A paradox is indicative that you have an underlying logic error. — Devans99
When I am finished, I will post the result here, and then we'll finally know for good and all. — andrewk
What you wrote here are not deductions. The first is an analogy. The second is a non-sequiteur. — andrewk
There is no rule of logical inference that justifies the second and subsequent lines in either of those sequences — andrewk
In the first case you can't say that the physical WORLD(as a whole) as a beginning whatsoever, because you must first account for the origin of the structure which made to you possible to distinguish two states at all, where a beginning would be the recognition of a thing in a certain state, within the recognition of the absence of any thing like that in a precedent state — Ikolos
I hope nobody thinks a hierarchy has a beginning, just as the laws that regulate the behavior of waves has none. — Ikolos
The physical world (=universe) must have a temporal beginning. How can something exist without a temporal beginning? If you take away the Big Bang, the universe no longer exists. So deductively its impossible for the universe to exist without a temporal start. — Devans99
Do you agree that without change there is no time? — leo
Time is fundamental because we can't have stuff flying around at infinite speeds in a sane universe. There has to be a speed limit so the universe must be time-aware. And all experimental evidence points to that speed limit. — Devans99
But it is wrong to say: « Time is a series» for a mathematical series is n o t characterized by an o r i e n t a t i o n: you can go back and forth just the same. — Ikolos
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