Here is the solution that occured to me, and it might not be very good. But let's say that all sorts of things do start to exist, at random. Why should we expect that different sorts of things that start existing would be able to interact with one another? Maybe stuff is popping into being all the time and it just makes no difference to us. A premise in the framing of the problem seems to suggest that if anything starts to exist, we will be able to observe it. But is this premise warranted? After all, nothing can determine what is uncaused. — Count Timothy von Icarus
This is an incorrect expectation. There was just a single point that was very very hot before the Big Bang. This singularity (prior to the Big Bang) will never occur again until, maybe, this universe dies in what they call the Big Freeze, which is like the death valley. There is no explanation as to the cause responsible for the singularity. "How it forms" is not a cause.Here is the solution that occured to me, and it might not be very good. But let's say that all sorts of things do start to exist, at random. Why should we expect that different sorts of things that start existing would be able to interact with one another? Maybe stuff is popping into being all the time and it just makes no difference to us. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If this is the case, and things can start to exist, for no prior reason (they are uncaused), then why don't we see more things starting to exist at different times? — Count Timothy von Icarus
They're called virtual particles — Philosophim
Let think of an inch by inch square of space. Anything could appear in that square of space at any moment right? Right — Philosophim
But divide the square in half. Anything could appear in that square at any moment, and not in the other half. Right? Right. — Philosophim
What does this mean? For every one square inch we see that has one chance out of the infinite, we have a square that subdivides down into magnitudes smaller, meaning in the comparative likelihood of one square inch, its much more likely that something appear very small. I don't want to math this out, maybe someone else could. — Philosophim
So over time its not surprising that we would see extremely small 'things' forming and unforming as they enter into existence, interact, and wink out — Philosophim
If this is the case, and things can start to exist, for no prior reason (they are uncaused), then why don't we see more things starting to exist at different times? — Count Timothy von Icarus
They're called virtual particles
— Philosophim
A mathematical convenience that cannot be observed through instruments. — jgill
Wrong. And I think you mean an inch cube in 3-space? Or an inch square in my favorite, the complex plane. — jgill
But divide the square in half. Anything could appear in that square at any moment, and not in the other half. Right? Right.
— Philosophim
Wrong. Where do you come up with these flights of fancy? — jgill
Please don't. And don't ask a mathematician to do so. And something would appear very small if it is very small. — jgill
I love it when philosophers dabble in physics and math. Especially quantum physics. :cool: — jgill
For every one square inch we see that has one chance out of the infinite, we have a square that subdivides down into magnitudes smaller, meaning in the comparative likelihood of one square inch, its much more likely that something appear very small. I don't want to math this out, maybe someone else could. — Philosophim
Take a one inch square. Divide each side into n equal parts. Then there are n^2 sub squares. Assume the probability of a point being in the big square is one, and each sub square probability then is n^-2. — jgill
"One chance out of the infinite" means what? — jgill
Sorry. Language is a lot looser in philosophy (or this forum) than where I worked. — jgill
The point that I was trying to make is that if all had an equal chance of being selected individually, a smaller section of square is more likely to be selected then the larger scaled squares. — Philosophim
"How it forms" is not a cause.
If we subdivide into 9 sub squares, the probability of choosing one of those sub squares is 1/9. If we have 25 sub squares, the probability of one of those is 1/25. Time to retire here, too.
But I don't think this is necessarily relevant since it would seem to relate to the size/mass-energy, what have you, of objects beginning to exist within an already existing space-time. — Count Timothy von Icarus
No. Singularity as described is the infinite density - this is what was. (matter cannot be created nor destroyed). So, that said:Yes, that's the premise I was accepting starting out. Things can begin to exist for no reason at all, no Principle of Sufficient Reason in effect.
