Proving God is very simple.
1. God is the only one who can solve the infinity regress.
2. Infinity regress is logically unavoidable, since either time is infinite either amount of causes are infinite.
3. Infinity regress has been solved.
C. God must exist.
1. Causes cant cause themselves.
2. "Something" cannot be the first cause
3. "Nothing" cannot be the first cause
4. First cause had to be neither "something" nor "nothing".
5. First cause had to be God.
Because God is above the laws of logic, being supernatural, he doesnt need a cause.
With powers to speed up time so that infinity passes in an instant, God solves infinity regress.
Since "nothing" only produces nothing, and "something" requires a cause, it follows that first cause had to be supernatural, neither nothing nor something.
This only leads us to some God-like being, that explains the existence of first cause, infinite regress and universal laws of logic that would otherwise have no explanation.
- Whatever begins to exist has a cause of its existence.
- The universe began to exist.
- Therefore, the universe has a cause of its existence.
Craig analyses this cause in
The Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology and says that this cause must be uncaused, beginningless, changeless, timeless, spaceless, extraordinarily powerful, and personal.
[30"
Aquinas's argument from contingency allows for the possibility of a Universe that has no beginning in time. It is a form of argument from universal
causation. Aquinas observed that, in nature, there were things with contingent existences. Since it is possible for such things not to exist, there must be some time at which these things did not in fact exist. Thus, according to Aquinas, there must have been a time when nothing existed. If this is so, there would exist nothing that could bring anything into existence. Contingent beings, therefore, are insufficient to account for the existence of contingent beings: there must exist a
necessary being whose non-existence is an impossibility, and from which the existence of all contingent beings is ultimately derived.
Aquinas' argument from contingency may also be formulated like this: if each contingently existing being considers himself Bn, then, because he exists contingently, he depends for his existence on a prior being Bn-1. Now, Bn-1 likewise, if it is contingent, depends on Bn-2. Nevertheless, this series cannot go on until Infinity. At a certain time, we will arrive at a B1, the First Being in existence, and since there is no "zeroth" Being or B0, B1 exists Necessarily, i.e. is not a contingent being. This was Aquinas' Third Way, under Question 2, Article 3 in the Summa Theologica
[21]The German philosopher
Gottfried Leibniz made a similar argument with his
principle of sufficient reason in 1714. "There can be found no fact that is true or existent, or any true proposition," he wrote, "without there being a sufficient reason for its being so and not otherwise, although we cannot know these reasons in most cases." He formulated the cosmological argument succinctly: "Why is there something rather than nothing? The sufficient reason ... is found in a substance which ... is a necessary being bearing the reason for its existence within itself."
[22]Leibniz's argument from contingency is one of the most popular cosmological arguments in philosophy of religion. It attempts to prove the existence of a necessary being and infer that this being is God.
Alexander Pruss formulates the argument as follows:
- Every contingent fact has an explanation.
- There is a contingent fact that includes all other contingent facts.
- Therefore, there is an explanation of this fact.
- This explanation must involve a necessary being.
- This necessary being is God.[23]
Premise 1 is a form of the
principle of sufficient reason stating that all contingently true sentences (i.e. contingent facts) have a sufficient explanation as to why they are the case. Premise 2 refers to what is known as the Big Conjunctive Contingent Fact (abbreviated BCCF), and the BCCF is generally taken to be the
logical conjunction of all contingent facts.
[24] It can be thought about as the sum total of all contingent reality. Premise 3 then concludes that the BCCF has an explanation, as every contingency does (in virtue of the PSR). It follows that this explanation is non-contingent (i.e. necessary); no contingency can explain the BCCF, because every contingent fact is a
part of the BCCF. Statement 5, which is either seen as a premise or a conclusion, infers that the necessary being which explains the totality of contingent facts is God."
"
Duns Scotus, the influential Medieval Christian theologian, created a metaphysical argument for the existence of God. Though it was inspired by Aquinas' argument from motion, he, like other philosophers and theologians, believed that his statement for God's existence could be considered separate to Aquinas'. His explanation for God's existence is long, and can be summarised as follows:
[31]- Something can be produced.
- It is produced by itself, by nothing, or by another.
- Not by nothing, because nothing causes nothing.
- Not by itself, because an effect never causes itself.
- Therefore, by another A.
- If A is first then we have reached the conclusion.
- If A is not first, then we return to 2).
- From 3) and 4), we produce another- B. The ascending series is either infinite or finite.
- An infinite series is not possible.
- Therefore, God exists.
Scotus deals immediately with two objections he can see: first, that there cannot be a first, and second, that the argument falls apart when 1) is questioned. He states that
infinite regress is impossible, because it provokes unanswerable questions, like, in modern English, "What is infinity minus infinity?" The second he states can be answered if the question is rephrased using
modal logic, meaning that the first statement is instead "It is possible that something can be produced."
"Depending on its formulation, the cosmological argument is an example of a
positive infinite regress argument. An
infinite regress is an infinite series of entities governed by a
recursive principle that determines how each entity in the series depends on or is produced by its predecessor.
[32] An
infinite regress argument is an argument against a theory based on the fact that this theory leads to an infinite regress.
[32][33] A
positive infinite regress argument employs the regress in question to argue in support of a theory by showing that its alternative involves a vicious regress.
[34] The regress relevant for the cosmological argument is the
regress of causes: an event occurred because it was caused by another event that occurred before it, which was itself caused by a previous event, and so on.
[32][35] For an infinite regress argument to be successful, it has to demonstrate not just that the theory in question entails an infinite regress but also that this regress is
vicious.
[32][35] Once the viciousness of the regress of causes is established, the cosmological argument can proceed to its positive conclusion by holding that it is necessary to posit a
first cause in order to avoid it.
[36]A regress can be vicious due to
metaphysical impossibility,
implausibility or
explanatory failure.
[35][37] It is sometimes held that the
regress of causes is vicious because it is
metaphysically impossible, i.e. that it involves an outright
contradiction. But it is difficult to see where this contradiction lies unless an additional assumption is accepted: that
actual infinity is impossible.
[36][33][35] But this position is opposed to infinity in general, not just specifically to the
regress of causes.
[32] A more promising view is that the
regress of causes is to be rejected because it is
implausible.
[36] Such an argument can be based on empirical observation, e.g. that, to the best of our knowledge, our universe had a beginning in the form of the
Big Bang[36] (albeit the possibility that it existed for eternity before the Big Bang is also not strictly excluded on physics grounds alone
[38]). But it can also be based on more abstract principles, like
Ockham's razor (parsimony), which posits that we should avoid ontological extravagance by not multiplying entities without necessity.
[39][35] A third option is to see the
regress of causes as vicious due to
explanatory failure, i.e. that it does not solve the problem it was formulated to solve or that it assumes already in disguised form what it was supposed to explain.
[35][37][40"
The concept of Infinite Regress was detailed as a basis for the existence of a god. This in no way validates the existance of a god. Just the asumption that some thing depends on a predecessor. Which is a huge assumption. Atheiest like to use this as a means to decalre validity in their thinking. It doesn't. It in general is a phlisophical statement and I want to have concrete explanations. Something everyone can understand and validate for themeselves. I put it in your hand and you can see it.