So you are not saying if you agree with me on the evidence. If not, what evidence?We go with the evidence, which has nothing to do with gods or steady state universes.
So you are not saying if you agree with me on the evidence. If not, what evidence?We go with the evidence, which has nothing to do with gods or steady state universes.
So you are not saying if you agree with me on the evidence. If not, what evidence?
Of course, just like I said. We observe an accelerating rate of separation between galaxies and galaxy groups (and to add to that, a host of other observations of the physical universe that we can detect).The evidence that supports current theory, of course.
Of course, just like I said. We observe an accelerating rate of separation between galaxies and galaxy groups (and to add to that, a host of other observations of the physical universe that we can detect).
Can I refer to you as someone that does not speculate about things that we cannot test observationally?
I speculate to an extent that is consistent with observations and data and follows a methodology that connects it to the current consensus.I have no problem with speculation, as long as the evidence agrees with the speculation.
There's nothing terribly wrong with speculation, on an individual level, so long as it does not contradict the evidence. We all get hunches and flashes of creativity. We'd be rather dull if we didn't. But this speculation does not become a respectable hypothesis until we roll up our sleeves and start looking for evidence. And our search must be organized in such a way that if falsifying evidence exists we will have a fair chance of finding it, rather than myopically searching only for supporting evidence.I have no problem with speculation, as long as the evidence agrees with the speculation.
So, MacM, you can guess that initially there is NO THING. No time. No space. No mass. No electric field. No nothin'.
Out of no nothin' springs up time, space, vacuum, false vacuum, Laws Of Quantum Physics, some kind of magicke sheriff that enforces Laws Of Quantum Physics, and a virtual particle pops out of hyperspace.
The virtual particle knows that it has not existed forever(?) and so knows that it will cease existing soon(?).
Scientifically speaking, it is contradictory to try to employ Quantum Physics principles of virtual particle borrowed energy to explain existence. Why? Because immediately prior to the emergence of the virtual particle, there had to already be false vacuum, vacuum fluctuations, a virtual particle field (commonly called the "quantum field"), the Laws Of Quantum Physics, and a magicke sheriff to enforce the Laws Of Quantum Physics.
I CAN GUESS that you think it is silly to believe in eternal existence.
But, I CAN GUESS also that it is equally silly to believe in momentary existence. I have just before explained how silly it is to believe in either eternal or momentary existence.
It is completely silly to believe in either eternal or momentary existence.
But here you and me and all of us are, existing and believing that we exist.
There may be energy in a vacuum, but I don't think there is any requirement that there must be energy in every vacuum. Energy after all is comprised of quarks and bosons just like matter, merely in a different arrangement.I am inclined to believe there is no such thing as nothing. A vacuum contains energy according to quantum physics.
Of course. Just change the charge and spin on those fermions, and the waves and the particles turn into one another.That energy can be converted to matter is accepted by scientists around the world.
Wait, you are begging the question of whether there was once "nothing." "Nothing" means no energy too, not just no matter. To argue that before the Big Bang a universe existed that was devoid only of matter but not of energy is, to use the language of the law, "assuming facts not in evidence," and in any case it is totally inconsistent with the Big Bang Model as it is now accepted.So whether it was a big bang or some other means, a vacuum can eventually produce universes.
You're free to speculate because hypotheses come from speculations and every theory was once a hypothesis. But your assertion qualifies only as speculation until you present some evidence for it. And since what little evidence we've managed to gather supports the Big Bang Model--i.e. literally "nothing" before the singularity occurred--you've got an uphill battle.This leads me to think there has always been something, or the energy to produce it. Even when it may appear there is "nothing" the potential is there.
The sudden springing into existence of a completely balanced set of quarks and anti-quarks and all the other pairs of elementary particles is nothing but a local reversal of entropy. As I speculated earlier, this singularity becomes unremarkable if the universe is infinite both spatially and temporally, because the law of averages then tells us that local reversals of entropy are quite possible. As I also speculated, this could happen more than once, but the occurrences would likely be so far apart spatially and temporally that we'll never have a means of detecting any of the others.It must be inherent in the ability to generate the balanced borrowed energy in the first place. I would not even consider thinking I knew how the process works but it does.
