Conservation laws, like spacetime, apply within – immanent to – the (this) universe. Mass-energy belongs to the (this) universe which is not "eternal" (except in Einstein's time-reversible equations). IMO, the only 'physical' candidates which might be "eternal" are the true vacuum or the bulk encompassing (our) spacetime. — 180 Proof
In QG, the planck era ("BB") occurred at the planck scale for which classical metrics (e.g. distance, interval, causality) do not apply. This is why the attempt to reconcile GR and QFT in a "ToE" is so intractably difficult. — 180 Proof
I think Roger Penrose suggested a cyclic universe of multiple big bangs? Was that chaos theory? — TiredThinker
But of course there is a difference as respects the question in the OP. If the Big Bang was a black hole then it might make plenty of sense to talk of time before the Big Bang. It could conceivably be a common textbook fact that we talk of something casually prior to that event, it just depends on what we find and how we come to think of it. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But that wouldn't mean that "nothing comes before the Big Bang," even if the Big Bang was the result of a black hole in a larger universe. If that premise finds support it would mean our concept of time is parochial and needs expansion. And for myriad other reasons plenty of physicists have already come out and said there appear to be deep problems with our current space-time and that it may need to be overthrown. Like I said in my other post, plenty of now foundational discoveries in physics have previously been written off as "meaningless" or worse still "metaphysics," so our ability to conceive of such changes now doesn't mean that much. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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