Post-Debate Reflections

We’ve returned from the lovely city of New Orleans, where within a short period of time I was able to sample shrimp and grits, bread pudding soufflé, turtle soup, chicken gumbo, soft-shelled crab with crawfish étouffée, and of course beignets. Oh yes, also participated in the Greer-Heard Forum, where I debated William Lane Craig, and then continued the discussion the next day along with Alex Rosenberg, Tim Maudlin, James Sinclair, and Robin Collins. The whole event was recorded, and will be released on the internet soon — hopefully within a couple of days.

[Update: Here is the video:]

"God & Cosmology" - 2014 Greer-Heard Forum

In the meantime I thought I’d provide some quick post-debate reflections. Overall I think it went pretty well, although I certainly could have done better. Then again I’m biased, both by being hard on myself in terms of the debate performance, but understandably of the opinion that my actual ideas are correct. I think I mostly reached my primary goal of explaining why many of us think theism is undermined by modern science, and in particular why there is no support to be found for it in modern cosmology. For other perspectives see Rational Skepticism or the Reasonable Faith forums.

Clockwise from top left: William Lane Craig, Alex Rosenberg, Sean Carroll, James Sinclair, Robert Stewart (Greer-Heard organizer), Tim Maudlin, and Robin Collins.
Clockwise from top left: William Lane Craig, Alex Rosenberg, Sean Carroll, James Sinclair, Robert Stewart (Greer-Heard organizer), Tim Maudlin, and Robin Collins. Screenshot by Maryanne Spikes.

Short version: I think it went well, although I can easily think of several ways I could have done better. On the substance, my major points were that the demand for “causes” and “explanations” is completely inappropriate for modern fundamental physics/cosmology, and that theism is not taken seriously in professional cosmological circles because it is hopelessly ill-defined (no matter what happens in the universe, you can argue that God would have wanted it that way). He defended two of his favorite arguments, the “cosmological argument” and the fine-tuning argument; no real surprises there. In terms of style, from my perspective things got a bit frustrating, because the following pattern repeated multiple times: Craig would make an argument, I would reply, and Craig would just repeat the original argument. For example, he said that Boltzmann Brains were a problem for the multiverse; I said that they were a problem for certain multiverse models but not others, which is actually good because they help us to distinguish viable from non-viable models; and his response was the multiverse was not a viable theory because of the Boltzmann Brain problem. Or, he said that if the universe began to exist there must be a transcendent cause; I said that everyday notions of causation don’t apply to the beginning of the universe and explained why they might apply approximately inside the universe but not to it; and his response was that if the universe could just pop into existence, why not bicycles? I was honestly a bit surprised at the lack of real-time interaction, since one of Craig’s supporters’ biggest complaints is that his opponents don’t ever directly respond to his points, and I tried hard to do exactly that. To be fair, I bypassed some of his arguments (see below) because I thought they were irrelevant, and wanted to focus on the important issues; he might feel differently. I’m sure that others will have their own opinions, but soon enough the videos will allow all to judge for themselves. Overall I was moderately satisfied that I made the responses I had hoped to make, clarified some points, and gave folks something to think about.

Longer version (much longer, sorry): the format was 20-minute opening talks by each speaker (Craig going first), followed by 12-minute rebuttals, and then 8-minute closing statements. Among the pre-debate advice I was given was “make it a discussion, not a debate” and “don’t let WLC speak first,” both of which I intentionally ignored. I wanted all along to play by his rules, in front of his crowd, and do the best job I could do without any excuses.

In his opening speech Craig gave two arguments: the Kalam Cosmological Argument (the universe must be caused, and the cause is God), and the teleological/fine-tuning argument (the parameters of the universe appear designed for the existence of life). To his great credit, WLC actually stuck to arguments concerning physical cosmology, where presumably my expertise would be most valuable; he didn’t hide behind primarily metaphysical arguments like the ontological argument or the denial of realized infinities. The two he used were familiar from his repertoire, and they were the two that I was primarily interested in talking about myself, so we were off. (I’ll try to reconstruct the logic rather than doing a point-by-point recap, since I’m mostly working from memory. Naturally, my memory of my own parts will be sharper than my memory of WLC’s, so I’ll happily accept factual corrections.)

The cosmological argument has two premises: (1) If the universe had a beginning, it has a transcendent cause; and (2) The universe had a beginning. He took (1) as perfectly obvious, and put his effort into establishing (2). Partly he used the celebrated (by theologians) Borde-Guth-Vilenkin theorem, which says that a universe with an average expansion rate greater than zero must be geodesically incomplete in the past. But he also used an argument I hadn’t heard before: from the Second Law of Thermodynamics (entropy in a closed system doesn’t decrease). I think the argument was basically that the Second Law implies that we approach equilibrium, and in an infinitely-old universe we should therefore have reached equilibrium long ago, which we haven’t, so the universe began at some finite time in the past.

My attitude toward the above two premises is that (2) is completely uncertain, while the “obvious” one (1) is flat-out false. Or not even false, as I put it, because the notion of a “cause” isn’t part of an appropriate vocabulary to use for discussing fundamental physics. Rather, modern physical models take the form of unbreakable patterns — laws of Nature — that persist without any external causes. The Aristotelian analysis of causes is outdated when it comes to modern fundamental physics; what matters is whether you can find a formal mathematical model that accounts for the data. The Hartle-Hawking “no-boundary proposal” for the wave function of the universe, for example, is completely self-contained, not requiring any external cause.

