Well, It seems to me that you don't understand what I am trying to say. So I won't repeat.Age wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 6:25 amAnd, of the MANY CONTRADICTIONS you make and say some of I SHOW and REVEAL.REALLY?
WHY were you under some sort of an ASSUMPTION "others" here were NOT AWARE of this Fact and that you NEEDED to SAY and WRITE this here?
But, as I have EXPLAINED to you BEFORE, just because a human being can NOT do some thing, then this by itself does Not mean that a 'thing' does not exist, OBVIOUSLY."Now is just one point at the time" does NOT make sense in english.What you are 'trying to' CLAIM can be VERY EASILY UNDERSTOOD. But what you are 'trying to' CLAIM can be PROVED False AND Wrong. You are just NOT YET OPEN enough to UNDERSTANDING and SEEING this Fact.OF COURSE 'it' follows. 'it' even follows LOGICALLY, as I just SAID. However, if the Universe' did NOT begin from ANY moment, then It is infinite, ALSO 'follows', and even LOGICALLY, but does this make 'it' TRUE and RIGHT?
BUT what you, Wrongly, refer to as 'rime' IS eternal, along WITH the Universe. The two go 'hand-in-hand', as some might say.Your response here, ONCE MORE, is MORE ABSURD than your original CLAIM IS and WAS.
A fair amount of what you say MIGHT make sense in your original language but it truly does NOT in english.But what you SUPPOSEDLY :know' here is ABSOLUTELY and TOTALLY Wrong AND Absurd.'what' some of you human beinga refer to as 'time', like the Universe, can NOT begin. BECAUSE it is BOTH logically AND empirically IMPOSSIBLE to create some thing from NO thing. So, what some of you human beings refer to as 'time' is NOT some thing that was 'created' but is some 'thing' that exists ALWAYS, with the ALWAYS CHANGING Universe.
'Regress' is just some IMAGINED up thing, which has absolutely NO bearing in a discussion about whether the Universe began or not.
Is it STILL IMPOSSIBLE for you to just ANSWER the ACTUAL QUESTION posed to you?If this is what you SEE, then this is what you "UNDERSTAND".bahman wrote: ↑Mon Jun 13, 2022 8:46 pmYes, I am.
I am familiar with the wall of words from you that explain nothing and provide nothing.Age wrote: ↑Sun Jun 12, 2022 10:43 pm
WHO and/or WHAT is the 'we' here, EXACTLY?
By the way,'you' have NOT shown ANY such thing here.
The above was a GREAT EXAMPLE of how adult human beings used to 'try to' "argue" for their ALREADY OBTAINED BELIEFS, back in the days when this was being written.
Instead of just REMAINING Truly OPEN, ALWAYS, so as to be ABLE to SEE and RECOGNIZE what WAS and WILL ALWAYS BE IRREFUTABLY True, they much preferred to just first BELIEVE some thing was true, and then 'try' their HARDEST to LOOK FOR and FIND just about ANY thing, which they could 'try to' use in the hope that it would back up and support their pre-existing ASSUMPTIONS or BELIEFS.
This forum is a GREAT PLACE to BEAR WITNESS to this Truly DISTORTED way of THINKING and of LOOKING AT things.
Are you AWARE that 'others" SEE things VERY DIFFERENTLY from you here?
Nothing to something must be possible
Re: Nothing to something must be possible
Re: Nothing to something must be possible
But 13 billion years ago the universe was not born as well as anything else that is born.
Because everything is born in a pre-existing place.
A space-time place.
Instead, the birth of the universe, according to physicists, is the birth of space-time itself.
There is no space and time where the universe is born.
It is for this reason that for physicists you are precisely in the center of the universe.
Because everything in the universe is in the center of the universe itself.
This should already make us meditate...
But there is more!
Because if time has a beginning, and we hold this event in place without letting ourselves go to arbitrarily assume the existence of a time prior to this ... then we are still in that initial instant!
The 13 billion years have never actually elapsed.
And this paradoxical observation is confirmed by the photon, for which the universe is but a point and its billions of years have never been.
- iambiguous
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Re: Nothing to something must be possible
Okay, so you'll go to the grave with your metaphysical speculations. And if that's enough for you, great. Ater all, in the end, it's what we come to think and believe "in our heads" is true that counts.bahman wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 4:18 pmI don't need evidence since this is purely a metaphysical discussion. But I have evidence for the fact that there is a beginning: If the universe was eternal we should be at heat death state now. We are not at heat death. Therefore there is a beginning.iambiguous wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 2:46 amWhich part of your argument are you able to back up with hard evidence?
