TheGreatArcanum         
         
TheGreatArcanum         
         
Banno         
         an eternal being exists necessarily, — TheGreatArcanum
jgill         
         furthermore, if space itself is born out of some non-dimensional point, then what is the essence of that non-dimensional point? — TheGreatArcanum
TheGreatArcanum         
         Why?
Eternity is a temporal state, necessity, a logical. — Banno
Thunderballs         
         
TheGreatArcanum         
         Points of singularity, whether in the physical world or mathematics, allow bizarre behavior in their neighborhoods. I dabble in the complex plane where these things appear now and then. Even in that well-trod territory there are minor differences of definition — jgill
TheGreatArcanum         
         Spacetime is eternal. — Thunderballs
Onlu the gods can create this. Time and space don't exist for them. Time is maybe not even inherent to Nature. — Thunderballs
Banno         
         
TheGreatArcanum         
         None of which shows that an eternal being exists necessarily.
To do that you would have to show that there are no possible worlds that are not eternal.
So, I posit a world that exists for ten minutes. Demonstrate that this involves a contradiction. — Banno
Banno         
         even the existence of alternate worlds is an assumption. — TheGreatArcanum
the 'many worlds' hypothesis states that all possible worlds are born simultaneously out of some a priori potential. — TheGreatArcanum
TheGreatArcanum         
         
Banno         
         
PoeticUniverse         
         if the universe is born out of 'quantum fluctuations' (as physicists claim), do those fluctuations necessitate space, — TheGreatArcanum
TheGreatArcanum         
         
TheGreatArcanum         
         
Banno         
         You may be right, and that gives you the right to ignore all of my other points? — TheGreatArcanum
Banno         
         is space itself contingent, or necessary? — TheGreatArcanum
PoeticUniverse         
         what about the substratum from which quantum fluctuations emerge and disappear into? — TheGreatArcanum
Thunderballs         
         There's no emerging or coming from or going to for what is Fundamental; it is ever and always. The fields themselves fluctuate all over, always; there is no stillness—else naught could happen. Where there is a unit stable quantum it is directly an elementary particle; else there are just other fluctuations not amounting to a unit level. — PoeticUniverse
PoeticUniverse         
         every new big bang — Thunderballs
PoeticUniverse         
         Relative space? — Thunderballs
Thunderballs         
         Sure, if there can be one bang, there will be others. — PoeticUniverse
Thunderballs         
         
PoeticUniverse         
         When our bang has reached infinity (big rip), another bangs behind us. — Thunderballs
PoeticUniverse         
         is time real or do we assign it? — Thunderballs
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