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    The metaphysical intuition that something cannot come out... — Carmelics
    Home/Natural Theology
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    Supports→The first premise of the kalām argument (that everything that begins to exist has a cause) is true.

    The metaphysical intuition that something cannot come out of nothing supports the Causal Principle.

    Natural Theology
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    Natural Theology

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    No one sincerely believes that things, such as a horse or an Eskimo village, can...The Causal Principle is intuitively obvious; no one seriously denies it.The first premise of the kalām argument (that everything that begins to exist ha...

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    The truth of the Causal Principle rests upon the metaphysical intuitio...91%Therefore, metaphysical reasoning leads to the conclusion that a First...81%The PSR requires that everything lacking metaphysical necessity be exp...79%A state of absolutely nothing is not conceptually possible, because at...79%

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    SEP: cosmological-argument
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    The basis for the argument’s first premise is the Causal Principle that undergirds many cosmological arguments. (Oderberg [2002: 308] is mistaken when he tries to establish the uniqueness of the kalām argument by denying that the Causal Principle plays a role in kalām argument. It only does not play a role in supporting a particular premise in the argument.) Defenders and critics alike suggest that basing the argument on the Principle of Causation rather than on the more general Principle of Sufficient Reason is advantageous to the argument (Morriston 2000: 149). Craig holds that the first pre...

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