I'm not really sure if you're trying to rebut my solution or the problem itself? If a singularity can start to exist, i.e., it did not always exist, why can't others? Why does one beginning to exist preclude others? — Count Timothy von Icarus
This is totally not what we're talking about here. The "new" is missed here.Actually we do see many new things appear: new stars, new human beings, new social problems, new diseases, new hopes, new philosophies, new theories, new films, new technologies, etc. What is not common is that something new arises out of nothing and for no reason. — JuanZu
If the universe is actually eternal, that solves the problem. — Count Timothy von Icarus
This is initially how I was conceptualizing the problem as well, but I think it runs into problems. "Time" doesn't exist outside of our 4D spacetime manifold. When our universe spontaneously exists, it is like a 4D object popping into existence, outside of any external time dimension. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Other things that spontaneously exist wouldn't "start to exist" within the context of the time dimension of our own universe. You need an external frame here, and here it might be useful to conceptualize our universe as only two dimensional, with a third time dimension — Count Timothy von Icarus
Smarter people than me, who actually specialize in this sort of thing still think Johnathan Edwards has a point here — Count Timothy von Icarus
The problem with uncaused existence is that, if it is possible, then nothing should stop it from occuring at random.
Further, being uncaused, there is no reason to expect any specific sort of thing to come into existence over any other. So, we shouldn't just expect lots of stuff to start existing, but different sorts of stuff. — Count Timothy von Icarus
What's new and had existed infinitely was the singular point that has infinitesimal volume. Then big bang happened — L'éléphant
Time doesn't exist if nothing exists, that's true. — Philosophim
Until we come up with a clear description of what time is, this statement cannot be justified — Metaphysician Undercover
No, the universe is not eternal. The singularity, however, is infinite.If the universe is actually eternal, that solves the problem. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I am lost here. We could only describe quantum fluctuations outside of the singularity, I believe. That is, we can only describe the quantum fluctuations within the universe.Basically, if inherit fluctuations in the singularity could produce the universe 14 billion years ago, how did the singularity not produce any such fluctuations for an infinite amount of time before these fluctuations finally did occur? My understanding is that this is the problem that drives the appeal of cyclical universes or Black Hole Cosmology. — Count Timothy von Icarus
No, there's no time in singularities. Let's try not to confuse the Newtonian causality with the infinity.Of course, we could appeal to the status of time in singularities, but we have reason to think our understanding of singularities is incomplete because of Hawking radiation, conservation laws, the prediction that black holes will decay and have an end, etc. — Count Timothy von Icarus
You're still stuck in the Newtonian causality. While I agree with you, in fact I said this in my previous post that there was always something, and that the universe did not come from nothing, your train of thought is still the regularity of the laws of the universe. We are totally not on the same page.But as I said in my answer, although things come into existence constantly, what would be unusual is for them to come from nothing. Since generally there is a causality that precedes and explains them, kinda. The important thing is that "coming into existence" presupposes the order of coexistence and the order of succession. From this it follows that the universe did not come out of nothing: It could have been there forever. — JuanZu
Virtual particles are not, currently, "directly observable." They have effects that can be observed, which is why the idea has gained currency — Count Timothy von Icarus
Please don't say this. Physics is very much invested in causality -- which is the prize of metaphysics.This is strange territory where philosophy can't seem to abstain trespassing. — jgill
Physics is very much invested in causality -- which is the prize of metaphysics — L'éléphant
, then nothing should stop it from occuring at random. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So, is philosophy very much invested in physics? Should it be? Is philosophy equipped, in general, to circumvent details and pull quantum tricks out of its big hat?
I believe I noted that time was registered change between entities. That's not very specific of course. Do you have a definition of time that you like to use? — Philosophim
We were just having a discussion as to whether causation should be removed from discussions of ontology because it "doesn't exist in physics." This was Russell's argument circa 1910 or so. "If physics doesn't use cause then it is anti-scientific and incoherent." Of course, Russell's premise is simply wrong today, physics does talk about cause, just not the "law of cause," he successfully attacks. It's actually not clear that Russell's premise was remotely true when he made his argument either. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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