I fail to see the dilemma. — Jackson
The big bang is conceived as being the beginning of space and time, — unenlightened
This perennial "what if" assumes that, in contemporary physics terms, there is "time" independent of – "before" – spacetime, which seems as conceptually incoherent as "north of the North Pole" (i.e. edge of a sphere, torus, loop, etc). And if we do away with "spacetime", for the sake of discussion, we then lose more than a century of physical and cosmological grounds to even discuss "the expanding universe" and its retrodicted BB. What does an event mean "before" spacetime? – is the implication of that old "what if". — 180 Proof
Our universe today is derived from this event. What if there were other universes before that? — Jackson
Or parallel universes to this one, sure. I dont see why not but “what if?”?
Ya suppose if there were other universes before this one we would need to adjust our models? They would be incorrect? What are you getting at? — DingoJones
Big bang only shows how to derive our current universe from that situation. Says nothing about what happened before. — Jackson
I think it only make sense in philosophy to talk about what has already been established in physics and not to extrapolate non-evidentiary, or inexplicable, counterfactuals that philosophy is ill-equipped to establish. My point is: given the physics we philosophers have to work with, time before – independent of – spacetime doesn't make any sense; besides, a speculative fiat of "other spacetimes" is unparsimonious as well. — 180 Proof
If the explanation lies outside our capacities, or outside of naturalism, then we need to accept it or broaden our fundamental concepts of existence. — Xtrix
Multiple universes seems to push the question back, much like God. Who or what created God? What created the universe or the multiverse? Etc.
Human beings aren’t omnipotent. This could be a question we just can’t answer, and perhaps demonstrates our cognitive limits. — Xtrix
My position is not [philosophy] "must ground itself in the realism of physics". You're interpretation of what I've on this thread, if this is your interpretation, is mistaken. Btw, I prefer Sellars to Quine.This was Quine’s position, that pragmatism’s relativism must ground itself in the realism of physics, a notion referred to as scientism by Putnam. — Joshs
However, philosophy IS NOT physics (i.e. not theoretical, or does not explain any aspect of nature).Physics IS philosophy.
:cool: :up:[ ... ] how could any putative big bangs, universes and instances of spacetime be counted as being "before" or "after" anything in our spacetime bubble? — Janus
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