Mostly Craig ignored this argument, which to me was the most important part of the debate. In the first rebuttal he said that the Hartle-Hawking model was indeed lacking something — a reason why the universe exists at all. To me this looks like confusing the cosmological argument with the argument from contingency, but since my objection applied to that case as well I didn’t raise that as an rebuttal. Rather, I pointed out that this response sailed right by my actual argument, which was that a self-contained physical model is all you need, and asking for anything more is completely unwarranted. To drive the point home, I elaborated on why things like “causes” and “explanations” make perfect sense for parts of the universe, but not for the universe itself: namely, that we live in a world with unbreakable patterns (laws of physics) and an arrow of time, but the universe itself (or the multiverse) is not one element of a much bigger pattern, it’s all there is. Finally in the closing speech WLC finally offered arguments in favor of the idea that the beginning of the universe implies a transcendental cause: (1) it’s a metaphysical principle; (2) if universe could pop into existence, why not bicycles?; and (3) there’s no reason to treat the universe differently than things inside the universe. To me, (1) isn’t actually an argument, just a restatement; and I had already explained why (2) and (3) were not true, and he didn’t actually respond to my explanation. So by the time my rebuttal came around I didn’t have much more new to say. Craig spent some time mocking the very idea that the universe could just “pop into existence.” I explained that this isn’t the right way to think about these models, which are better understood as “the universe has an earliest moment of time,” which doesn’t misleadingly appeal to our intuitions of temporal sequence; but my explanation seemed to have no effect.

The second premise of the Kalam argument is that the universe began to exist. Which may even be true! But we certainly don’t know, or even have strong reasons to think one way or the other. Craig thinks we do have a strong reason, the Borde-Guth-Vilenkin theorem. So I explained what every physicist who has thought about the issue understands: that the real world is governed by quantum mechanics, and the BGV theorem assumes a classical spacetime, so it says nothing definitive about what actually happens in the universe; it is only a guideline to when our classical description breaks down. Indeed, I quoted a stronger theorem, the “Quantum Eternity Theorem” (QET) — under conventional quantum mechanics, any universe with a non-zero energy and a time-independent Hamiltonian will necessarily last forever toward both the past and the future. For convenience I quoted my own paper as a reference, although I’m surely not the first to figure it out; it’s a fairly trivial result once you think about it. (The Hartle-Hawking model is not eternal to the past, which is fine because they imagine a universe with zero energy. In that situation time is an approximation rather than fundamental in any case — that’s the “problem of time” in quantum gravity.)

Sadly, Craig never responded to my point about the QET. Instead, he emphasized another “theorem” in a paper by Aron Wall. This is a great paper, well worth reading — but it doesn’t say what Craig wants it to say, which I was only able to check after the debate. Wall (like BGV) proves theorems that apply to semiclassical gravity (classical spacetime with propagating quantum fields — see comment from Aron below), and then speculates “the results may hold in full quantum gravity” and “there is a reasonable possibility that the Penrose singularity theorem can be proven even in the context of full quantum gravity.” As good as the paper is, proving a theorem in the semiclassical case and then opining that it is probably extendable to the full quantum gravity case does not actually represent a “theorem” about the quantum case. And in fact I think it’s highly unlikely to be extendable in the sense Craig wants it to be, since the QET says that’s impossible (unless the universe has zero energy or a time-dependent Hamiltonian, in which case it’s easy to avoid eternity). But I had never seen Wall’s paper before, and Craig didn’t give a precise statement of the purported theorem, only the above quote about “reasonable possibility”; as a result I didn’t know the range of applicability of the “theorem” or its assumptions, so chose not to talk about it rather than making guesses. That was probably a strategic mistake on my part.

While I’m lingering over my mistakes, I made a related one, when Craig emphasized a recent paper by Anthony Aguirre and John Kehayias. They examined the “emergent universe” scenario of George Ellis and Roy Maartens, in which the universe is in a quasi-static pre-Big-Bang state infinitely far into the past. Aguirre and Kehayias showed that such behavior is unstable; you can’t last in a quasi-static state for half of eternity and then start evolving. Personally, I didn’t think this was worth talking about; I completely agree that it’s unstable, I never promoted or defended that particular model, and I just didn’t see the relevance. But he kept bringing it up. Only after the debate did it dawn on me that he takes the specific behavior of that model as representative of any model that has a quantum-gravity regime (the easiest way out of the “beginning” supposedly predicted by the BGV theorem). That’s completely false. Most models with a quantum-gravity phase are nothing like the emergent universe; typically the quantum part of the evolution is temporary, and is surrounded on both sides by classical spacetime. But that’s so false that I didn’t even pick up that WLC was presuming it, so I never responded. Bad debater.

The other argument from Craig in favor of the universe having a beginning comes from the fact that entropy is increasing, in accordance with the Second Law. This is another case where it took me a while to understand the point he was trying to get at. To me, it is perfectly obvious and well-understood that the Second Law comes about because of the configuration of matter in our local region of universe, not because of some ironclad fundamental law. (Otherwise Ludwig Boltzmann lived in vain — and I have his tombstone right up there on my blog header.) A theory like my model with Jennifer Chen tries to explain how the Second Law emerges in local regions of the universe, by showing how a universe with no equilibrium state can evolve forever (rather than settling down), and entropy will naturally increase both in the far past and the far future. Craig seems to think that the Second Law should be absolute, so that models like ours are ruled out because entropy doesn’t increase monotonically — i.e. they “violate” the Second Law. (Unless I’m still misunderstanding his point — his presentation was uncharacteristically muddled here.) This is a pretty straightforward misunderstanding of the origin of the Second Law and the point of our model, although to be fair I caught on too late to present a strong counterargument.

