 Razorback kitten
Razorback kitten         
          JosephS
JosephS         
          PoeticUniverse
PoeticUniverse         
         It will drift out of time and pass, as it were, into legend. The universe will no longer exist. — JosephS
 JosephS
JosephS         
          Razorback kitten
Razorback kitten         
          Deleted User
Deleted User         
         It's good, then, never to lose sight that science probably will never answer ultimate, final questions. And it's a sign, imo, of maturity to give up spending too much energy on them. — tim wood
 Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
          Razorback kitten
Razorback kitten         
          Razorback kitten
Razorback kitten         
          schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
          Deleted User
Deleted User         
         Now, given that there is a universe, is it more likely that there is just one and only one, or that there's more than one? — tim wood
 James Pullman
James Pullman         
          Razorback kitten
Razorback kitten         
          Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         This is akin to the problem of the Loch Ness Monster. Reported over nine-hundred years, if there is such an animal, it's got to be a family. Now, given that there is a universe, is it more likely that there is just one and only one, or that there's more than one? To hold it to one implies the existence of not only whatever brought it into existence, but additional somethings to keep it at only one. That seems the less likely. But clearly this has nothing to do with physics so much as a judgment on likelihood. — tim wood
 PoeticUniverse
PoeticUniverse         
          RegularGuy
RegularGuy         
          PoeticUniverse
PoeticUniverse         
         I tend to think that universes are constantly being belched from other universes. One or many had to have always existed. — Noah Te Stroete
 Janus
Janus         
          James Pullman
James Pullman         
          Janus
Janus         
         And the answer is we do not know yet. — James Pullman
And acknowledging that we don´t comprehend most of it, it´s the best way to get there. — James Pullman
 James Pullman
James Pullman         
          Janus
Janus         
         There is nothing contradictory in wanting to know something and recognize that we do not know it yet. In fact they are mostly the same thing. If we´ll have a closing answer? Not one of my strong beliefs:
we may not have the time (as species) and it may not be finite (all of this, i mean). — James Pullman
 James Pullman
James Pullman         
          Janus
Janus         
          James Pullman
James Pullman         
          BC
BC         
         In the 13th century, Siger of Brabant authored the thesis The Eternity of the World, which argued that there was no first man, and no first specimen of any particular: the physical universe is thus without any first beginning, and therefore eternal. Siger's views were condemned by the Pope in 1277.
 Janus
Janus         
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