The universe is an infinite cycle of expansion and contraction. The beginning is equal to the end. — Benj96
This is the theory which I stand for. — javi2541997
Yes! :up: I personally think is the most reasonable theory. Nevertheless, I respect the others points of views — javi2541997
Ever heard of General Systems Theory??
There can be no cause of existence. For there to be a cause something must exist. — Fooloso4
At planck radius, "the universe" was a runaway – inflationary – cosmic-thermal entropic effect of an acausal (spontaneous symmetry-breaking) vacuum fluctuation^. There was no "beginning", just cosmological development^ that is measurable with contemporary physics to minus c13.8 billions years back from t=0 (today).Other options - please elaborate. — Benj96
Also, pedantic note: "the universe" =/= "existence" (as the poll suggests); analogously, the latter is like a field and the former a dissipating structure^ with respect to that field (i.e. ocean and wave/s, respectively; or continuum and set/s). — 180 Proof
Not exhaustive??? This is the longest poll list I have ever list by far!I know that the list in the poll is not exhaustive — Benj96
Your question is incomplete: you should add the word "Universe" next to "existence", even if --or, especially because-- it is contained in the options, since alone, this term can refer to a lot of things.What theory or proposition do you hold as to the original cause of existence — Benj96
Existence is cause or existence is energy - the ability to be/ do. — Benj96
How did life originate? — SatmBopd
And a lot of the options have considerable overlap and could be both explained simultaneously. — Benj96
There are endless arguments about beginnings or eternities but its like a dog trying to understand calcul — jgill
As a subject, the start of everything doesn't interest me much. I tend to think notions of beginnings and ends are human attempts to apply order to the reality we know. 'How it all began' is of almost no use to me in my daily life. But I understand the especial attraction of beginnings for theists. The absurd uncaused first cause still has a hold on folk who use it to prop up god's who must have something to do, or they recede into history. — Tom Storm
I'm not sure I understand why this is an attraction for theists. I'm a theist too but I don't have a problem with a beginning without them gods. — EugeneW
I voted for this because the universe is not bounded. The everything is the universe. We gave meaning to time, but without us, it has no meaning or existence at all. But -- there's decay! How about that. Stars die out.The universe is an infinite cycle of expansion and contraction. The beginning is equal to the end. — Benj96
Sounds pretty boring, doesn't it? — magritte
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