Since out of nothing, nothing comes, it's more rational to consider the universe as having always existed. — LD Saunders
Since out of nothing, nothing comes, it's more rational to consider the universe as having always existed. — LD Saunders
What you are claiming is that if something always existed, then nothing could exist — LD Saunders
Everything has spacial start point(s). For example, a human you could choose head or feet
- Everything has a temporal start. This might be a window of time rather than a point. An example for a human would be birth. — Devans99
How about existence of truths which has always been the same unaffected by time. For example the fact that there are an infinite number of prime numbers. Or are you considering these not to be "things"? — anthonyshinex
How about existence of truths which has always been the same unaffected by time — anthonyshinex
Therefore, this potential is both an intrinsic part of reality and can neither begin nor end — SnowyChainsaw
Euclid's proof by contradiction logically there are an infinite number of primes — anthonyshinex
I'm interested by the possibility that (say) the domain of natural numbers doesn't have a beginning and end in time. — Wayfarer
Since out of nothing, nothing comes... — LD Saunders
Numbers only exist in our head as a potential infinity; they don't exist in reality — Devans99
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