C. So spontaneous matter/energy creation happens (eg by quantum fluctuations / Big Bangs)
A. An infinite regress has no initial cause (start).
B. That implies cause and effect don’t hold — Devans99
You now have a universe in which every single event, without exception, has a cause. — fishfry
The being has always experienced events. No matter how far we go back in time, the being experienced events. So it must have experienced some events greater than any number of years ago. Which is a contradiction (can’t be a number and greater than any number at the same time). — Devans99
Is it the infinite they believe in or the unbounded? Makes a difference. Do you know the difference? — tim wood
Travelling around circle can be regarded as an example of potential infinity (/unbounded). But it's not really an infinite path: starting at 0˚, once 360˚ is reached, it is the same path being traversed again. — Devans99
Indeed, it's a conjecture of Hawking's that space-time is unbounded — tim wood
5. The being has always experienced events. No matter how far we go back in time, the being experienced events. So it must have experienced some events greater than any number of years ago. Which is a contradiction (can’t be a number and greater than any number at the same time). — Devans99
Granting this: "So it must have experienced some events greater than any number [you select] of years ago." is not implying the existence of a number greater than all numbers. — coolguy8472
But we know the being has experienced events so there must be a (total) number of events. Goes to show how things without starts don't make any sense. — Devans99
↪Frank Apisa
Everything that exists in time needs a temporal start point. Things that exist outside of time don't. — Devans99
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