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Does God Exist?

Explore the philosophical and scientific evidence supporting the existence of God through the Kalam Argument, Cosmological Argument, and Design Argument. Understand the intricacies of causality, the beginning of the universe, and the concept of a necessary being.

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Does God Exist?

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  1. Does God Exist? The Cosmological Argument Goldsmith & McAtee The Design Argument Dana & Betsy Harris God & the Meaning of Life Hedges & Homoya Science & Christianity Brenner & Scott

  2. The Cosmological Argument by: Reid Goldsmith and Ben McAtee

  3. Overview of the Kalam Argument

  4. Actual Infinity Represented by the figure to the right a0-1= a0 a0+1= a0 a0-n= a0 a0+n= a0 a0* a0= a0 a0 An actual infinite cannot exist because it creates irreconcilable paradoxes

  5. Potential Infinity • A potential infinite increases its number through time • A potential infinite is always finite • A potential infinite can never become an actual infinite. lim1/n=  n  0

  6. Kalam: First Premise and First Argument • Since an actual infinite cannot exist, then there is a finite number of past events in this universe. • If there is a finite number of past events, at some point, there was no universe • Therefore, there must have been a beginning to our universe

  7. B A Y Z Kalam: First Premise and Second Argument • Even if an actual infinite could exist, it is impossible to traverse an actual infinite • If there are an actual infinite number of points between point Z and point Y, then it would take infinite time to traverse that segment • The argument from nature of causal sequences helps us to understand this phenomenon.

  8. Argument from Causal Sequences • Imagine, if you will, a helicopter flying over your head. How did it get there? • Here’s how it got there. The pilot got into the helicopter. The pilot getting into the helicopter is the direct cause of the helicopter flying over your head. • The fact that there is a causal relationship between the pilot getting in the chopper and the chopper flying over your head means that there are specific instances in the past that you can determine, thus proving that there isn’t an actual infinite number of past events. (The chicken and the egg is a perfect example of this)

  9. Expansion from Nothing • In 1920, Astronomer Edwin Hubble discovered the Red Shift. • The red shift proves the universe is expanding • If the universe is expanding, it must have had a starting point. Hence, the universe had a beginning. • The big bang theory states that this beginning was a giant explosion from an infinitesimal point.

  10. Second law of Thermodynamics • The Second law defines Entropy as either energy, disorder, or information. • The second law states that Entropy is always increasing in the universe. • If the universe had not had a beginning, we would have reached an equilibrium of disorder right now, the universe being completely in disorder. We would all be a bunch of quarks and mesons flying around in a soup of energy. But, since that hasn’t happened, then the universe had a beginning.

  11. Kalam Premise 2: The Beginning of the Universe was Caused • Because the universe began to exist, it’s logical to assume it was caused. • Something does not come from nothing without a cause. • Events have a definite beginning and end and do not happen without something causing them.

  12. God Needed no Cause Because He had no Beginning • God does not need a cause, because He is neither an event or a contingent being. • Because God is a necessary being, He does not need a cause. • Asking for a cause for God is illogical. It’s asking for a cause for an uncaused Being.

  13. So…. • Even if the beginning being something from nothing were logically possible, it’s still physically impossible • There is therefore no reason to deny what we witness every day: events have causes. • The beginning, being an event, must have had a cause.

  14. Kalam Premise 3: The Cause for the Universe was Personal • The cause had to either be personal or impersonal. • Prior to the universe, there was a state of no time, no space, and no change of any kind. • The conditions for the beginning were either existent from all eternity in a state of “immutability,” or they had to come to be.

  15. So What is the “First Event?” • If the conditions had to come to be, then that in itself was the first event. • This couldn’t be because before the initial universe, there was no order and no change. • The only way to avoid the first event being uncaused is to say that conditions existed in a timeless, changeless state.

  16. And… • If this was an impersonal beginning, then when the cause existed, the effect would have taken place, simply because all the conditions were in their proper place. • If there is no waiting, then an infinite cause would have caused an infinite effect. This goes back to the universe being infinite.

