But you didn't understand the axiomatic explanation. So I'm inviting you to try to do it, in reality, so that you'll experience what you say you can't understand.MikeNovack wrote: ↑Sat Jul 18, 2026 8:22 pmYou don't "experiment" with mathematics, you do proofs (starting from axioms, which are assumed not to need proofs*).Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jul 18, 2026 6:43 pmGuess again.MikeNovack wrote: ↑Sat Jul 18, 2026 6:02 pm Apparently you have never encountered cosmologies that have no start.
But I've showed you that they're all simply wrong. It cannot be the case. It's irrational to believe it.You've misunderstood the proof.You even gave mathematics as an example, ignoring that while there is a "starting point" for the natural numbers there is no starting point for the integers.
Go and do the experiment. Try to write any integer for which there is always a prerequisite. You'll soon realize why you're wrong.
You'll never write a single number. You'll find out. Just do it.
The integers are representing a series of causes and effects. Integers by themselves or as merely themselves, don't have prerequisites: but every effect has a prerequisite cause. And we're using the integers to represent a sequence of causes and effects.And I don't know exactly what you might mean by the "prerequisite" of an integer.
So if "-1" is the cause, then "0" is the alleged effect. If "-2" is the cause, its effect is "-1", and so on.
Now go and try the experiment, and you'll find out experientially why you were wrong. Or believe the axiomatic rule: there is no such thing as an infinitely regressive sequence of causes and effects.
I don't think I can make it clearer to you than that.