Also, if something's out of spacetime then by definition it isn't bound by causality...I thought we've already established that. — Three-Buddy Problem
’Nothing takes place without a sufficient reason’ - Leibniz — Devans99
I can speculate that time travelers created the universe — Three-Buddy Problem
Thing is, we do not really know. We hardly know much at all about how such things might work and its certainly could be discovered one way or another. The universe doesnt care about our models for how it works.
The fact that we do not know doesnt mean people can just make something up in place of that knowledge. (Not that you did that). — DingoJones
The OP on the other thread specifically addresses why things cannot have existed 'forever' in time. That leads to a model where something(s) have permanent existence outside of time. — Devans99
I believe that causality always forms a pyramid shape in time, which is suggestive of a start of time. — Devans99
Also, as Leibniz, Aquinas and others have said, infinite regresses are impossible - they must terminate in something concrete, permanent and uncaused - in my view that is only possible if the terminator to the regress is outside of time. — Devans99
One of the author's points is that QM as it stands does not prove that reality is random at a micro level - that's down to the interpretation of QM. — Devans99
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.