  17. The Cause had to be Personal • The only way the first event could have come spontaneously from a timeless, changeless state is to be caused by a free act of a person or agent, meaning it was created on purpose. • You can raise your arm if conditions are right, but conditions don’t cause it. It’s an act of free will.

  18. To Sum it all Up: • It’s not logical to believe that the beginning of the universe was caused by a timeless, impersonal act or force. • This shows that for us to exist there needs to be some supreme, necessary Being who was our cause.

  19. DESIGN ARGUMEN DESIGN ARGUMENT DESIGN ARGUMENT THE DESIGN IGN ARGUMENT DESIGN ARGU DESIGN ARG DESIGN AR ARGUMENT DESIGN DESIGN ARGUMENT DESIGN ARGUMENT DESIGN ARGUMENT IGN ARGUMENT DESIGN ARGUMENT DESIGN ARGUMENT DESIGN ARGUMENT DESIGN ARGUMENT

  20. KINDS OF DESIGN ORDER *THE UNIVERSE IS ARRANGED* Quantitative sequences (orderly arrangements) the color spectrum Regularities of spatial compresence roads on maps at right angles Regularities of temporal succession sequence of notes in a song

  21. KINDS OF DESIGN PURPOSE ARRANGEMENT REFLECTS A PLAN OF THE DESIGNER Biological vs. Nonbiological e.g. body functions, eyes, etc. = biological e.g. freezing point of water, answer to prayer = nonbiological

  22. KINDS OF DESIGN SIMPLICITY THE UNIVERSE IS A RESULT OF A SINGLE, RATIONAL, EFFICIENT MIND The Grand Unified Theory = one simple theory which unifies forces e.g. an apple falling and the galaxy rotating all because of the Law of Gravity

  23. KINDS OF DESIGN COMPLEXITY THE UNIVERSE IS COMPLEX Simple unity with complex diversity shows great design EXAMPLES: Snowflakes Organic compounds and DNA

  24. KINDS OF DESIGN BEAUTY BEAUTY POINTS TO A GRAND ARTIST BEAUTY IN MATH POINTS TO A GRAND MIND The world demonstrates objective beauty (e.g. sunsets) This leads to a Creative Designer

  25. KINDS OF DESIGN SENSE & COGNITION WE CAN PERCEIVE AND THINK ABOUT THE WORLD Our senses did not evolve out of survival value Senses we use to accurately think about our world go beyond what we need to survive

  26. KINDS OF DESIGN INFORMATION INFORMATION EXISTS OUT OF AND PRIOR TO THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE PARTS- MEANING EXISTS IN THE AUTHOR High order, little information = snowflakes High order, high information = living organisms, DNA

  27. KINDS OF DESIGN COSMIC CONSTANTS *ANTHROPIC PRINCIPLE* The universe unfolded with life in mind CONSTANTS: 1. No life could be possible had all the forces in the world been slightly smaller or larger 2. Only on earth is life possible and probable 3. Formation of life from non-life is 1x 1040000 chance

  28. KINDS OF DESIGN COSMIC CONSTANTS “It is hard to resist the impression that the present structure of the universe, apparently so sensitive to minor alteration in the numbers, has been rather carefully thought out ... the seemingly miraculous concurrence of [these] numerical values must remain the most compelling evidence for cosmic design.” - theoretical physicist Paul Davies

  29. God and the Meaning of Life By Aaron Homoya & Josh Hedges

  30. God and the Meaning of Life • Most Urgent of Questions • Why does the universe exist? Why is there something instead of nothing? • Why do human beings in general exist? • Why do I exist?

  31. God and the Meaning of Life • Are there any objective values which provide significance and a goal or purpose for the universe as a whole, human life in general, or my life in particular? • -What is the meaning of moral statements? • -Why should I be moral?

