Why is there something rather than nothing? Hi. This is my first post in this forum. I’m not a philosopher, so please excuse me if I talk rubbish.
The posts so far in this thread have mostly treated this as a philosophical question. To me, the question is more interesting as a scientific one and I tend to think it was originally asked with a scientific answer in mind.
I think what it is asking is ‘Why are there electrons and protons, quantum fields, space-time and so on – physical things that make up our universe?’ People have suggested that there can’t be nothing because even ‘nothing’ is a mental construct and therefore ‘something’. I tend not to take the Platonic view that all possible mental constructs exist, even in the absence of any mind to construct them. So, to me, the absence of space-time and the fields that we understand to make up the universe would leave ‘nothing’. Nothing is what there would be if the big bang hadn’t happened. And this nothing is, I think, the nothing that the original poser of the question had in mind.
So I will treat it as a scientific question. As such, however, I really don’t think we have an answer to the question and it might well be that, being unable to see outside our universe, we will never have the information we need to get an answer.
As an analogy, consider a meson produced in a particle collision. It begins its life in the collision, lasts a small fraction of a second, then decays into something else and no longer exists. We don’t really know what a meson is apart from a few observable properties like its mass, velocity, charge, spin etc. Beyond knowing that it is made from two quarks, we can’t tell if it has more detail inside it than that. But suppose, hypothetically, that the meson was a self-contained universe a bit like ours, which evolved thinking beings (admittedly on very compressed space and time scales). Their universe would have a beginning and an end. They might wonder about why is existed (‘why is there something rather than nothing?’) and what caused it to exist. We know that is was caused to exist by the collision of two other particles. But the minds in the meson universe could never know that because they can’t see anything outside their universe (beside it, before it or after it). However much they observed and analysed their universe and however much their philosophers pondered it, they could never know that it existed because some human did an experiment with a particle accelerator.
Just like the meson people, we are quite possibly in a universe which is part of something bigger, but which we can never know anything about. It would then seem to be impossible to answer the question ‘why is there something rather than nothing?’
If we’re not part of something bigger, thinking about why the universe came into existence 13.8 billion years ago is too mind-boggling for me. If we are part of something bigger, there might be a reason why the universe exists. But then there is still the question of why the bigger universe exists. And so on ad infinitum.
Of course, the above could all be wrong. It could be that, through scientific investigation, we are starting to get an inkling of why there is something. Particle – anti-particle pairs come into existence from nothing and for no apparent reason throughout space all the time (quantum fluctuations). They have a certain energy/mass and, by the uncertainty principle, can only exist for a very short time before annihilating each other back to nothing again. The more energy such particles have, the shorter the time they can exist. If they have no energy, however, they can exist for ever. It has been argued that the positive particle/field energy of the universe exactly cancels the negative gravitational energy, so the universe might have exactly zero energy and thus could be a quantum fluctuation that lasts for ever. Maybe such quantum fluctuations just have to happen, even when there is nothing for them to happen in. Who knows? We can’t perform an experiment to test the idea unless we have a bit of ‘nothing’ to test it in. And we can’t get away from the fields that make up the fabric even of ‘empty’ space.