Hi Michael,
this’ll be my last post for a while, what with Christmas looming and all. And I apologise if my posts have made you angry (or if I’ve misread your tone). I think we have reached an impasse and are now arguing against or past each other rather than trying to understand each other, so it’s probably best if I have a break after this anyway.
No - the issue here is not as you and Lewis are saying that they really mean something else, but rather they’re using the word ‘nothing’ in a different way to its usual sense, in same way specialists in all fields sometimes alter the denotation of terms to suit a more nuanced usage. A simple check up on wikipedia shows that:
“According to present-day understanding of what is called the vacuum state or the quantum vacuum, it is “by no means a simple empty space”,and again: “it is a mistake to think of any physical vacuum as some absolutely empty void.” According to quantum mechanics, the vacuum state is not truly empty but instead contains fleeting electromagnetic waves and particles that pop into and out of existence.”
So I don’t accept a large portion of your post has any relevance, sorry. We’re talking at cross purposes - I tried to communicate that they were using ‘nothing’ in a different way but obviously I failed to make myself clear to you.
No - mindless particles do things ‘of their own accord’ all the time. I drop a rock - it falls. Who’s is making it travel towards the earth? I know that you know this, so I guess you meant something else when you typed that. But I’m not sure what.
Not sure what you mean. A particle does X, it may or may not be what we expected - we explain X as best as we can using mathematics etc Some ‘laws’ remain undiscovered, others we’re working on, some we pretty much have down cold.
Yes, I can put aside respect (why would I want to?). It is (why say philosophically as if that lends credence to a point?) nonsense to talk of particles popping in and out of existence out of nothing. It is *not nonsense *to talk of mindless, material particles ‘obeying’ physical forces without the constant intervention of mind.
Descartes believed this, and Aquinas’ view (along with Mavrodes) - I think - was that God could make a rock so heavy He couldn’t pick it up. There’s various ways of dealing with the omnipotence paradox, and different philosophers and theologians have arrived at differing answers. But I’m not sure of the relevance of this with regards creation, chaos or freewill.
Yes and no. Let’s say He made a spinning coin *ex nihilo *- and made all the surrounding environment. And let’s say He knows everything. He knows, in Newtonian terms, which side the coin will land - so in making it with a certain spin, and in a certain environment He is choosing which side it will land.
So far so good - but when I used that analogy I was trying to relate the coin to non-Newtonian physics. So lets try that:
God makes a special coin where nothing in the environment can change the fact that the coin has a 50/50 chance of landing heads or tails (it’s a quantum coin!). God knows everything there is to know about the environment, the spin of the coin etc - but, by His own choosing, the coin is part of an irreducable probabilisitc system. The only way God can now know which side the coin will land, and therfore the only way God would be said to have specifically chosen it to land that way, is if God’s omniscience covers* knowledge of future events as facts*. As an open theist I reject that any such knowledge is possible - the future is a realm of possibilities which chance and freewilled beings actualise as self-determining agents (or systems), to talk of knowing the future is as nonsensical as talking about knowing how to make a four-sided triangle. If you believe that God’s omnipotence is limited by logic, then I can make the same philosophical move with regards omniscience.
No. God made a chaotic system 'cause He wanted one (if there is one - again, I’m just arguing that it’s possible - trying to keep an open mind etc).
No more logically incongrous than a world where rocks fall according to the laws of gravity without God’s direct intervention or guidance.
O.K - I’ll stop. You obviously don’t like quotes (apart from Lewis) even though you asked who the experts were.
I believe both can exist. Some choices I make are free in the libertarian sense; others might not be. I think I can be a libertarian and a universalist. It’s a cool viewpoint that gives me the best of both worlds. I like it.
I’ll leave it there. There’s much more you said that I could respond to, but I have limited time and it seems like it’s getting us nowhere now. I’ve learned a bit from our chat, and you’ve helped me sharpen up my views. Thank you. I hope that I too may have been of some use - I did warn you to start with that I wasn’t an expert and that I couldn’t engage you on the level you wanted. In all seriousness I suggest that you learn quantum theory and discuss these things on a science forum - becuase it’s the only way you’ll really know what the scientists are saying. Similarly, I suggest that you read a selection of the texts or listen to a selection of the lectures I’ve named so that you can beter understand, even if you disagree with, the opposing viewpoint.
Merry Christmas!