Nature abhors macro-discontinuity so the shape of our universe may well be circular (a torus) with the time dimension running around the body and the space dimensions being within the circular cross sections. — Devans99
...or a 4-dimensional sphere, or an infinite universe. — Michael Ossipoff
Of course it is. What you mean is it's never realized in or as an artifact. Part of the mistake, I think, lies in confusing infinite with unbounded.It is not constructable mathematically. — Devans99
Well, you need to define "something" and "nothing." Absent rigor, these, and the argument based on them, is just a flight of fancy, or as you say, a creation story. Further, without defining them yourself, you leave it open for everyone else to attach their own definitions, which in turn means that the resultant discussion is necessarily nonsense, until and unless there's an accident of sense.It's impossible for something to come from nothing — Devans99
"It is not constructable mathematically.
— Devans99
Of course it is. — tim wood
Well, you need to define "something" and "nothing." — tim wood
Your problem is not whether this or that construction defines or implies a transfinite number, but instead that no such construction is possible.Would you call this a construction of Actual Infinity? — Devans99
Fair definitions, in my opinion. Let someone else take them on. But the conclusion doesn't follow - unless your nothing is the philosopher's nothing, which is a mere concept, an idea. The physicist's "nothing" is an altogether different animal and the two ought not be confused.- Nothing: no matter/energy or dimensions
- Something: at least some matter/energy and spacial dimensions
So with this definition, going from nothing to something is not feasible. — Devans99
A 4D sphere is certainly possible, but not an infinite universe; infinite things do not have a start so cannot exist. — Devans99
Cosmologists don't agree with you — Michael Ossipoff
There have been articles reporting that, so far, the evidence seems to be piling up in favor of this universe being infinite — Michael Ossipoff
Then explain that to the PhD physicists and cosmologists who say that the universe might be infinite — Michael Ossipoff
Also consider the universe is expanding. It cannot expand if it infinite because there would be nowhere to expand to. So the universe is not infinite. — Devans99
An Actual infinite universe is impossible; it implies the universe is at once 100x greater than everything else and at the same time 1000x, 10000x bigger etc... — Devans99
No, it doesn't imply any of those sizes. It refers to a size that is greater than any of those sizes, or any other specifiable size. — Michael Ossipoff
The east-west scale on a cylindrical map projection of the Earth, in standard equatorial-aspect (or of any line-pole projection in that aspect) increases without bound as the poles are approached. — Michael Ossipoff
Your traveled-distance would merely increase without bound, while always having a finite value. — Michael Ossipoff
No, it doesn't imply any of those sizes. It refers to a size that is greater than any of those sizes, or any other specifiable size. — Michael Ossipoff
There is no such size: — Devans99
Your traveled-distance would merely increase without bound, while always having a finite value. — Michael Ossipoff
Potential Infinity rather than Actual infinity again. — Devans99
Its impossible for something to come from nothing, so base reality must of always existed. — Devans99
Nothing is much more natural: We start with nothing and end with nothing and nothing needs explanation; we have a completely logically consistent description of a (very dull) system/universe with no unanswered questions. — Devans99
I must ask: how do we know this? Yeah, it applies to ordinary affairs, and it has an intuitive appeal. But I find it just a little bit iffy as a foundation/premise — macrosoft
First you define nothing as no dimensions, matter or energy. Then its pretty clear that nothing can come from it; hence something (dimensions, matter or energy) must of always existed. — Devans99
Imagine all the metaphysically possible worlds, only one of which obtains by chance. There are very simple worlds, and extremely complex ones — Relativist
A world with an absolute beginning of space-time, and therefore cannot have been caused - because causes temporally precede effects and there is no time before the beginning of time. — Relativist
ut all such worlds bar one suffer from the same problem; they are logically inconsistent because there is, unaccountably, stuff in the world. There is no first cause for this stuff. Hence it seems these worlds are logically impossible.
The only world the hangs together logically/does not need magic is the one with nothing in it. All the others present a logical conundrum. — Devans99
Considering the really horrible experience that are included in some lives — Michael Ossipoff
"Considering the really horrible experience that are included in some lives" — Michael Ossipoff
— Devans99
These are compatible with a benevolent Creator God who is powerful but not omnipotent.
There is more good than evil in the world and this ratio improves with time.
We are still at a very early stage of development by cosmological standards; our society should improve towards near perfection given time.
So God was fully justified in creating the universe; it was a 'good' act; he could not make the omelette without breaking a few eggs unfortunately; he's not omnipotent so its best endeavours only.
The Gnostic allegory says that a demiturge created — Michael Ossipoff
I suggest that God adopted us, rather than creating us — Michael Ossipoff
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