In the beginning there was the inflaton field, and it was without form, and void.
Then it spontaneously transitioned into a different phase exciting all of the other quantum fields.
yadda yadda yadda later the hot plasma filling the universe was without form, and void, and then the free electrons paired with the H and He ions in another phase shift from plasma to gas and there was light.
And it was good. — Pfhorrest
In the beginning there was the inflaton field, and it was without form, and void. — Pfhorrest
Let p stand for anything and ~p for nothing — Pippen
If, for the sake of argument, we consider an earlier state of the universe as pure energy sans familiar matter which then, for reasons unknown to us, "coalesced" into matter, would that count as creation ex nihilo? — TheMadFool
No-thing is no formed thing or no contingent thing or thing that can be defined. This is the void which is the source. — EnPassant
Matter is nothing in the sense that it is only form. — EnPassant
Theism or Platonism doesn't work as it might posit a formal cause, but is pretty mute about material cause. — apokrisis
its collective thermal direction that is the entropic gradient we call time. — apokrisis
Yet, the void, or 'chaos' contained within itself, the potential for order, which may mean it is not true chaos.A blank everythingness that is neither material, nor enformed. Just a pure vagueness or state of potential. — apokrisis
Matter is secondary because it is contingent or caused. The cause of matter is beyond matter. — EnPassant
They believe that only material causes are real. Formal causes are useful fictions that stand outside the physical world they describe. — apokrisis
My question is, why only one form? Why only one matter? — Gregory
Why only two principles? Why not five? — Gregory
Materialism says there is one principle per object. It's simpler and doesn't waste people's time — Gregory
This is because you can't prove a division in objects between "structure, purpose, organisation" and "fluctuation, accident, possibility". — Gregory
Theism or Platonism doesn't work as it might posit a formal cause, but is pretty mute about material cause. There is no workable complementary definition of the two aspects of causality as there would need to be if the Universe is going to be its own natural bootstrapping story - something that can be its own cause ultimately and so provide a model of causal closure.
Formal and material cause need to be seen dialectically as two aspects of the one world so that individuated substance becomes the emergent product of a closed causal process. — apokrisis
Krauss's "something from nothing" account is certainly clunky. It reflects the metaphysical prejudices of reductionists and positivists. They believe that only material causes are real. Formal causes are useful fictions that stand outside the physical world they describe. — apokrisis
The particular, eternally persisting, elementary physical stuff of the world, according to the standard presentations of relativistic quantum field theories, consists (unsurprisingly) of relativistic quantum fields. And the fundamental laws of this theory take the form of rules concerning which arrangements of those fields are physically possible and which aren’t, and rules connecting the arrangements of those fields at later times to their arrangements at earlier times, and so on — and they have nothing whatsoever to say on the subject of where those fields came from, or of why the world should have consisted of the particular kinds of fields it does, or of why it should have consisted of fields at all, or of why there should have been a world in the first place. Period. Case closed. End of story.
Yes, the object is all "one thing" - the substantial actuality. My (Aristotelean) point was about the causes of this "one thing".
Concrete actuality is the product of top-down formal cause in interaction with bottom-up material cause. That is the standard systems or structuralist ontology. — apokrisis
Prior to the moment of the singularity, there are no relationships, ratios, forces, or anything else in existence. One might say that these relationships and ratios 'emerge' in the subsequent period, but again, nothing could have emerged had not these fundamental constraints in some sense pre-existed. — Wayfarer
You say above that formal causes 'are physical' but if indeed these constants amount to aspects of formal causation, they must precede the physical, they must be real in order for physical matter to form. But they're not prior temporally, but logically, if you can see what I mean. — Wayfarer
Prove it. Demonstrate what matter even is — Gregory
The philosophy you are quoting says objects are formed from pure matter and form. My question is, why only one form? Why only one matter? Why only two principles? Why not five? Materialism says there is one principle per object. It's simpler and doesn't waste people's time — Gregory
Matter is secondary because it is contingent or caused. The cause of matter is beyond matter. — EnPassant
I don't see entropy as a definition of time. It may be - in most cases - parallel to the arrow of time but it does not define time. Physical time is a physical object in the same way that chairs or tables are, except it has an extra dimension which is why it is called spacetime. I think it is a mistake to equate time with entropy simply because they are moving is the same direction. — EnPassant
Yet, the void, or 'chaos' contained within itself, the potential for order, which may mean it is not true chaos. — EnPassant
I was simply saying above that we don't fully know what matter is. You say it's energy. But do you know what energy is? How close is the relationship between energy and matter? When energy becomes matter, is there true change or simply a rearrangement or condensation or something? This is what I'm interested in. I am not sure philosophy really has an answer — Gregory
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