on being able to prove finitism from a linear series of causes; Jimmy and St. Thomas says you cannot do that philosophically.

  • @johnkehoe1067
    @johnkehoe1067 3 года назад +1

    Both excellent. I'm Catholic and will look into Jimmy's stuff, but still can't get my head around his PAST infinites...a one-ended stick
    ...bear in mind we are only talking about physical infinites (?) How with a past infinity of time could we ever get to where we are...yet here we are.

    • @josephzammit6396
      @josephzammit6396 3 года назад

      I’m publishing a weekly RUclips video on episodes from the life of Don Bosco, entitled ST JOHN BOSCO by JOE ZAMMIT. In this series I’m narrating events and miracles from the splendid life of Don Bosco. St John Bosco used to perform a miracle almost every day, through the intercession of Mary Help of Christians. From the lives of saints we can learn how to love God more and draw closer to him. Thank you.

  • @darianelgert7511
    @darianelgert7511 3 года назад +3

    What is the distinction between logic and metaphysics? Like could I say something logically correct but metaphysically wrong?

    • @jstevo1349
      @jstevo1349 3 года назад +2

      it would be to say that rhetorically you can argue these things with words, but the things are still impossible fundamentally. it would sound correct in words but with more deep reasoning it would still be untrue. like its logically correct that if all beings get knowledge from God, and God has 1 act of knowledge, then all beings would have Gods knowledge. but its metaphysically impossible since Gods knowledge is infinite and we are finite, so our knowledge will always be incomplete.

    • @josephzammit6396
      @josephzammit6396 3 года назад

      Logic deals with reason; metaphysics with reality beyond (not contrary!) reason and the physical world/universe. I’m publishing a weekly RUclips video on episodes from the life of Don Bosco, entitled ST JOHN BOSCO by JOE ZAMMIT. In this series I’m narrating events and miracles from the splendid life of Don Bosco. St John Bosco used to perform a miracle almost every day, through the intercession of Mary Help of Christians. From the lives of saints we can learn how to love God more and draw closer to him. Thank you.