...says the dude who special pleads the opposite.
And I'm OK with that. If you claim the universe has always existed that's not impossible.
But neither is it impossible that the universe was caused by intent.
The additional claim that the first cause is a personal God is simply a non-sequitur.
No it's not because it's not an
additional claim it's one of the
types of cause.
If atheology holds that an infinite regression of prior causes are
impersonal that's
not a non-sequitur either.
You like throwing around the terms "special pleading" and "non-sequitur" but not all special pleading is necessarily invalid. And not every claim or belief is presented as the coercive logical conclusion inferred from a set of propositions.
If the cause of the universe beginning can be likened to a light switch being turned on (or off) then the switch can't spontaneously turn itself on - because that would beg the question why it didn't turn itself on sooner than 13.7B years ago.
And it can't be an involuntary (impersonal) light switch because cause necessarily implies contingency. Agent/Mechanism
If God is the personal light switch in this analogy, then who manufactured said light switch?
If lower case "g" god was created by a Higher Being guess which Being I would worship.
Is God an unmanufactured light switch?
Yes.
If God is immutable, then how can the light switch ever be switched from off to on?
Who says God is immutable such that He can't decide to flip the switch?
If God is eternal, then when was this light switch off?
13.7 billion years ago
The cause must be personal in the sense that it is the voluntary, decisive trigger that does not depend on a prior deterministic cause.
What triggered the God switch to flick itself on?
What triggered Beethovens to create any given one of his symphonies?
You talk like you've never had a spontaneous moment of creativity where you do something new for the first time.
That's what we're contemplating. Was the light switched on deliberately, accidentally, randomly or has it always been on.
Either the universe has always existed or it was caused by intent or it came into existence by pure random chance.
Time is a dimension of Minkowski spacetime,
Special pleading
which in turn is a property of the physical universe.
Non-sequitur
This means that there is no point in time at which the universe did not exist.
There is no point in time at which God did not exist.
Oh dear. See how easy it is to gainsay someone else's brute fact assertion about metaphysics.
If we define 'always existed' as 'existed at every point in time', then the universe has always existed, at least according to relativity.
How about we define God as past-eternal / uncaused and having volition.
Of course, that conclusion only holds if relativity correctly describes the nature of time for all points in time, but we already know that it doesn't. So we simply don't know whether the universe has 'always existed'.
Make up your mind. Has or has not?
At the very least, we have learned enough to move beyond metaphysical arguments that depend on an intuitive, classical conception of time.
Speak for yourself.
We have no evidence that the universe was 'caused by intent',
Yes we do. Cue the intelligent design argument in ...3,2,1
and the arguments presented in favour of this conclusion, including the KCA, are either unsound or invalid.
Hand waving now?
We have no evidence that the universe 'came into existence by pure random chance', just hypotheses presented by physicists, including (ironically) Alexander Vilenkin.
I wouldn't expect to find evidence that such a grand design happened by pure random chance either. Guess why I think that