I assume you meant to write "consciousness." But sure, particles probably don't have morality either.Particles don't have a conscience and know or think anything.
* * * * NOTE FROM THE LINGUISTICS MODERATOR * * * *Eternal and infinite are synonyms . . . .
N----------------> (+S) + (-S) = (1) + (-1) = 0
Good point; I agree.This is not 'nothingness'- Why don't you explain where each component came from? 1 + -1 ? They are definitely something.
If the Net Force of a system is 0, that doesn't mean there is no force there.... The Force of X direction and Force of Y direction could be there - which is like your 1 and -1 BUT this is NOT nothing...these components are something.
Peace be unto you
We came into existance and exist in the form of bifurcated nothing or borrowed energy. Nothing created, no creator and no infinite or eternal existance nonsense.
I see eternal existance as nonsense because it cannot exist eternally without having come into existance initially. The issue is how it came into existance. God certainly is not a solution to that paradox.
I share this view of future discoveries that might yield a new understanding of states of energy. Right now the thought of an eternal universe has too much of a religious connotation to be acceptable to some reasonably large percentage of the scientifically oriented. A new or better understanding of physics will bring us closer to an understanding of reality. Right now the term "reality" is considered philosophical by some of those in that reasonably large percentage. There is a gap between math and reality, i.e. between the correspondence of mathematical representations of physical phenomena and that philosophical concept of reality. Science narrows the gap as understanding improves.Ex nihilo, nihil fit. Out of nothing comes nothing. Not true according to some physicists. And you know what? They aren't necessarily wrong if their definition of reality is limited to what can currently be measured or detected, or what can reasonably be said to exist based on current evidence. But I believe, as do many others, that as we probe deeper and deeper into the structure and fabric of reality, we will eventually expand our definition of the physical to include states that were previously undetectable, and will eventually integrate these discoveries into a more complete description of reality and expand our definition of the universe. As long as our methods are based on empirical, observable and measurable evidence, whatever we discover about reality will always be scientific, no matter what it is.
The point of contention here is whether or not the nothing that some physicists are suggesting that the universe transitioned from actually exists as part of reality. Whether or not it has the quality of being actually real. Physics tells us that it doesn't, because according to our current definitions it does not have any physical properties and something must have physical properties in order to be said to actually exist. But is this an absolute truth, or merely a limitation of our current model to describe the true scope of reality?
Let's examine this nothing again. An unstable unphysical state that is somehow just itching to undergo a phase transition to a physical state. Although it can't be said to have physical properties, it obviously does have at least one property, which is it's mathematically supported overwhelming tendency to become something. It is this instability, this potential, that I want to focus on. How can something have the potential to become something else if it does not actually exist? Or phrased differently, and more in line with how physics would define the elements in play, how can nothing have the potential to become something if it is really nothing? The answer to the latter question is that it can't. Nothing can not become something because it is nothing. Ex nihilo, nihil fit. The only explanation that makes any kind of logical sense is that this nothing is actually something. That it's something that one day physics will be able to at least describe due to inevitable advances in our understanding of the universe we live in.
what is meant by nothing here? Is this 'nothing' really 'nothing'.
Which brings us back to my definition of "cosmology" as an awkward place where physics, mathematics and philosophy meet.I would look at nothing as "no thing" which would bring it to an issue of dualistic consciousness which creates it's own boundaries or limits. Probably the closest we can come to an understanding of this would be found in quantum physics? Or maybe Zen. Or even Plato. There are some questions that are ultimately unanswerable by logic because every answer will only beg another question, ad infinitum. Nature of dualism. Answered by subjective experience will be unprovable scientifically. Just the nature of the beast.