It was interesting that Craig spent so much time talking about the Carroll-Chen model, when I wouldn’t have brought it up at all if left to my own devices. I think the model is very useful as an illustration of an interesting fact: you can derive a natural dynamical origin of the Second Law in a universe that creates new entropy without bound by creating regions of space that look like our Big Bang. But I’m the first to admit that it’s speculative, and especially that the process of baby-universe creation is ill-understood, if it’s possible at all. So I probably wouldn’t have dwelt on it, but Craig really went to town on the model. Unfortunately, nearly everything he said about it was just wrong. First, he tried to claim that having a moment of time in the history of the universe when entropy was lowest counts as a “thermodynamic beginning,” even if there is more universe in both direction of time around that moment. That’s quite an innovative definition (to be polite), but more importantly that kind of “beginning” has nothing to do with the kind of “beginning” where God would create the universe. I made this point, but it wasn’t answered. Relatedly, he seemed to think it was a glaring mistake (or perhaps intentionally subterfuge?) that on one picture of our model I had the “time” axis have only one arrow, while on another version of the picture I put arrows pointing in both directions. I apologize for being sloppy, but it’s neither a mistake nor a dastardly plot; either version is acceptable, because you have a time coordinate that runs monotonically from -infinity to +infinity, but the direction of entropy increase (that defines the arrow of time) is not monotonic. Next, he tried to claim that our model violated unitarity (conservation of quantum information), which is flatly wrong. He supplied two pieces of evidence, in the form of quotes from Stephen Hawking and Chris Weaver. But the Hawking quote was completely out of context; he was talking about the fact that he no longer thought that wormholes would lead to violation of unitarity in black-hole evaporation, nothing to do with cosmology. And the Weaver quote that Craig read had nothing to do with unitarity at all; it merely pointed out that the process of baby-universe creation is speculative and not well-understood, which I’m the first to admit. Again — I didn’t actually hold up this model as a solution to anything, but he felt the need to attack it, so I had to defend its honor a little bit.

In contrast, I wanted to talk about a model developed by Anthony Aguirre and Stephen Gratton. They have a very simple and physically transparent model that (unlike my theory with Chen) imposes a low-entropy boundary condition at a mid-universe “bounce.” It’s a straightforward example of a perfectly well-defined theory that is clearly eternal, one that doesn’t have a beginning, and does so without invoking any hand-waving about quantum gravity. I challenged Craig to explain why this wasn’t a sensible example of an eternal universe, one that was in perfect accord with the BGV theorem, but he didn’t respond. It wasn’t until the talks on the following day that Craig’s teammate James Sinclair admitted that it seemed like a perfectly good model to him.

But again — my main point was not to push this or that specific model, but to argue that it’s the models that matter, not some general theorem in a regime we don’t pretend to understand. So I listed a bunch of plausible-looking eternal cosmologies. The point is not that all or some of these models is perfect; it’s that they’re eternal. So we should judge them on their merits, rather than claiming to have general arguments that there are no such things. (It’s as if WLC has a powerful general theorem against heavier-than-air flying machines, while airplanes keep buzzing overhead.) On occasion it would be as if Craig admitted that there were indeed eternal cosmologies, but they were all ruled out for various unspecified other problems. That sounds like a suspiciously far-reaching claim, but one that is hard to directly dispute without any details being presented. More importantly, it’s beside the point. Which, in case it isn’t yet clear, is that it’s the models that matter, not any general theorems. If there are some cosmological models that are eternal but have other problems, there’s no reason to stop looking for other models that are also eternal but don’t have those problems. This is a case where working scientists are quick to admit that we don’t know the answer, so we shouldn’t stop considering all legitimate possibilities.

The fine-tuning argument proceeded in a more straightforward way. Unlike the cosmological argument, where Craig presented a few twists I hadn’t heard before (though he may have used them in other debates, I don’t know), the fine-tuning presentation was pretty standard. I acknowledged that, unlike the cosmological argument that is based on outdated metaphysics, the fine-tuning argument is a respectable scientific claim: two models trying to account for some data. But I gave five reasons why it was nevertheless not a good argument for theism:

  1. We don’t really know that the universe is tuned specifically for life, since we don’t know the conditions under which life is possible.
  2. Fine-tuning for life would only potentially be relevant if we already accepted naturalism; God could create life under arbitrary physical conditions.
  3. Apparent fine-tunings may be explained by dynamical mechanisms or improved notions of probability.
  4. The multiverse is a perfectly viable naturalistic explanation.
  5. If God had finely-tuned the universe for life, it would look very different indeed.

Craig didn’t respond to 2. or 3. here. To counter 1. he simply noted that other physicists disagreed with me, which again really isn’t an argument; he didn’t offer any suggestion that we actually do know the conditions under which life can and cannot form. Against 5. he invoked an argument by Robin Collins that the universe is optimized for “discoverability,” at least when we consider the known physical parameters. To me this argument is completely implausible right on the face of it, since it’s trivially easy to imagine ways to make it easier to discover the universe (just make the Higgs boson lighter!). But I knew Collins was going to give a full discussion of that argument the next day, so I saved my response until then.

