Why is the idea of an infinite universe not logical? In fact, I wanted to show solely that the idea of a limited universe containing everything is not logical, — Asktheshadow
because as he tries to contain himself there still is a new him not contained and if he doesn`t contain himself he doesn`t include everything and defies his own definition. — Asktheshadow
And I delivered details that this definition of an universe as something that includes everything is properly used( ``the universe : all of space and everything in it`` etc.) — Asktheshadow
And there are contradictions with the fact that universe would be limited in physics and logics: when you discover it`s limits, you should discover itself in it, as it contains everything and discover that the universe that contains himself within himself still doesn`t contains his ``newest form``, that double him. — Asktheshadow
You just didn`t understand what I have said there and my point: to prove this model of universe including everything within can`t be limited. — Asktheshadow
Yes, it does falsifies the definition of universe, not of everything, because that something that does the containing in order to contain everything needs to contain even itself, and from here, if it`s limited, it can grow, but after this process we have a universe x containing himself, so by summing it and viewing it as an ensemble, we have 2x which isn`t contained. It`s like you have a circle containing a half-smaller circle, but this whole isn`t contained. If you try to contain it, you have another bigger container that isn`t contained and so on.I'm really trying hard to follow you here. In order to contain everything, there has to be something that does the containing, and that something falsifies the definition of everything? — puppet
After this process of stepping outside there would be a bigger creation, containing the old itself because it had to grow to contain itself, nothing of X dimensions can`t contain another thing of X dimensions, quantities/ itself, it has to be bigger and that bigger one, that ``new form`` is still not contained by himself, which would generate a bigger him and so on, ad infinitum.And I don't follow the "newest form" If all of creation stepped outside itself to contain itself, there would be another him? — puppet
Now think at Laplace`s point: if we would live everything in universe at a point in time and if the universe is infinite, and we are infinite, then we should have lived all the possibilities, all the scenes of the movie without scrolling them. Here is the first contradiction in what you say: how can a infinite consciousness experience infinity from a relative point, if it experiences all the points?Infinity also has no meaning if we are infinite creatures, because it's all relative to the scope of what we experience — Nils Loc
In an infinite world maybe contradictions are permitted. The meaningless is meaningful. Infinity is finity, et cetera. — Nils Loc
Sounds like you've read J.L. Borges the Library in Babel
His library is finite but the number of books (all possible combinations of letters) would exceed the number of estimated atoms in our universe by a tremendous magnitude. You could travel among recognizable copies of Moby Dick for your lifetime.
One of the imaginary librarians speculates that all is needed to reproduce this finite library is a single volume, since all books are limited to 26 letters and whatever the repeating format is. — Nils Loc
...how can a infinite consciousness experience infinity from a relative point, if it experiences all the points? — Asktheshadow
Now some logical possibilities may not be physically instantiated but subsist in a non-physical state — John Kernan
I believe existence contains all logical possibilities. This seems to me to be the default ontological state.
Let`s imagine a library from one cylindrical chamber and suppose it`s a finite universe; every book must contain a part from the existing information and images so that all the data is contained; also the information and the images of them – of their covers, of their files and of the ensemble cover-pages/ exterior- interior- must be contained. From here we distinguish two possible cases: the data about the books can be divided and shared between them or we have another book which contains the data and the images about the others. In any of the cases, there still remains data not included: case 1.the image of the book containing solely the information about others and 2.the images of the ``new books``, the old books containing now more information, which asserts a new form and more space.
There's no incongruity. When they are doing physics, they are working with equations. When they are talking to lay people to try to give them an approximate sense of what the equations are about, they may talk in terms of galaxies, as in the balloon analogy (example here).You said they were talking about galaxies moving farther apart. Now it's equations? — jkop
The equations are capable of making definitive statements about whether the universe is finite or infinite, based on observations. Observations have not been made to date that can determine which it is, but it is possible that there may be in the future, in which case the finitude or otherwise of the universe will become definitively and scientifically settled one way or the other.Nevertheless, neither talk about equations nor the relation between galaxies is talk about the nature of the universe, whether it is finite or infinite.
In that case we need to be more precise about whether by 'universe' we mean 'this spacetime' or 'everything that exists'. — andrewk
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