Chickens are from eggs, but eggs are from chickens, making it difficult to say which one came first. From ancient time until now, philosophers and scientists have been discussing contradictory questions about the chicken and the egg: which one came first? However, they never get an answer; likewise, they never get an answer about how life and the universe in general began. One of the classic arguments for the existence of God is known as the “Cosmological Argument” or “First Cause” argument. It works from the premise that every natural event is the effect of a cause. If this is so, then the events that caused today’s events must have had causes themselves, which must have had causes, and so on. If the chain never ends, then one must uphold the hypothesis of an ”actual infinite.” If the chain does end, it must end with a non-natural or supernatural cause at the start of the natural world-a creation by God.
Chickens are from eggs, but eggs are from chickens, making it difficult to say which one came first. From ancient time until now, philosophers and scientists have been discussing contradictory questions about the chicken and the egg: which one came first? However, they never get an answer; likewise, they never get an answer about how life and the universe in general began. One of the classic arguments for the existence of God is known as the “Cosmological Argument” or “First Cause” argument. It works from the premise that every natural event is the effect of a cause. If this is so, then the events that caused today’s events must have had causes themselves, which must have had causes, and so on. If the chain never ends, then one must uphold the hypothesis of an ”actual infinite.” If the chain does end, it must end with a non-natural or supernatural cause at the start of the natural world-a creation by God.
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