In my first speech I used 5. above as a launching pad to make a bigger point: the real reason theism isn’t taken seriously is because it’s completely ill-defined. If we would presume to contemplate theism from an intellectually honest perspective, we would try to decide what kind of universe we would expect to live in if theism were true; then we would do the same for naturalism; and finally we would compare those expectations to the real world. But when we do that we find theistic expectations failing to match reality over and over again. Now, I know perfectly well (from experience as well as from cogitation) that you can never make headway with theists by claiming “If God existed, He would do X, and He doesn’t” (where X is “prevent needless suffering,” “make His existence obvious,” “reveal useful non-trivial information to us,” “spread religious messages uniformly over the world,” etc.) Because they have always thought through these, and can come up with an explanation why God would never have done that. (According to Alvin Plantinga, our world — you know, the one with the Black Death, the Holocaust, AIDS, Hurricane Katrina, and so on — is “so good that no world could be appreciably better.”) But these apologetic moves come at a price: they imply a notion of theism so flexible that it becomes completely ill-defined. That’s the real problem. Craig’s way of putting it is to suggest that God is “like the cosmic artist who wants to splash his canvas with extravagance of design.” That’s precisely why naturalism has pulled so far ahead of theism in the intellectual race to best model our world: because it plays by rules and provides real explanations for why the world is this way rather than that way.

Against the multiverse, Craig’s major argument (surprisingly) was the Boltzmann Brain problem. I say “surprisingly” because it’s such an easy argument to rebut. Sure, Boltzmann Brains are a problem — for those models with a Boltzmann Brain problem. Not all models have them! And a good modern multiverse cosmologist focuses on those models that avoid them. In this sense, the BB problem is a good thing; it helps us distinguish viable models from non-viable ones. As far as I can tell, this straightforward response was completely ignored by Craig. He just kept repeating that Boltzmann Brains were really bad things. He aimed this criticism particularly at the Carroll-Chen model, which I would say is very bad aim; it’s much less likely that BB’s are a problem in our scenario than in most other multiverse theories, since you actually produce baby universes (with potentially billions of observers) more frequently than you produce individual Boltzmann Brains. But I didn’t emphasize that point, since my goal wasn’t to defend that particular model.

As an aside, the Boltzmann Brain discussion illustrated a problem with the debate as a whole: it was too technical (and I think mostly on WLC’s side, although I deserved some of the blame). I had prepared a single slide about the topic of BB’s, but upon reflection I figured that many people wouldn’t be familiar with the term, so I replaced it with “observers as random fluctuations.” But Craig just plowed right into the technicalities, without trying to explain what the Boltzmann Brain problem really was. When my term came I gave a one-sentence definition, but in retrospect that wasn’t really sufficient, so on Saturday (where we both gave five-minute responses to a series of 40-minute talks by the four other speakers) I took a few minutes to give a more careful explanation. It’s probably an inherent flaw of the format; if a speaker takes a minute to do a bit of pedagogy rather than argumentation, the audience benefits but the speaker suffers. So the game theory tells you to be obscure, to the general detriment.

A couple of words about the rebuttal speeches in particular. Each of us pulled one “gotcha” move in the rebuttals; mine worked, his didn’t (in my opinion, of course). His referred to fine-tuning: he found a quote by me saying that the low entropy of the early universe seems finely-tuned. Which is true! But he claimed that I had said we didn’t know whether fine-tuning was real. That part is completely false. I had said we didn’t know that fine-tuning for life was real; indeed, the words “for life” were italicized on my slide. And it’s perfectly obvious that the fine-tuning of our initial entropy isn’t necessary for life; the entropy could have been fantastically larger than it actually was and life still could have arisen. (For example, you could imagine a universe with our Solar System as it essentially is, but otherwise in thermal equilibrium.)

On my part, I knew that WLC liked to glide from the BGV theorem (which says that classical spacetime description fails in the past) to the stronger statement that the universe probably had a beginning, even though the latter is not implied by the former. And his favorite weapon is to use quotes from Alex Vilenkin, one of the authors of the BGV theorem. So I talked to Alan Guth, and he was gracious enough to agree to let me take pictures of him holding up signs with his perspective: namely, that the universe probably didn’t have a beginning, and is very likely eternal. Now, why would an author of the BGV theorem say such a thing? For exactly the reasons I was giving all along: the theorem says nothing definitive about the real universe, it is only a constraint on the classical regime. What matters are models, not theorems, and different scientists will quite naturally have different opinions about which types of models are most likely to prove fruitful once we understand things better. In Vilenkin’s opinion, the best models (in terms of being well-defined and accounting for the data) are ones with a beginning. In Guth’s opinion, the best models are ones that are eternal. And they are welcome to disagree, because we don’t know the answer! Not knowing the answer is perfectly fine. What’s not fine is pretending that we do know the answer, and using that pretend-knowledge to draw premature theological conclusions. (Chatter on Twitter reveals theists scrambling to find previous examples of Guth saying the universe probably had a beginning. As far as I can tell Alan was there talking about inflation beginning, not the universe, which is completely different. But it doesn’t matter; good scientists, it turns out, will actually change their minds in response to thinking about things.)

I very much hope that I hammered these points home enough to help clarify issues in the minds of listeners/readers. But from Craig’s (lack of) reaction, and from the online discussion from his supporters, I doubt it will make any difference. He will continue to quote Vilenkin saying the universe probably had a beginning, which is fine because that’s what Vilenkin actually thinks. He will not start adding in the fact that Guth thinks the universe is probably eternal, nor will he take the even more respectable position of not relying on people’s individual opinions at all and simply admitting that we don’t have good scientific reasons to think one way or the other at the moment. But we’ll see. (And to reiterate: I think the whole discussion is enormously less important than the bigger point that a “cause” is completely unnecessary even if the universe did have a beginning.)

