If you are using thermodynamics to create...Doesnt that mean you are just converting energy in a form? The only possible end i see is as Andrew was saying that energy will become too dispersed, Which is a good theory. Yet that shows no change in the amount of energy. I cannot plausibly see a beginning or end to the amount of energy there is.
I'm not using the laws of thermodynamics to create. I'm using them to show that matter-energy had a beginning. I use God to create (Genesis 1:1). You say that you cannot see a plausible beginning to matter-energy, but you have not given any support to the idea that matter-energy has always existed. As far as I can tell, all that you have said is that because infinitey exists as a mathmatical tool, it's possible that matter-energy had no starting point.
Because you thought I was using "thermodynamics to create", I assume that you have not understood my argument, so I'll restate it here.
1) The total amount of mass-energy in the universe is constant (1st law)
2) The amount of
energy available for work in the universe is decreasing and NEVER increases (2nd law)
Notice I said "energy available for work" and not simply "energy". If I were to heat an iron bar at one end, then I could place a thermocouple across the bar and get useful work out of that system. Once the bar has cooled, as it
always will if left alone, it is not possible to extract useful work from the system. No energy has been destroyed, that would violate the 1st law, the energy still exists within the bar and in the surroundings, but the amount of energy available for work has decreased.
If the universe were of infinite age, then there would be no energy available for work at this point in time. This is not the case, so the universe must be of finite age, it has a beginning, it has a cause (which I hold as the God of the bible).
This argument eliminates the idea that the universe has always existed as a reasonable possibility. Can you challenge this argument?
Possibly a big bang forced the energy into a smaller area and created an odd situation that caused life to form, If that is the case i would still lean towards energy was always there, just too dispersed previously as well. In such case that could mean there were previous big bangs which unleashed an entirely different situation so long ago it cannot be accounted for. I wouldnt discount that entirely.
This is fantastic just-so story. I don't think either of us
require such a "theory", do we? So I won't bother to argue against this.
I wouldnt mind agreeing to disagree but this type of bantering tends to improve reasoning skills in the best of us
it doesnt take many braincells to insult someones ideas either Im always interested in peoples point of view in a lot of situations. I have no qualm with any belief that is within reason
Cool
-Kev