  32. The Meaning of Moral Statements • Metaethics: That branch of philosophy which analyzes the meaning of certain moral terms • (right, wrong, good, bad, ought, worth, and so forth)

  33. The Meaning of Moral Statements • “You Can’t Know” Theories - Statements do not give information, and are not true or false • ex. “x is right” really means “hurray for x!” • or “x is right” means “do x!”

  34. The Meaning of Moral Statements • “You Can Know” Theories - statements give factual information and can be true or false - Subjectivist Theories: moral statements convey information about the speaker -ex. “x is right” means “I think x is right” - Or “we in our culture like x” - Objectivist Theories: moral statements convey information by properties of people or acts -ex. “x is right” means “what is best for the most amount of people” - Or “x is right” simply means “x is right”

  35. Reasons for Being Moral • Why should I adopt the moral point of view as a guiding force over my life? • Justifications for morality • What rational justification can be given to me as to why it would be reasonable for me to adopt the moral point of view?

  36. Four Views of the Meaning of Life

  37. Nihilism • Beliefs • Human existence is totally meaningless • There are no values, thus no reason to be moral • God is dead • Science has shown life to be meaningless

  38. Nihilism • Objections • Values may exist even though they cannot be proven • Proof of everything is not necessary. Proving proof would continue ad infinitum. • Nazi genocide and the torture of babies is obviously wrong. • Questions of meaning and value are outside the limits of science • Nihilism is unlivable and cannot be rationally recommended

  39. Existentialism • Beliefs • There is no reason for existence, but humans create values and give life their own meaning • Life can be subjectively satisfying • Objections • Suggests living a life of delusion • No rational justification over nihilism • No rational objection to obvious moral atrocities (ex. Nazis, torturing babies, etc.)

  40. Transcendentalism • Beliefs • There is no reason for existence, but life has objective meaning because objective values can be found within life • Objections • Cannot account for moral guilt (Guilt requires a Person to feel guilty towards) • Moral values without moral law-giver does not make sense

  41. Transcendentalism • Objections (continued) • If moral values are cosmic entities, why would they have do with us? • Cannot explain how detailed aspects of morality can be known • Has no adequate answer for why to obey morality over one’s selfish interests

  42. Christian Theism • Beliefs • The universe, man, and individuals have reason for existence and for living • Cosmos exists to glorify God and promote the good of His creatures • Human history has purpose, showing the struggle between good and evil • Values come from God, through nature and the Bible

  43. Christian Theism • Beliefs (continued) • Motives for morality • the love of God • the sake of doing right • the rewards of obeying God • Morality is based on God’s nature • Man has free will and was designed to find meaning in God • Value and purpose are based in God’s nature

  44. Conclusion • Nihilism and Existentialism are empty and lacking purpose • Transcendentalism and Christian Theism affirm the existence of values and purpose • Christian Theism has a better explanation • Christian Theism has only weak objections

  45. Science and ChristianityByDave ScottandDaphne Brenner

  46. Science vs. Religion • Description of relationship: allies, enemies, other • Science claims that it alone is the model of truth and rationality; Christianity must conform to it • Religion argues that it has yet to be proven irrational or a matter of opinion

  47. Is Science Reliable?Successful? • The majority of modern scientists embrace realism • Most Creation/ Evolution debates assume scientific realism • 3 views of scientific realism • Rational realism • Nonrational realism • Nonrational nonrealism

  48. Rational Realism • Scientific theories are true or approximately true • A properly developed theory makes existence claims • Rationality is an objective notion and conceptual relativism is false • A scientific theory will be simple, clear consistent, relevant, and useful. • The aim of science is a literally true picture of the world

  49. Nonrational Realism • Objectivity, but reality lies beyond what our senses tell us • Science presently givesinaccurate descriptions • Scientific knowledge is only what we can perceive with our senses • Theories are just sets of lab operations and recorded numbers • Science only desires working theories, which might not be true • Science aims to find theories that adequately yield desirable results and observations

  50. Nonrational Nonrealism • There is no objective sense in which science is rational • There are no givens • Rival theories or models cannot be compared • Science is no more than rules scientists have chosen to accept

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