An observation... you're mixing the concept of "time" here. One could say that "there was at one time nothing" is simply a contradiction... because if there was a time at which there was nothing, then there was not nothing then... there was a time then.Which would mean that we have never had complete nothingness, there has always been something. If you believe in God, than there has always been God.
...unless you were blind from birth and had no concept of a visual experience, or you were clever enough to imagine "nothing" by not imagining anything. This may really be nothing more than a language game; and the same sort of contradiction. It might be that you're asking us to imagine something that is nothing, and don't actually count imagining nothing as imagining nothing.If someone asked you to imagine 'nothing' and than I asked you what you saw, it would make sense for you to say 'nothing'. However, you may see a vast expanse of all black or white, or even maybe some glass like something.
How do you know? By that, I'm not asking you to give me your reasoned argument; I'm asking, how is it that you can even give a reasoned argument coming to that conclusion if you don't "comprehend nothing"? Also, it's not meant as a challenge, it's just a question. There's something about your ability to recognize that you're not comprehending nothing that requires at least explaining in terms of how you're able to come up with the notion that we cannot do it.But you can't do that with 'nothing'.
This is a misunderstanding. Conservation of Energy is a law because it's something we've noticed occur under certain limits and it has a mathematical form; not because the universe is compelled to obey it. In fact, strictly, we think the universe as a whole does not obey this law, because the universe isn't symmetric in the right way.The Law of Conservation of Matter and Energy states: matter and energy can neither be destroyed nor created, but they may interchange from one to the other. This being said, we must conclude that either there has always been matter, or that there has always been energy or that there has always been both. — OpinionsMatter
Whether you believe in god or not, this still applies to you. I would like to propose something, it is absolutely impossible for the human brain to comprehend the term 'nothing' literally. You could say that there is nothing in a specific spot, for example: I ate your apple slice from your hand. Now there is nothing there. But you cannot say that there ever was actually nothing. If we look at our world famous laws(science, not political) we would recall that The Law of Conservation of Matter and Energy states: matter and energy can neither be destroyed nor created, but they may interchange from one to the other. This being said, we must conclude that either there has always been matter, or that there has always been energy or that there has always been both.
Which would mean that we have never had complete nothingness, there has always been something. If you believe in God, than there has always been God. Therefore there is still no such thing as nothing, neither can we comprehend nothing. If someone asked you to imagine 'nothing' and than I asked you what you saw, it would make sense for you to say 'nothing'. However, you may see a vast expanse of all black or white, or even maybe some glass like something. Either way, you still saw something, whether you'd like to admit it or not. Is it possible for us to know what something is like without ever experiencing it or anything like it? No, we can't. When someone tries to explain something you've never eaten before, they usually say the ingredients and things that are similar in taste. But you can't do that with 'nothing'.
Overall, 'nothing' is one of the many things that are impossible to comprehend or to distinguish. We can use the word, but never literally. — OpinionsMatter
There was nothing before the Big Bang. There was no time, so only a motion exists. — Gregory
Nothingness is fundamental perhaps to math, grammatical studies, and meditation, as has been pointed out above. And it is essential to reject absolute time and also understand nothingness is order to see the world as motion from point Zero, i.e. a projection — Gregory
That's not necessarily true. The Big Bang is most precisely a singularity; that's it. This does not imply there was nothing before it. In eternal inflation models, for example, big bangs (as singularities) can spontaneously arise from the formation of false vacuums; and this happens indefinitely into the future. Under such models there's a sense in which one can talk about things before big bangs.There was nothing before the Big Bang. There was no time, so only a motion exists. — Gregory
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