For me though, it's just not enough. I was not, I was, I may not be, I will not be. Why? That I will almost certainly never have access to the answer can, in particular moods and frames of mind, exasperate me to no end. And, since I lost my faith/belief in religion, even my own existence "here and now" is construed by me to be essentially meaningless and purposeless.
And take your evidence for a beginning to the scientific community. I'm sure you'll find those there who both agree and disagree with it. But as for accumulating irrefutable proof that it's true...in our lifetimes?
Right.
And even if that ontological proof comes to be found, there's still the part about whether existence has any teleological meaning or purpose.
Try getting around God and religion in grappling with that.
Look, if there was a consensus among physicists about the beginning of the universe/existence it would be all they were talking about. Hell, that news would be plastered in headlines in the media around the globe. Right?
Note where your "simple truth" is being talked about either in the scientific community or the general media.
As for your argument against the existence of God, where's the irrefutable evidence for that?
I don't believe in the existence of God, myself.
But given the "staggering vastness" that is "all there is"...
...what are the odds that my belief comes closest to the actual objective truth?Light travels at approximately 186,000 miles a second. That is about 6,000,000,000,000 miles a year.
The closest star to us is Alpha Centauri. It is 4.75 light-years away. 28,500,000,000,000 miles.
So, traveling at 186,000 miles a second, it would take us 4.75 years to reach it. The voyager spacecraft [just now exiting our solar system] will take 70,000 years to reach it.
To reach the center of the Milky Way galaxy it would take 100,000 light-years.
Or consider this:
To get to the closest galaxy to ours, the Canis Major Dwarf, at Voyager's speed, it would take approximately 749,000,000 years to travel the distance of 25,000 light years! If we could travel at the speed of light, it would still take 25,000 years!
The Andromeda galaxy is 2.537 million light years away.
nasa
It turns out that roughly 68% of the universe is dark energy. Dark matter makes up about 27%. The rest - everything on Earth, everything ever observed with all of our instruments, all normal matter - adds up to less than 5% of the universe. nasa
Or your own.
Re: Nothing to something must be possible
Space, time, matter, antimatter, etc. were born at the same point.bobmax wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 5:01 pmBut 13 billion years ago the universe was not born as well as anything else that is born.
Because everything is born in a pre-existing place.
A space-time place.
Instead, the birth of the universe, according to physicists, is the birth of space-time itself.
There is no space and time where the universe is born.
It is for this reason that for physicists you are precisely in the center of the universe.
Because everything in the universe is in the center of the universe itself.
This should already make us meditate...
But there is more!
Because if time has a beginning, and we hold this event in place without letting ourselves go to arbitrarily assume the existence of a time prior to this ... then we are still in that initial instant!
The 13 billion years have never actually elapsed.
And this paradoxical observation is confirmed by the photon, for which the universe is but a point and its billions of years have never been.
Re: Nothing to something must be possible
Speculation? I am using logic. Again, (1), (2), or (3). Which one do you like to discuss?iambiguous wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 5:06 pmOkay, so you'll go to the grave with your metaphysical speculations. And if that's enough for you, great. Ater all, in the end, it's what we come to think and believe "in our heads" is true that counts.bahman wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 4:18 pmI don't need evidence since this is purely a metaphysical discussion. But I have evidence for the fact that there is a beginning: If the universe was eternal we should be at heat death state now. We are not at heat death. Therefore there is a beginning.iambiguous wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 2:46 am
Which part of your argument are you able to back up with hard evidence?
For me though, it's just not enough. I was not, I was, I may not be, I will not be. Why? That I will almost certainly never have access to the answer can, in particular moods and frames of mind, exasperate me to no end. And, since I lost my faith/belief in religion, even my own existence "here and now" is construed by me to be essentially meaningless and purposeless.
And take your evidence for a beginning to the scientific community. I'm sure you'll find those there who both agree and disagree with it. But as for accumulating irrefutable proof that it's true...in our lifetimes?
Right.
And even if that ontological proof comes to be found, there's still the part about whether existence has any teleological meaning or purpose.
Try getting around God and religion in grappling with that.
Look, if there was a consensus among physicists about the beginning of the universe/existence it would be all they were talking about. Hell, that news would be plastered in headlines in the media around the globe. Right?
Note where your "simple truth" is being talked about either in the scientific community or the general media.
As for your argument against the existence of God, where's the irrefutable evidence for that?
I don't believe in the existence of God, myself.
But given the "staggering vastness" that is "all there is"...
...what are the odds that my belief comes closest to the actual objective truth?Light travels at approximately 186,000 miles a second. That is about 6,000,000,000,000 miles a year.