For my closing statement, I couldn’t think of many responses to Craig’s closing statement that wouldn’t have simply be me reiterating points from my first two speeches. So I took the opportunity to pull back a little and look at the bigger picture. Namely: we’re talking about “God and Cosmology,” but nobody really becomes a believer in God because it provides the best cosmology. They become theists for other reasons, and the cosmology comes later. That’s because religion is enormously more than theism. Most people become religious for other (non-epistemic) reasons: it provides meaning and purpose, or a sense of community, or a way to be in contact with something transcendent, or simply because it’s an important part of their culture. The problem is that theism, while not identical to religion, forms its basis, at least in most Western religions. So — maybe, I suggested, tentatively — that could change. I give theists a hard time for not accepting the implications of modern science, but I am also happy to give naturalists a hard time when they don’t appreciate the enormous task we face in answering all of the questions that we used to think were answered by God. We don’t have final answers to the deep questions of meaning and fulfillment and what it means to lead a good life. Religion doesn’t have the final answers, either; but maybe it has learned something interesting over the course of thousands of years of thinking about these issues. Maybe there is some wisdom to be mined from religious traditions, even for naturalists (which everyone should be).

More than once of the course of the weekend I spoke conciliatory-sounding words about how we’re really all in this together, theists and naturalists, trying to understand the deep questions in a confusing world. And I meant all of it, in complete sincerity. I will be absolutely uncompromising about what I think the truth is concerning questions of substance; but I don’t ever want to start thinking of people who disagree with me about those questions as my enemies. Many times in New Orleans, people on “the other side” came up after my presentations (in which I said that their most deeply held beliefs had been definitively refuted by the progress of modern science) and thanked me, saying how much they appreciated my ideas and that I had given them something to think about, even if they remained quite resolute in their beliefs. Not every single person was so gracious, but the vast majority. I admire those folks, and I hope I can be as sincere and open when people who I disagree with are speaking in good faith.

To me, Craig’s best moment of the weekend came at the very end, as part of the summary panel discussion. Earlier in the day, Tim Maudlin (who gave an great pro-naturalism talk, explaining that God’s existence wouldn’t have any moral consequences even if it were true) had grumped a little bit about the format. His point was that formal point-counterpoint debates aren’t really the way philosophy is done, which would be closer to a Socratic discussion where issues can be clarified and extended more efficiently. And I agree with that, as far as it goes. But Craig had a robust response, which I also agree with: yes, a debate like this isn’t how philosophy is done, but there are things worth doing other than philosophy, or even teaching philosophy. He said, candidly, that the advantage of the debate format is that it brings out audiences, who find a bit of give-and-take more exciting than a lecture or series of lectures. It’s hard to teach subtle and tricky concepts in such a format, but that’s always a hard thing to do; the point is that if you get the audience there in the first place, a good debater can at least plant a few new ideas in their heads, and hopefully inspire them to take the initiative and learn more on their own.

I completely agree. Events like this are valuable, not because they are efficient ways to find the truth, nor even because there is any reasonable chance of changing the minds of people who are relatively secure in their beliefs (on either side). It’s because there are a lot of people who are not secure in their beliefs, or at least are curious and willing to listen to a variety of ideas. If we think we have good ideas, we should do everything we can to bring them to as many people as possible. I think science and naturalism include some pretty awesome ideas, and I’m happy to share them with as many different people as I can.

p.s. Sorry I didn’t talk about Saturday’s talks, in which Tim Maudlin discussed the relationship between theism and morality (claiming there isn’t any), Alex Rosenberg drew connections between thermodynamics and natural selection to argue that theism is incompatible with Darwinism, Robin Collins argued that the discoverability of the universe is evidence for theism, and James Sinclair talked about notions of time and the origin of the universe. But I’m kind of all talked out on this topic for right now.

149 Comments

149 thoughts on “Post-Debate Reflections”

  1. Sean, could you elaborate on the difference between a theorem and a model and their relevance to the issue?

  2. Sean,

    I’m not sure I like your response to Craig’s claim that past-eternal models are not viable. You rightly point out that we are free to keep looking for past-eternal models which are viable. But in the mean time, aren’t the best models those which are not past-eternal? If, as you say, it’s the models that matter, and the best models are all past-finite, then doesn’t that suggest the universe/multiverse is also past-finite?

  3. Sean,

    On the subject of fine-tuning, there is a very good book entitled “The Fine Tuning Fallacy” by Victor Stenger. Most arguments on fine tuning look at individual values and ask the question of what would happen if they were to change. In this book, Dr. Stenger looks at the 21 some odd values and forms a multi-dimensional space and then asks the question “What is the range of values that any one can take on if the others can freely change?” His result is that the universe is not finely tuned, that each of the variables has a wide range of possible values as long as all can change at the same time; like defining a solid in a three dimensional space where any point in the solid will support life but in this case it is many more than three dimensions.

    That book is the only place I’ve seen this put forward but it makes a lot of sense. Why does the standard argument fix all but one variable and then ask what would happen if it were different?

  4. Carroll-Craig cosmology is a non-standard cosmology in naturalistic theology, sometimes known as “the best of all possible multiverses”, best-known for the claim that every causal patch has a Savior.

    See also

    Apocatastasis
    Boltzmann Christ
    Farnsworth Parabox
    Nucleation ex nihilo

  5. Sean,

    Would you please address Curtis Metcalfe’s A/B theory point? It seemed you and Craig disagreed on your time theory and then each argued simply from your definition. This point seems to be crucial to both Kalam premises: the “need” for cause and the beginning of the universe.

