zephyrprime
Diamond Member
- Feb 18, 2001
- 7,512
- 2
- 81
This is of course true. However, even if all links in an inductive chain cannot be solved or proven, does that mean that a single link in that chain cannot be solved or proven? I don't think so. Even if you can't solve the entire chain, I think it's still possible to solve one chain.God suffers from every first cause argument that the universe does. The only way theists get around this is by simply declaring him immune from it.
For example:
Let's say that your cake has been eaten.
Question: Who ate my cake?
Answer: eskimospy
Next question in the chain: Why did eskimospy eat my cake?
Answer: unknown.
Implication -> since we don't know why eskimospy ate the cake, the cake therefore must never have been eaten by anyone even though it was eaten.
Of course this implication is false. Even if you don't know why the cake was eaten, you can still know who ate it without further insight into an infinite number of layer of cause and effect the final action is linked to.