Why is there something rather than nothing? I will have to consider general nothing. Nothing is such an engrained part of our life, like time. Do you think that nothing (general or specific) could ever be located? It could--in the mind of humans. — val p miranda
(General/Universal) Nothing
negates anything and everything.
A gedanken experiment is in order. Imagine a man Y and a woman X who've been brought up since infancy in one room, with an attached bathroom cum toilet of course - all their basic needs are fulfilled. In short this room is their universe - everything they know is in the room.
One fine day the two are sitting on their bed and X says to Y "I'm thinking of
something, can you guess what it is?" "I'll try" replies Y. He begins "is it this (pointing to an object in the room)?" X responds "no!" "Oh, ok, it's this then (again pointing at an item in the room)" goes Y. "Nope" says X. This goes on and on until Y realizes that he's checked everything in the room. He looks at X, puzzled, X smiles back and blows Y a kiss.
"Why is there anything at all?" Because nothing prevents anything from coming-to-be. :smirk: ↪180 Proof. — 180 Proof
The word "nothing" has two very intriguing meanings
1. Nothing as in Nothing
2. Nothing functions as linguistic shortcut e.g. I
don't want anything = I
want nothing.