The reference to 'nothing' meant that nothing came before the Big Bang was one of the possible choices, making the Big Bang the thing that is infinite. Whatever you arrive at, if nothing came before it, that thing is infinite. Even if we try to characterize what came before the Big Bang as 'nothing' that nothing is something, a void of white or darkness or just 'nothing' but that inself is a characteristic making it infinite, because it had to be. Essentially, everything comes from something, except that which was there at the beginning. — GigoloJoe
The modern view is the big bang was the birth of space-time. Is the concept of before valid in an era when time itself did not exist? — Bill Hobba
My belief about Pi is its defined as the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter. A — Bill Hobba
The ratio of a circle to its diameter existed before it was observed, named and quantified. The ratio was not invented it was observed. — Rank Amateur
↪fishfry go throw a rock in a pond — Rank Amateur
↪fishfry I wasn't being nasty, I was pointing out circles exist in nature, and the ratio of the circumstances to the diameters of these circles exist in nature. — Rank Amateur
↪fishfry ok sure. — Rank Amateur
And you cannot ever make a physical measurement of a natural number like 2. As I've said earlier, every physical measurement is obviously an approximation. Naturally every drawing is too. Do you understand that? I guess you do, so I assume you do understand the abstract theoretical nature of mathematics, hence I'm not sure what where the disagreement is here.There is a profound difference between a physical drawing, and an abstract, idealized geometric shape. You can't draw a mathematical circle with a pencil and paper. Nor could you ever make a physical measurement of any irrational number. Do you understand that? I'm asking just to make sure we're not talking past each other on this essential point. — fishfry
I'm not denying the out-there-ness of ππ. I'm a Platonist on weekends. But to me the case isn't as obvious as it is to others. Sure, we don't have any choice in whether 5 is prime. So it's out there. But where is it? Was it there before the Big Bang? Platonism is not as obvious as some think. How do we know that math and logic aren't qualities of our own minds and not so much of the world? Just as a bat thinks the world is full of informative sounds. We are very human-centric in these matters and I wonder if someday we'll get past that. — fishfry
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