    This would be equivocation. Would it not?

    Thank you,

    Daniel

  6. I learn more about cosmology through forums like this than any other method. That to me is their true value. “Proving the existence of God” is almost an oxymoron and expecting to discover His fingerprints on the universe seems somehow illogical. Fortunately understanding how, or even believing that, God created the cosmos/universe is not a prerequisite for faith. Hubris on the other hand is a bit of a problem. Humility takes care of that in all cases. Keep looking. Keep talking. The science is beautiful and unstoppable. The theology is beautiful and indomitable . I am very grateful to be able to enjoy both sides of essentially the same coin.

  7. Lots of information so I will just comment on one important issue, causation. I mentioned in a previous blog that causation can be simply defined and applied to physics. You need a new understanding. You need to see all mass as being both causal and effected, and equally so, as repeated neutrons decaying in a void upon Big Bang neutralization of gravitational attraction (Use Weinberg’s Escape Velocity for neutrons in the first three minutes).

    Simply divide the capacities of mass between causing other mass to change – gravitational attraction to it, for example, and being effected by other mass to change – being attracted by other mass in gravitation. These are equal alternatives, in quantity and form, when neutrons separate, decay, and create hydrogen and helium nuclei in the first three minutes. Each neutron can cause attraction and be effected by the attraction of others, and they are equal and opposite forces relative to quantities.

    This is a way of understanding. It will be entirely new to you, as is my view expressed in other blogs about limitation to measurement in Uncertainty – not limitation to mass itself. These are new ideas or ways of creating useful formalisms – based on logical relations. The separation of capacities in this way can be extended to electromagnetism if you read my free book at my site (click name).

  8. Thomas Stone,

    I’ve not read Stenger’s book, but I have read of similar arguments he has made in some of his other writings. Luke Barnes (at Letters to Nature blog) has a critique of Stenger’s argument there.

    As I am not a physicist (biology major) I lack any qualifications to say whether or not Dr. Stenger’s argument, or Dr. Barnes critique are correct. Nonetheless, there are such critiques.

    Then again, I have read similar conclusions from a cosmologist Fred Adams who Dr. Barnes has spoken some positive points about it. As a non-expert, my opinion is that theists are really jumping to conclusions on the fine-tuning data given that there seems to be much work that still needs to be done within the feild.

    Cheers!

  9. Janet Leslie Blumberg

    Sean, I especially appreciated these words of yours:

    “I don’t ever want to start thinking of people who disagree with me about those questions as my enemies. Many times in New Orleans, people on “the other side” . . . thanked me, saying how much they appreciated my ideas and that I had given them something to think about . . . I admire those folks, and I hope I can be as sincere and open when people who I disagree with are speaking in good faith.”

    What is taking place in these words might be more important, perhaps, even than the elegant arguments themselves are.

    Because this which is going on within you (and within those others) — which is also going on BETWEEN you and them at-the-same-time — is an opening of a space that is technically referred to as communion, within a certain elegant and ongoing Christian frame of reference, which, like that of science, is always having to be rescued and reclaimed from being misrepresented by those outside it, and also from its own inherent fallibilisms and all of the various kinds of “sloppiness” that are always attending it, from within itself.

    Having said that, I have a question. Is “naturalism” capable of being defined, for you, without entailing a claim of its singular and ultimate truthfulness? I mean, I know what naturalism is, but how would you define it in terms of its truth-claims?

    And I guess I will dare to add, given that yesterday’s liturgical readings and homily are still fresh in my mind, and also with your words above still in my ears, that “Where love is, God is there also.”

  10. Sean, I have a difficulty understanding why the Kalaam argument is considered so powerful that to refute it one must invoke a past-eternal universe. In the standard textbook Inflationary Lambda-CDM model the universe does have a beginning. So what? Should that make us take divine creation more seriously? I think not.

    If I understand it correctly, the big bang creates not only the universe’s matter-energy, but spacetime itself. If some agent is to be the “cause” of that, that agent must have led a nonmaterial existence (in some obscure sense) outside of spacetime, or that it doesn’t require spacetime and matter to exist. This is OK with current Judeo-Christian-Muslim theologies, which view God as a nonphysical, unimaginable entity, the Jesus episode notwithstanding.

    Now, the Kalaam argument says that nothing is known from experience to emerge from nothingness, and therfore, if the universe comes into existence, it must have a creator. And WLC ridicules the possibility that the universe just popped up without a cause—if that were possible, he says, bicycles and whales would pop up in your office. But here’s my point: nothing physical is known from experience to spring from anything nonphysical either. That spacetime and matter-energy and form were caused by an entity outside of spacetime and itself devoid of matter-energy and form is no less absurd than that they popped up out of nothing.

    It’s something akin to the psychophysical problem: philosophers have a hard time contemplating how on earth can a physical brain give rise to the nonphysical phenomenon of consciousness, and how can conscious thoughts drive physiological events. This difficulty seems of the same kind as that of physical creation by an nonphysical creator.

  11. So Dr. Guth has changed his mind as reflected in the following interview and written comments?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVFX5aJSxKg

    http://www.counterbalance.org/cq-guth/didth-frame.html

    It would be helpful if he would explicate the reasons for his change of mind so his evidence and arguments can be compared to Vilenkin’s to see who makes the better case (or if it is really a case of “we just can’t say one way or the other” based on the current science).

  12. Dr. Carroll,

    Thank you for this writeup. I thought you did very well in the debate.

    When you get a chance, please post the slides you used during the debate. I’d really like to look through them again. Thanks.