The closest star to us is Alpha Centauri. It is 4.75 light-years away. 28,500,000,000,000 miles.
So, traveling at 186,000 miles a second, it would take us 4.75 years to reach it. The voyager spacecraft [just now exiting our solar system] will take 70,000 years to reach it.
To reach the center of the Milky Way galaxy it would take 100,000 light-years.
Or consider this:
To get to the closest galaxy to ours, the Canis Major Dwarf, at Voyager's speed, it would take approximately 749,000,000 years to travel the distance of 25,000 light years! If we could travel at the speed of light, it would still take 25,000 years!
The Andromeda galaxy is 2.537 million light years away.
nasa
It turns out that roughly 68% of the universe is dark energy. Dark matter makes up about 27%. The rest - everything on Earth, everything ever observed with all of our instruments, all normal matter - adds up to less than 5% of the universe. nasa
Or your own.
- iambiguous
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Re: Nothing to something must be possible
bahman wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 9:47 pmSpeculation? I am using logic. Again, (1), (2), or (3). Which one do you like to discuss?iambiguous wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 5:06 pmOkay, so you'll go to the grave with your metaphysical speculations. And if that's enough for you, great. Ater all, in the end, it's what we come to think and believe "in our heads" is true that counts.
For me though, it's just not enough. I was not, I was, I may not be, I will not be. Why? That I will almost certainly never have access to the answer can, in particular moods and frames of mind, exasperate me to no end. And, since I lost my faith/belief in religion, even my own existence "here and now" is construed by me to be essentially meaningless and purposeless.
And take your evidence for a beginning to the scientific community. I'm sure you'll find those there who both agree and disagree with it. But as for accumulating irrefutable proof that it's true...in our lifetimes?
Right.
And even if that ontological proof comes to be found, there's still the part about whether existence has any teleological meaning or purpose.
Try getting around God and religion in grappling with that.
Look, if there was a consensus among physicists about the beginning of the universe/existence it would be all they were talking about. Hell, that news would be plastered in headlines in the media around the globe. Right?
Note where your "simple truth" is being talked about either in the scientific community or the general media.
As for your argument against the existence of God, where's the irrefutable evidence for that?
I don't believe in the existence of God, myself.
But given the "staggering vastness" that is "all there is"...
...what are the odds that my belief comes closest to the actual objective truth?Light travels at approximately 186,000 miles a second. That is about 6,000,000,000,000 miles a year.
The closest star to us is Alpha Centauri. It is 4.75 light-years away. 28,500,000,000,000 miles.
So, traveling at 186,000 miles a second, it would take us 4.75 years to reach it. The voyager spacecraft [just now exiting our solar system] will take 70,000 years to reach it.
To reach the center of the Milky Way galaxy it would take 100,000 light-years.
Or consider this:
To get to the closest galaxy to ours, the Canis Major Dwarf, at Voyager's speed, it would take approximately 749,000,000 years to travel the distance of 25,000 light years! If we could travel at the speed of light, it would still take 25,000 years!
The Andromeda galaxy is 2.537 million light years away.
nasa
It turns out that roughly 68% of the universe is dark energy. Dark matter makes up about 27%. The rest - everything on Earth, everything ever observed with all of our instruments, all normal matter - adds up to less than 5% of the universe. nasa
Or your own.
Right. Logic -- metaphysical logic -- and the beginning of the universe and/or existence itself.
Pick one of them yourself and provide us with the logic -- the simple truth -- that will have the scientific community buzzing with excitement once they hear it.
Or are you to physics what Immanual Can is to the Christian God?
At least as construed by me.
Re: Nothing to something must be possible
(1). What is your objection?iambiguous wrote: ↑Wed Jun 15, 2022 1:57 ambahman wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 9:47 pmSpeculation? I am using logic. Again, (1), (2), or (3). Which one do you like to discuss?iambiguous wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 5:06 pm
Okay, so you'll go to the grave with your metaphysical speculations. And if that's enough for you, great. Ater all, in the end, it's what we come to think and believe "in our heads" is true that counts.
For me though, it's just not enough. I was not, I was, I may not be, I will not be. Why? That I will almost certainly never have access to the answer can, in particular moods and frames of mind, exasperate me to no end. And, since I lost my faith/belief in religion, even my own existence "here and now" is construed by me to be essentially meaningless and purposeless.
And take your evidence for a beginning to the scientific community. I'm sure you'll find those there who both agree and disagree with it. But as for accumulating irrefutable proof that it's true...in our lifetimes?
Right.
And even if that ontological proof comes to be found, there's still the part about whether existence has any teleological meaning or purpose.
