I said Ok, Ok, and now Ok. I was wrong, there is no such thing as causality in physics - I bend to your overwhelming knowledge on the subject. Not really sure what level of victory you are looking for. — Rank Amateur
if the universe is finite (by definition) it had a first moment. — Rank Amateur
also by definitnon there was nothing before that — Rank Amateur
Correct, within the same reference frame. While in the Universe, it can be said there was nothing of the Universe before it’s first moment. Nonetheless, both propositions, together or separately, are not sufficient to logically eliminate some other reference frame which suffices to falsify the conclusion “there was nothing before that”. — Mww
As long as knowledge is unattainable, pure speculation is allowed. But just because pure speculation is allowed does not serve as warrant to usurp logical or rational rules. — Mww
I agree - but if the universe is finite. By definition it had a first moment. so also by definitnon there was nothing before that. So there was nothing - than there was something. How? — Rank Amateur
Your answer seems to be, is something cant come from nothing, but it did, so it didn't - I am lost in you logic. And pretty sure it is my fault. — Rank Amateur
Or in other words, as I've pointed out before, and as should be obvious, no matter what we posit, we're stuck on either with "something coming from nothing" or something always existing. There's no way to circumvent that problem, so we might as well just stick with the obvious stuff instead of making up things that don't necessarily make any sense--"god," "quantum fluctuations," whatever. — Terrapin Station
Can't see how with that understanding - you can rule out a an un-created creator. — Rank Amateur
But the finite uuniverse, which at this moment of our understanding is the scientific consensus, most definitely posits the question how did something come from nothing. — Rank Amateur
If causality is absent in the laws of physics, then why does anyone expect the creation event to have a cause? — Inis
If causality is absent in the laws of physics, then why does anyone expect the creation event to have a cause? — Inis
Lazy. There is no causality in any fundamental law of physics. — Inis
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