I never understood how the universe came from nothing…until now!
1 week ago
| 60
Something cannot come from Nothing. It is a physical and philosophical impossibility. True Nothing does not even allow for potentiality.
1 week ago | 6
There’s a neat parallel between how a computer boots up and how the universe began. Both needed a “first step.” Computers solved this with the BIOS, a basic system that starts everything else. The term boot up even comes from the paradox of trying to lift yourself by your own bootstraps. Surprising that only a few thought this was a good title.
3 days ago | 0
Don’t frame with a false premise. You’re better than to propagate logical fallacy, Arvin… right? 😕
6 days ago | 1
Our first recorded words of God in Genesis 1:3 were "Let there be light." In Revelation 21:22-24 And I saw no temple in the city, for its temple is the Lord God the Almighty and the Lamb. And the city has no need of sun or moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light, and its lamp is the Lamb. By its light will the nations walk, and the kings of the earth will bring their glory into it, — Revelation 21:22-24
4 days ago | 0
A mere quantum fluctuation and given 13 billion years hydrogen atoms will as questions. Nothing to see folks, move along, nothing to see.
1 week ago (edited) | 2
I think the most important question ever. Describe absolute nothingness — that which lies beyond being, beyond non-being, beyond even the most basic concepts such as numbers, space, or time, even absolute nothing is something. Contradiction: If “absolute nothing” exists, then it is “something.”
1 week ago | 1
I prefer option #2. #1 seems like it's insinuating that the universe actually did come from nothing so it's kind of misleading.
1 week ago | 4
Nature often defies our logical expectations, but mathematics consistently reveals the underlying reality. While we still don't know what truly preceded the Big Bang or what 'nothingness' actually means, logic alone can't unravel these mysteries. One day, mathematics may illuminate answers that logic cannot reach.
6 days ago | 0
My thinking: What we call “nothing” may not be true nothingness at all, but rather just one possible state of the universe. There could exist infinitely many such states, some of which have already given birth to physical universes. When our present universe eventually meets its fate—whether through heat death or another end—it may transition into yet another of these ever-changing, unique states, from which new universes can once again emerge.
1 week ago | 0
May be something can come from nothing. But universe has given us limit to not able to imagine how something can come from nothing ⚛️❤️
1 week ago | 1
Terence McKenna used to mock physicists for materialistic determinism following the "Big Bang": "Just give me one miracle..." 😆
6 days ago | 0
Option 2 is a philosophical/theological question. Science can describe everything that happened with what physically exists, the hows, but not the whys.
1 week ago | 0
Arvin Ash
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1 week ago | [YT] | 168