This question makes no sense. "Always" implies temporality, and time is a metric description of entropy, or changing densities (i.e. complexities) of mass-energy. "Always" only has meaning in terms of mass-energy. — 180 Proof
Not my "explanation" :roll: ... We've done this 'reframing the BB in terms of the no boundary conjecture dance' before, kid. — 180 Proof
A. Assume an infinite causal regress exists
B. Then it has no first element
C. If it has no nth element, it has no nth+1 element
D. So it cannot exist — Devans99
Why can we not number the elements in a causal regress?
— Devans99
Didn't you show with B and C?
We can label events (A) in whichever way we standardize/choose, indexically, but not non-indexically. — jorndoe
- Do you think time has a start?
- What is the cause of the Big Bang?
- Was there a first cause? — Devans99
I fail to see why you cannot appreciate that an infinite causal regress is like a house without a foundation [...] — Devans99
it is simply impossible [...] cannot exist — Devans99
No.- Do you think time has a start? — Devans99
Consistent with the overwhelming convergence of observational data in contemporary physical cosmology, my understanding is that the BB was a planck-scale event, therefore acausal; or, in other words, the initial conditions of the universe were randomly set (because there couldn't have been other matryoshka doll-like universes ad infinitum (right?) to fine-grain - select - the conditions necessary for this universe). As an explanation, saying 'g/G caused it' is indistinguishable from saying it randomly occurred, and yet, where as the latter follows from contemporary physics, the former - ptolemaic-aristotelian "Uncaused Cause" of the gaps - clearly does not.- What is the cause of the Big Bang?
No.- Was there a first cause?
- Do you think time has a start?
— Devans99
No. — 180 Proof
Consistent with the overwhelming convergence of observational data in contemporary physical cosmology, my understanding is that the BB was a planck-scale event, therefore acausal; or, in other words, the initial conditions of the universe were randomly set (because there couldn't have been other matryoshka doll-like universes ad infinitum (right?) to fine-grain - select - the conditions necessary for this universe). As an explanation, saying 'g/G caused it' is indistinguishable from saying it randomly occurred, and yet, where as the latter follows from contemporary physics, the former - ptolemaic-aristotelian "Uncaused Cause" of the gaps - clearly does not. — 180 Proof
- Was there a first cause?
No. — 180 Proof
I'm not so interested in your analogies per se, I'm just pointing out that the argument you keep posting doesn't work. — jorndoe
The argument I've commented on a few times by now does not prove so. — jorndoe
1) Time. A degree of freedom. The fourth dimension.
2) Start. The furthermost temporal/spacial point(s) of something's extent.
3) Cause. The reason for something happening.
4) Big Bang. The expansion of space that started 14 billion years ago.
5) First. Coming before all others in a temporal or spacial sense — Devans99
1) This won't do.
2) Nor this. What is furthestmost? In ordinary usage, perfectly understandable. In this case it would seem you want to define a moment(?), a place(?) as being the moment and place where, prior or before, there is neither moment nor space. As gee-whiz nonsense, fine. But I'm not interested in nonsense.
3) Reason and cause are generally different. My reason for dynamiting the stump is to get rid of it. To "cause" the explosion I light the fuse. But clearly neither of these cause the explosion.
4) Ok - with qualifications maybe not relevant here.
5) This as well problematic.
Cannot really work with any of these. Back to the drawing board. But not to be discouraged. These are (mostly) common words with common meanings that you apparently wish to apply in, and as part of the account of, uncommon ideas for which they were never intended. You have committed yourself to a hard task. But if that's the way you want to go, then you have to do the work. — tim wood
This fine tuner must be very special (to be uncaused and to not need a fine tuned environment)
So the answer to any of your questions about how could unconscious universe be the same thing you call god is simply because it is a very special universe. It must be, right? — Zelebg
there is simply no time/room for spacetime to fine tune itself
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