an eternal being exists necessarily, — TheGreatArcanum
furthermore, if space itself is born out of some non-dimensional point, then what is the essence of that non-dimensional point? — TheGreatArcanum
Why?
Eternity is a temporal state, necessity, a logical. — Banno
Points of singularity, whether in the physical world or mathematics, allow bizarre behavior in their neighborhoods. I dabble in the complex plane where these things appear now and then. Even in that well-trod territory there are minor differences of definition — jgill
Spacetime is eternal. — Thunderballs
Onlu the gods can create this. Time and space don't exist for them. Time is maybe not even inherent to Nature. — Thunderballs
None of which shows that an eternal being exists necessarily.
To do that you would have to show that there are no possible worlds that are not eternal.
So, I posit a world that exists for ten minutes. Demonstrate that this involves a contradiction. — Banno
even the existence of alternate worlds is an assumption. — TheGreatArcanum
the 'many worlds' hypothesis states that all possible worlds are born simultaneously out of some a priori potential. — TheGreatArcanum
if the universe is born out of 'quantum fluctuations' (as physicists claim), do those fluctuations necessitate space, — TheGreatArcanum
You may be right, and that gives you the right to ignore all of my other points? — TheGreatArcanum
is space itself contingent, or necessary? — TheGreatArcanum
what about the substratum from which quantum fluctuations emerge and disappear into? — TheGreatArcanum
There's no emerging or coming from or going to for what is Fundamental; it is ever and always. The fields themselves fluctuate all over, always; there is no stillness—else naught could happen. Where there is a unit stable quantum it is directly an elementary particle; else there are just other fluctuations not amounting to a unit level. — PoeticUniverse
every new big bang — Thunderballs
Relative space? — Thunderballs
Sure, if there can be one bang, there will be others. — PoeticUniverse
When our bang has reached infinity (big rip), another bangs behind us. — Thunderballs
is time real or do we assign it? — Thunderballs
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