  13. DEL – the issue of causation clouds the problem, quite apart from the possible philosophical equivalence of god creation or creation from nothing. With a current understanding of causation, or original cause, there can be no progress. Physics needs to see each particle and field as interacting by assured cause and effect. Every mass is both causing other mass to change, and being caused, and this is literal causation. They are literally attracting others to their location, or being attracted (or repelled) to another location. With that understanding, as a broad but strict formalism for dual properties, we have equality between cause and effect in exchanges to atoms or solar systems.

    By defining cause and effect in relation to particles and fields, or to momentum of you wish to keep it vague in current science to allow “uncertainty”, you are rooted in reality. Giving each mass those dual capacities enables their interactions to be tracked to conclusions like atom formation and solar systems based on real measureable cause and effect exchanges – to unities or reconciliation in orbitals or orbits.

    This avoids original cause, but depends upon matter not being created or destroyed, but being able to change by exercising their casual and effected capacities – possibly in unison at a Big Bang. So we return to logic ultimately, but to preserve an intact explanation of causation by saying matter can neither be created nor destroyed.

    Saying we can have something from nothing is no an issue for causation – which is already locked into all masses by their properties. However it is an issue for “creation” and gods and so on, if our “cause-and-effect, intact masses” just popped there. My model of causation does not apply to say something can cause itself to come into existence – it exists and causes others to behave differently and is likewise effected, but I will continue to work on it to see if it can stretch to something creating itself by equally opposed positive and negative energy, as currently accepted.

  14. Sean, I’ve uploaded an image that may be of interest re the history of cosmological arguments in 20th Century Christian apologetics. This is from the 1977 Coverdale edition of “That’s a Good Question” by Roger Forster and Paul Marston, which deals in each chapter with a particular objection to Christianity.

    http://outerhoard.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/tagq14.jpg

    This is a photograph of a two-page chapter dealing with the origin of the universe. It presents the standard argument from thermodynamics, which looks silly now (whoever said ‘material-as-we-know-it’ or ‘spiritual-hence-conscious’ are the only two possibilities), but I wonder how many people could have refuted it effectively in 1977.

    The book has many parts to make an informed skeptic laugh, but many other parts to make them think. Recommended to people who enjoy trying to understand other people’s beliefs. But beware: it’s not an easy book to track down, and the more available editions are abridged ones with all the juicy bits taken out.

  15. you did a great job Sean (you’re probably beating yourself up too much), but I do wish that when the Craig-ists of the world argue that it is obvious (even beyond argument) that the universe had to have a beginning, a first cause, that they would get pressed on what is the first-cause of their God (where did God come from, how many gods are there, could God have died since creating the Universe… and what is their evidence for any of these things) — their only response seems to be that God is, a priori, transcendent and eternal (but for some reason the Universe can’t be), which is no answer at all.
    Personally, I think its turtles all the way down….

  16. Sean,
    I think you did a superb job in the debate! Everyone always thinks their side won of course, but I very much thought you gave Craig a much harder run than most of his previous opponents. I wasn’t able to watch all the way to the end, but when I did cut off, instead of the triumphant tone I’ve seen Craig take toward the end of these events, he seemed far less confident.

    I do agree both that the debate got too technical and that it was much more Craig’s doing than yours.

  17. Pingback: Sean Carroll vs. William Lane Craig – Greer Heard Forum 2014 (Debate Review…sort of) | Uncertainty Blog

  18. Great debate, Dr. Carroll. You were very charitable and fair.

    I have a question though. How exactly did you address Craig’s comment about why bicycles couldn’t just pop into existence, as opposed to Universes? It almost sounded like your objection was merely semantical, when you suggested that we can’t think of the Universe “popping” into existence, but rather, we should think of it having a “first moment” of sorts. But again, that just sounds like semantics. I think Craig has a point, especially if he just changes the language around. All he’d have to say is, “Why can’t a bicycle (or anything else for that matter) have a first moment? Why does it have to be a Universe? Why is there a discrimination?”

    How would you respond to that?

  19. This debate review I think was very helpful. Hopefully WLC will post one as well so we can see his take-home ideas also. And please tell us you’ll take on more events like this! I know it takes time out of actually doing science, but hey, socially encouraging scientific progress can be just as effective in the long-run!

    I was hoping your review might cover more on the philosophical issue of causation though. Again, I really think it’s something that deserves some serious time if we lay people are to find it intelligible.

    Aside from how crazy a causeless universe might philosophically seem, I was thinking of another reason we might initially object: Imagine we have a closed system in a vacuum made of constituent parts where, every 5 minutes, some transformation occurs on all of its constituent parts (say a rotation, for instance). If this is true, can’t it still be said that the system itself also undergoes this transformation? If then some property being true for all parts of the system thereby makes it true of the system itself, and all parts of our universe exhibit cause and effect, then isn’t it sensible to extrapolate to the universe as well?

    There are obvious plot-holes to that, but I don’t think the language used in the debate would fully address this. I wonder if it might be useful to stare causation and its consequences full in the face and entertain notions such as the Munchhausen trilemma, why is god a more preferred beginning than a simple physical law, and why any cause would be more axiomatic than another (i.e. that the real questions is not “how from nothing?” but “how this rather than that?”), or to address that certain interpretations of quantum do call into question causality already in our observable world.

    Just saying, a post on this would make me smile. 🙂
    Anyways, good job, rest, and enjoy reading all the positive comments!

