Tistime345 said:
Lets start with the basics, everyone who does physics know about the law which forms the basis of many physical theories, it has never been disproven, and sticking to it is the key to expansion of many theories, i.e, relativistic mass, lenz's law, etc. The law of conservation energy, it requires no probability, we know that the universe must have had a beginning, and the mere fact that there is something rather than nothing, which is only possible by the presence of something that can make something from nothing, i.e God. Further if you choose to say that this is simply not true, impossible btw, then how bout the miraculous division of universe in which there is sometihng rather than a whole lot of gamma rays, which is what should have happened lest something miraculously made matter outnumber antimatter, something that simply should not have happened.
• Rebuttal: Rebuttal: First Law of Thermodynamics Claim
Claim:
The first law of thermodynamics says matter/energy cannot come from nothing. Therefore, the universe itself could not have formed naturally.
Response:
Formation of the universe from nothing need not violate conservation of energy. The gravitational potential energy of a gravitational field is a negative energy. When all the gravitational potential energy is added to all the other energy in the universe, it might sum to zero (Guth 1997, 9-12,271-276; Tryon 1973).
• Rebuttal: The First Cause Argument
Claim:
Every event has a cause. The universe itself had a beginning, so it must have had a first cause, which must have been a creator God.
Response:
1. The assumption that every event has a cause, although common in our experience, is not necessarily universal. The apparent lack of cause for some events, such as radioactive decay, suggests that there might be exceptions. There are also hypotheses, such as alternate dimensions of time or an eternally oscillating universe, that allow a universe without a first cause.
2. By definition, a cause comes before an event. If time began with the universe, "before" does not even apply to it, and it is logically impossible that the universe be caused.
3. This claim raises the question of what caused God. If, as some claim, God does not need a cause, then by the same reasoning, neither does the universe.
This was all on the 1st page.
@ the bolded bit, why can't a naturalistic explanation have caused the uneven creation of matter/anti matter, in fact i read a good guess of what could have caused this without needing to resort to "God did it".