Can't get anything from an argument that does not offer a definition of its terms. And for this topic, "nothing" really needs to be defined. So, out of the gate another gee-whiz argument.Can't get something from nothing — Devans99
'can get something from nothing' - quantum fluctuations — Devans99
"Quantum fluctuations" can't be both quantum fluctuations and nothing. Quantum fluctuations are something. If they exist, then they're part of the universe, and explaining the origins of the universe would have to involve explaining where quantum fluctuations come from. — Terrapin Station
So either whatever exists suddenly appeared, non-causally, or something has always existed — Terrapin Station
If we treat quantum fluctuations (and any other similar natural processes) as part of space which is part of the universe then there really is nothing to cause the universe - except the start of time - so that must be the cause of the universe. — Devans99
If it appeared non-causally, IE some natural stochastic process, — Devans99
Something can't 'always' exist; to exist something has to come into being first — Devans99
Nothing is spacetime absent of any matter/energy (except quantum fluctuations). — Devans99
There can't be anything to cause the universe, because that necessarily implies that something exists prior to the universe — Terrapin Station
So again, either the universe acausally began or something always existed — Terrapin Station
"Always existed" logically means that it never came into being. — Terrapin Station
That is an excellent definition. I'm pretty sure, though, there is no such thing nor ever was as your "nothing" as you define it — tim wood
God could exist timelessly. — Devans99
Can you explain how exactly the universe can begin truly acausally? — Devans99
Would you exist if you were not born? — Devans99
If your definitions are nothing to your argument, then your argument is nothing.That is an excellent definition.
— tim wood
The exact definition of nothing used does not impact my argument. — Devans99
No one could explain either how anything can begin acausally--any explanation would imply a cause, or how anything could always exist (since that's completely counterintuitive). — Terrapin Station
If I always existed, yes. I'd necessarily exist without being born. That's what the words "always existed" conventionally refer to. — Terrapin Station
In all these arguments of yours it appears you're desperate to make reality agree with your ideas as they're expressed in your language. You're allowed to do that, it's called belief. But reality does not work that way and that's why there is something called science. What you're creating when you mix the two is simply non-sense. Granted there are some interesting twists in language, but they're just in language, not in the world. — tim wood
Well if no-one can explain them and they are counterintuitive, then we can just rule them out? — Devans99
But you can't exist without being born. Would the universe exist if we took away the moment of the Big Bang? Everything has to have a 'coming into being' to exist (else its logically incomplete). "Always existed" is an oxymoron. — Devans99
Again, those are the only two options logically ('the universe acausally began or something always existed'). Ruling them out means you just don't bother thinking about or talking about this issue. — Terrapin Station
That's actually just a set of assertions, worded different ways, that it's not possible for something to always exist. It's not an argument for it. — Terrapin Station
Also, that would mean that it's not possible for god to have always existed. — Terrapin Station
But there is a third option, the universe began causally. — Devans99
If something always existed, it has no start. If it has no start, it has no middle or end. So it does not exist. — Devans99
But God is timeless and finite - he has a start and end. He can always exist in a finite state by virtue of being outside time. — Devans99
Whatever exists--whatever its nature, if we go back to the earliest thing, either it always existed or it began non-causally. — Terrapin Station
Right, it has no start, and there's no meaningful way to peg a particular point as a temporal middle. It could have an end, of course. There could be something for which there's no way to peg a particular point as a temporal middle. — Terrapin Station
If it's possible to be timeless and finite, then that's possible period. It can't be limited to just some things and not others. — Terrapin Station
I notice you stick to generalities and avoid engaging on any of the specifics of my argument. If there is nonsense in my argument you could at least point out where. — Devans99
That is an excellent definition. I'm pretty sure, though, there is no such thing nor ever was as your "nothing" as you define it
— tim wood
The exact definition of nothing used does not impact my argument. — Devans99
But if you have a start of time and timelessness then cause and effect does not apply to timeless entities. So you can have an uncaused cause as God outside time and have him then cause the start of time and the universe. — Devans99
So I ask you again: "nothing" figures in your argument. What do you mean by "nothing"? — tim wood
If there can be something that's timeless, how would we get to any restriction on just what can be timeless? Why couldn't any arbitrary thing be timeless at some point if it's possible for there to be timeless things? — Terrapin Station
It's the Big Bang theory with inflation that is regarded as the standard model of cosmology nowadays. And the multiple universes extension to that, Eternal Inflation is gaining credibility. That theory does address what happened before the Big Bang. — Devans99
OK how about a region of space absent of any matter/energy? — Devans99
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