That reasoning boils down to two propositions: the first is that all events must have causes; the second is that only in closed causal chains do all events have causes.
Speculative or not, still :cool: — 180 Proof
Just as anything falling into a black hole falls forever from its point of view (ignoring death and spaghettification), anything falling back in time to the big bang could also fall forever.
I'm not entirely sure that's true -- I thought that's just a mathematical artifact from relativity which doesn't necessarily apply to reality. — ChrisM
Isn't this why relativity and QM cannot be reconciled -- since relativity breaks down at the smallest scales into infinities? — ChrisM
Did you read the article? That very topic is talked about. — ChrisM
I would've asked for clues to be revealed once intelligence in the universe evolved to a level capable of handling the probably complex science involved in making some headway — TheMadFool
You're assuming that a causeless cause is possible, simply based on the basis that anything exists -- this does nothing to refute the claim that all events must have causes, thus that the universe must be a causal loop.
The fact that anything exists still follows a causal loop model, where causal loops as a whole are not create and do not have a first cause - they simply exist. But causality still obeys a logical consistency within the loop (i.e. no event without a cause) — ChrisM
I totally agree with you, and I also agree that we might not even be far enough along to be able to grasp the clues, if any, that may have been left for us. But its fun to think about and I don't think it rules them out -- maybe we'll come to decipher a code left in our DNA, like the article suggests. — ChrisM
No, a causeless cause is the only logical conclusion. It is logically impossible for there not to be a causeless cause, even within the idea of a causal loop. That is because there is still the question, "Why is there a causal loop, instead of there not being a causal loop?" The answer cannot be found inside the loop, except for the fact it exists. There is no prior explanation as to why it exists, therefore it is a causeless cause. — Philosophim
Causes can simply go back in time forever with no end. — Gregory
There is no need to go into divine realms for an answer — Gregory
Does uncaused cause come from nothing. And can nothing be a power? — Gregory
we reach a point in which there are no rules of prior necessitation, only the unyielding result of the existence that is there. — Philosophim
Didn't Shiller say there is more wisdom in children books than philosophy books? — Gregory
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