Try getting around God and religion in grappling with that.
Look, if there was a consensus among physicists about the beginning of the universe/existence it would be all they were talking about. Hell, that news would be plastered in headlines in the media around the globe. Right?
Note where your "simple truth" is being talked about either in the scientific community or the general media.
As for your argument against the existence of God, where's the irrefutable evidence for that?
I don't believe in the existence of God, myself.
But given the "staggering vastness" that is "all there is"...
...what are the odds that my belief comes closest to the actual objective truth?
Or your own.
Right. Logic -- metaphysical logic -- and the beginning of the universe and/or existence itself.
Pick one of them yourself and provide us with the logic -- the simple truth -- that will have the scientific community buzzing with excitement once they hear it.
Or are you to physics what Immanual Can is to the Christian God?
At least as construed by me.
-
Impenitent
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Re: Nothing to something must be possible
is "nothing" simply an absence of matter?
-Imp
-Imp
Re: Nothing to something must be possible
No, it is the absence of matter and antimatter or the presence of both.
- iambiguous
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- Joined: Mon Nov 22, 2010 10:23 pm
Re: Nothing to something must be possible
My objection? Again, I lack the education, the background and the experience to tackle your conjectures -- your logic, your simple truth -- with any degree of sophistication.
Thus my suggestion that you take it to those who do.
Then one day I might be watching an episode of Nova here in America and there it is...a documentary confirming your logic and your simple truth. By then you might even be closing in on the simple, logical truth regarding the meaning and the purpose of the universe and of existence itself.
Look, I'm the first to admit it truly is fascinating to speculate about things like this. But to insist your own conclusions are necessarily logical and convey the simple truth? I'll need confirmation from the scientific community itself before I can go along with that.
And shouldn't you?
Re: Nothing to something must be possible
It is alright.iambiguous wrote: ↑Wed Jun 15, 2022 5:32 pmMy objection? Again, I lack the education, the background and the experience to tackle your conjectures -- your logic, your simple truth -- with any degree of sophistication.
Thus my suggestion that you take it to those who do.
Then one day I might be watching an episode of Nova here in America and there it is...a documentary confirming your logic and your simple truth. By then you might even be closing in on the simple, logical truth regarding the meaning and the purpose of the universe and of existence itself.
Look, I'm the first to admit it truly is fascinating to speculate about things like this. But to insist your own conclusions are necessarily logical and convey the simple truth? I'll need confirmation from the scientific community itself before I can go along with that.
And shouldn't you?
- iambiguous
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Re: Nothing to something must be possible
Whatever that means?bahman wrote: ↑Wed Jun 15, 2022 6:21 pmIt is alright.iambiguous wrote: ↑Wed Jun 15, 2022 5:32 pmMy objection? Again, I lack the education, the background and the experience to tackle your conjectures -- your logic, your simple truth -- with any degree of sophistication.
Thus my suggestion that you take it to those who do.
Then one day I might be watching an episode of Nova here in America and there it is...a documentary confirming your logic and your simple truth. By then you might even be closing in on the simple, logical truth regarding the meaning and the purpose of the universe and of existence itself.
Look, I'm the first to admit it truly is fascinating to speculate about things like this. But to insist your own conclusions are necessarily logical and convey the simple truth? I'll need confirmation from the scientific community itself before I can go along with that.
And shouldn't you?
Re: Nothing to something must be possible
I don't need confirmation from the scientific community. It is alright if you need it.iambiguous wrote: ↑Wed Jun 15, 2022 7:10 pmWhatever that means?bahman wrote: ↑Wed Jun 15, 2022 6:21 pmIt is alright.iambiguous wrote: ↑Wed Jun 15, 2022 5:32 pm
My objection? Again, I lack the education, the background and the experience to tackle your conjectures -- your logic, your simple truth -- with any degree of sophistication.
Thus my suggestion that you take it to those who do.
Then one day I might be watching an episode of Nova here in America and there it is...a documentary confirming your logic and your simple truth. By then you might even be closing in on the simple, logical truth regarding the meaning and the purpose of the universe and of existence itself.
Look, I'm the first to admit it truly is fascinating to speculate about things like this. But to insist your own conclusions are necessarily logical and convey the simple truth? I'll need confirmation from the scientific community itself before I can go along with that.
And shouldn't you?
- iambiguous
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Re: Nothing to something must be possible
There is a difference here. I am open to discussion based on what I offer.iambiguous wrote: ↑Wed Jun 15, 2022 7:22 pmWell, sure, that's one way to go about it. Like IC not needing confirmation from the Christian God that He exists.
What do you mean?