Xelebes wrote:
A question is wrong if it is non sequitur.
Is a telephone ordinal?
Is a block chronological?
Your argument looks like what philosophers (and Wikipedia) call 'special pleading' -In this case, it seems that if a question calls your view of the world into question, it automatically makes no sense, even when you ask the same question (i.e. why?) in the context of all other similarly-physical objects? {I'm not even making a categorical error here as far as I can tell}
Also, on a second glance, your second question {'Is a block chronological?'}
does make sense, when you consider the block's trajectory through time. I don't know what 'ordinal' means and don't have a dictionary to hand, so I'll leave that aside for now.
Calling questions 'wrong' conjures up images of medieval preists condemning the 'wrong questions' as blasphemous. {The Buddha had a better idea, claiming that asking the sort of questions we're asking would lead to madness
}
Sorry if I'm missing something; I linked to this thread from the start screen - Not being a scientist, I never visit this forum, so feel free to explain any recent scientific proof that the universe is uncaused.
I once read an argument that the universe was caused by quantum inevitability alone, and remain open to the possibility that it needed no cause