  20. On the bicycle question, Sean made it clear in the main speech that the universe is very different from a bicycle because we have no good reason to expect one thing or the other about the existence of the whole universe; while we don’t expect bicycles to suddenly appear out of thin air because we know enough about what it takes to make a bicycle, we cannot get data about the meta-law that governs the process of universe-creation (universe as the sum total of nature, not a pocket universe within the multiverse). Incidentally, fine-tuning arguments also run into difficulty here: how do we know what values of the parameter are more likely than others, or if they can be variable at all, when we don’t have any larger arena than the whole of nature itself in which to observe and comapre (even in principle) these possible worlds? (if you assume a multiverse + landscape, then environmental reasoning kicks in, and fine-tuning is explained the same way we explain why we are not born in interstellar space)

    Or, to put in in terms of Schopenhauerian philosophy, causes and effects are changes, not substances, and they apply to changes of substance, not to the existence of substance. One change causes another change: e.g. the burning of fire causes the boiling of water, which in turn causes the steaming of vegetables; but of course the burning of fire did not cause boiling water to exist; the molecules were already there, and their arrangement simply changed. This viewpoint may be generalized to quantum field theory without sacrificing the essentials. There is no good reason to suppose that existence itself requires a cause.

    “Why does something exist rather than nothing” may be a question worth striving to answer, even though it is not even well-defined. There is a certain metaphysical itch that will remain unscratched so long as it goes unanswered. However, it is no more valid a question than “why would nothing exist rather than something?” and there is no reason to expect there to be an answer at all. Moreover, even if there is an answer, ‘god’ is not going to be it – theism is an entirely vacuous answer to such a question, for one may ask why the gods chose to create a universe at all, etc. As Nietzsche remarked, “mystical explanations are often considered deep; in fact, they are nor even shallow” – they don’t explain anything at all.

  21. You’re much too hard on yourself, Carroll; WLC has been at this three decades, comparing your performance to his is like comparing a tenured physics prof to a high school student.

    I was pleasantly surprised at how well you handled yourself. WLC’s choice to go heavy on the $10 words made him sound like he was hiding something, especially next to your more entry-level approach. I got the impression he was counting on your lack of debate experience to make you nervous and trip-up, hence why he was willing to debate cosmology with an actual cosmologist, but it didn’t happen. Instead, you remained cool, confident, and honest. That’s really all it takes to win a debate, in the public’s eyes, with the occasional “gotcha” sprinkled in for spice.

    The comparisons to Nye/Ham are inevitable, and in that regard you did worse than Nye overall. Nye shocked me by engaging in some dirty debate tactics, and Ham got visibly nervous as he realized he was being out-maneuvered, which combined to create a lopsided victory. You didn’t fight dirty, but your attempts to connect with the audience were also far more successful; the bit in the closing speech about the afterlife first struck me as rhetorical suicide, until I’d realized you’d earned it by being likeable and deftly playing the accomodationist card. Ham is no WLC, though, and despite his misjudgements (“I am ASTONISHED that…”) Craig still put in a convincing performance.

    As an atheist, I’d mark it as a solid win for you. Stepping out of that mindset and pretending to be a person-on-the-street, I’d call it a narrow victory for you. And to achieve that against WLC is damn-near a miracle.

  22. “I said that everyday notions of causation don’t apply to the beginning of the universe and explained why the might apply inside the universe but not to it…”

    Don’t you remember Dr. Carroll? Dr. Craig DID respond to this, in multiple ways.

    1) It’s the taxicab fallacy to claim that the causal principles holds to all of reality. But then when it comes to the beginning of the universe to all of a sudden to arbitrarily dismiss it! And notice how saying, “We don’t know what happened” makes no difference as the causal principle is a metaphysical claim which, by definition, applies to all of reality and not just things inside universes.

    2) Dr. Craig then gave a second argument in support of the causal premise. This was to say that if the causal principle really doesn’t apply to all reality, than we should be seeing anything and everything popping into existence. The fact that we don’t see this strongly disconfirms your objections to the first premise.

    You did not respond to point 1) and you failed to see just how relevant point 2) was to the debate. Obviously you’re a busy guy with a lot of important things to do. But if you’re interested in the truth, I suggest you take a look at the causal principle and do some hard studying of metaphysics to see where you went wrong here.

  23. “The causal principle holds to all of reality” is an empty statement. By such equivocation, one might as well argue that it should also “hold to” a god, since if a god does exist, it is obviously “real.”

    The more precise statement is that every change requires a cause, and for any change we may investigate its cause and find another, preceding change as its cause. Causality connecets changes within the universe; it can never lead us out of it.

    Also, note that a property that holds for each of the elements of a set need not hold for the set as a whole. The set of even integers is not itself even. Likewise, the set of all caused changes is not itself caused.

  24. A clarification to my Feb.24, 2:27 pm comment: When we say that a nonmaterial and formless entity “exists” outside of spacetime—the only theologically respectable kind of godly existence—what kind of existence is this? In what sense does such a god exist? Surely, it’s not the in same sense that my bicycle exists. It’s more like the existence of my love to my grandchildren, or the existence in my mind of the ideal of world peace, or that of the power over me of Rembrandt’s “The Jewish Bride“. These things surely exist, in some sense of existence, and I, personally, can attest to it. But that existence in not physical in any way, and therfore cannot be expected to cause physical changes in the world, except through me.

    So, if this is the sense in which WLC’s God exists, it couldn’t have created the universe physically, as WLC would argue, whether or not the universe had a beginning. But in contrast to the examples I gave above, of nonphysical entities that might affect the physical world through me, WLC’s God cannot create the universe through WLC, can he? And I bet WLC himself won’t insist he can.

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