Although the premises may be accepted as true by believers, any nonbeliever should feel justified in pointing out that those premises are not knowns so the syllogism is fallacious.
You can feel justified, I have no problem with that. The problem comes in when you use your feelings as rational justification to determine the truth value of the premises. Neither your feelings regarding absolute certainty, nor my theism has anything to do with the truth value of the premises.
Thus once again you have not made the case that the Kalam is fallacious. In order to do that your reasoning must remain consistent and your absolute certainty there is not consistent. It also works against you.
You misstate. The 'feelings' were about the reason for countering the claim not feelings about the counter argument and explanation of why the premises were not knowns.
I got that. My comment still remains the same. Your feeling justified. See that is precisely the issue we have here. What can we count as knowledge? What is justified knowledge? Must all knowledge be absolute certain? Then carefully juxtapose that with the issue of truth along those same concerns.
I come from a reasonable position that knowledge is mostly justified belief not only absolute certainty.
By justified belief … in short…..I mean beyond reasonable doubt. It is truly the way reasonable people live and communicate in their everyday lives.
You jump around. You hold that my premises must be absolutely certain knowns and/or absolute truth. While then making knowledge statements not based on absolute certainty but inference and justified belief.
You allow yourself plausibility and inference but deny my position based upon absolute certainty. You are flat out being inconsistent with your reasoning. Your skepticism is only severe in my direction. Look back to your position and be consistent …………….
My position is that those premises are unknowns (which is in agreement with every cosmologist I know of) so from an analytical position they remain unknown.
That is not the agreement of every cosmologist by a long shot. You are NOT absolutely certain, you are INFERRING a plausible preposition of knowledge. A justified belief. You are not absolutely certain there but you assert that as a known.
And………………….
I completely disagree with your present belief because I think you are confused and need to be skeptical of that belief. I think you are confusing their search for a natural cause with the justified belief that there most plausibly was a beginning. Hawking and Krauss recently wrote books purposing their solutions to the beginning. Vilenkin asserts that we can’t avoid a cosmic beginning. Now none of them are suggesting that infers God’s existence but they certainly indicate that is reasonable to infer that the universe began to exist.
As to your issues with uniformity, yes there are issues. But that does not affect the inference of the beginning. The new model will still need to reflect an expanding universe, thus comply with the BGV. We don’t know all there is to know about gravity, but we can reasonably infer a lot with what we do know. Many refer to evolution as a law even with all its problems.
Here you go again……………
Kalam syllogism was presented as a logical argument but the premises of a logical argument must be knowns (not beliefs) for the conclusion to be logically true.
……that is not a known. Your “but the premises of a logical argument must be knowns” is nothing more than your implausible belief and wrong. You don’t know that for certain but you assert that is a known. Actually if the premises are more plausible than their alternatives then you are justified in believing them to be true. Until such time when you can show that an alternative is more plausible then premises are plausibly true. And what is the alternative to p2. The universe is eternal. Good luck with that, knowing what we know now.
We are back to you needing to prove (contrary to cosmologists' position) the premises are true, not (really, really firm beliefs).
Note that is an inference you believe to be true. Your problem is …..the really really firm beliefs are justified. Your alternative of absolute certainty only works in math. Thus your belief there is not justified by your own standards. Your logic must be consistent.
Otherwise the conclusion will have to be "the universe may have had a cause" or "I believe the universe had a cause.
Not quite. That statement there is the reason you find the argument uncompelling. Which is perfectly fine. But it does not alter the conclusion of the argument. An argument can be a sound, valid and in this case an air tight true deduction. But that does not mean you are forced to find it compelling. So you can assert that you find the argument uncompelling, but you have not made your case that it is an argument from ignorance. Your case for that is tortured logic.