We are dealing with an infinite regress if something exists eternally. Infinite regress is not acceptable. Therefore something cannot exist eternally.We have had a great many threads on this topic. In general, I think your line of reasoning works. However, proponents of uncaused existence generally argue that they do not need to claim that something ever "came from nothing." Rather, they must simply posit that something began to exist, or if positing eternal entities, that "something exists (without beginning or end)." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Well, this statement is valid if spacetime exists.Beginning to exist, uncaused, does not imply "coming" from nothing. It implies that something began to exist, and that prior to its existence it did not exist. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I think you are talking about virtual particles that pop into existence from the quantum vacuum. The quantum vacuum refers to space that is devoid of matter whereas nothing is a condition that there is no thing, no spacetime, no material,...Hmm, interesting hypothesis.
However, I do believe something can come from nothing in quantum physics (believe it is called the Schwinger effect, but I'm no physicist). That would mean there is a possibility of creation out of nothing. I can't logically explain why, but in rare cases something just is, without a cause (or maybe without a cause yet or without a cause knowable by us). — Double H
Oh, thanks for the reference to your thread. I will read it shortly.Agreed, nothing cannot create anything. Nothing is nothing. It is not a 'thing'. There is a question of whether something can be uncaused, a topic I cover here if you're interested. https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/12098/a-first-cause-is-logically-necessary/p1 — Philosophim
Causality is not a thing. Whether spacetime is a thing or not is still subject to debate. You might like to read this article.I think this topic has nothing to do with logic but with causality. To think that every event has to have a cause is just a human intuition, in my opinion, or, according to Kant, a category "a priori". Space and time are another "a priori" category. Our senses cannot detect space and time, nor causality. Our senses can just detect things. Space and time, and causality are not things. — Quk
I think you are talking about virtual particles. Virtual particles however pop into existence from the quantum vacuum. Quantum vacuum is different from nothing.They are the prerequisite in our own transcendental mind that makes the detection of things possible for us. Just because this is the case here and now, doesn't mean that causality is everywhere all the time. Aside from that, there are acausal events in quantum physics. — Quk
You need spacetime for the Big Bang to happen.Also, assuming the big bang theory is correct, the bang occured without a cause as there wasn't even a time period before it. — Quk
Nothing to something is impossible. This is discussed here. There are two arguments for this one from Bob Ross and another from myself.Either there was never a time when there was nothing, or there was nothing and something came into existence uncaused. — Patterner
There is another case in which spacetime exists and then either things pop into existence or thing is caused by an agent, the so-called God.Neither seems possible, but at least one is the case. — Patterner
Quantum vacuum is different from nothing. — MoK
You think there was spacetime before the Big Bang? — Quk
Whether spacetime is a thing or not is still subject to debate. You might like to read this article. — MoK
The Big Bang is the rapid expansion of an initial singularity; that singularity being something like an infinitely compressed spacetime. — Michael
The beginning of spacetime lay either before or at the Big Bang. The material either popped into existence after or at the beginning of time or it was caused or simply existed.You need the beginning of spacetime for the Big Bang to happen, I think.
You think there was spacetime before the Big Bang? — Quk
But before that singularity there was no time axis on which a previous event caused the big bang event, was it? — Quk
Correct. The infinite past makes no sense.What's the alternative? An infinite past? That has its own problems. If the past is infinite then as of now an infinite period of time has completed, which seems nonsensical. — Michael
Correct.So I think that the past must be finite. — Michael
Spacetime simply has existed since its beginning. Spacetime could not begin to exist. That is true since otherwise we are dealing with nothing to spacetime. Nothing to spacetime is a change. Spacetime is needed for any change. Therefore, spacetime is needed for nothing to spacetime. This leads to an infinite regress.I'm unsure if that entails that something came from nothing or if something "already" existed when time started – but then how did time start? — Michael
We are dealing with an infinite regress if something exists eternally. Infinite regress is not acceptable. Therefore something cannot exist eternally.
I should have said that we are dealing with an infinite regress in time if something exists eternally ("in time" was missing). By infinite regress in time I mean for any chosen time, t, there exists another time, t', where t' is before t.No, we are dealing with an infinite regress in cases where we have to posit an infinite number of past causes for something. E.g., X began because of Y and Y began because of Z and Z began because of... etc. The statement that "X exists without begining or end," does not require an infinite regress because X never begins to exist. There is nothing to regress to. — Count Timothy von Icarus
To the best of my knowledge, there are two arguments against the eternal universe: (1) Infinite regress in time and (2) Heat death which is the unavoidable ultimate fate of the universe if the universe is old enough.This is precisely why Aristotle decides that the world must be eternal, and why so many cosmologists, even those embracing versions of the "Big Bang," theory nonetheless claim that elements of the universe must be eternal. — Count Timothy von Icarus
To me, the truth is objective, by objective I mean it does not depend on the mind so mathematical theorems are valid even if there is no man who could deduce or know them.You might attack to coherence of something existing "without begining or end," but it doesn't require a regress of explanations.
For example, you might consider the following proposition: Given we accept Euclid's axioms, it follows that all triangles will have angles that sum to two right angles (180 degrees).
Did this fact have a begining in time? Did it start to exist when Euclid developed his postulates? Or did it not exist until he had completed a proof for this proposition for each type of triangle? If the latter, and Euclid completed the proof of right triangles first, is it a true statement that at that time "given Euclid's axioms, it is the case that right triangles, but not other triangles have angles that sum to two right angles."?
Or, prior to Euclid, when earlier mathematicians empirically observed this fact about triangles, did the fact begin to exist then, even though Euclid's axioms has never been written down?
The problem here is that it seems like it will always be true that, given Euclid's axioms, this fact holds. It never begins to be true and under no conditions does it seem to become false.
Maybe we might think Euclid's axioms are rubbish, but it won't change the status of facts of the sort of "If A and I → B," where A is a set of axioms and I are inference rules, and B is a conclusion that follows from A and I.
Things like "if A = B and B = C, then A = C," do not seem to require any sort of infinite causal regress. Being logical truths, they do not require an infinite series of deductions either. Circularity is not infinite regress, we are not always going back to new reasons, but looping. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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