Moderator: Lomax
moranity wrote:why does the universe have to have begun, why can't it just "cycle"?
BadgerJelly wrote:I think the issue here being overlooked is TIME. The very concept of before and after seem a little presumptuous to me.
To say existence began is nonsense. What is IS and what is not IS.
Basically something and nothing are the same thing just as existence and non-existence are the same thing.
Explain to me what time is please.
hint : speed of light and matter/energy. Big Bang theory is not an actual "big bang" or in the physical sense what we refer to as a singularity. You may or may not find it interesting to think of the premise of a singularity that is existence in/of(?) an absolute plenum.
Existence began with no pre-existing cause
Watson wrote:OK back to the OP, is "with no pe-existing cause" the same as "no pre-existing conditions"? I could answer yes and no on that. The cause could be the spark the ignited existence, under the right conditions, in which case they are different. Or, some pre-existing conditions slowly involved to bring about existence, without any particular cause, in which case conditions where the cause and they are the same thing.
sponge wrote:As BadgerJelly implied, time could be significant and I can see that it could be argued that TIME is just a concept of the human mind to measure the journey through life, observe change as movement, etc.
I can also see that, if we regard TIME as a mere concept rather than an actual reality, existence can be considered a static state and no longer requires a beginning or an end. In fact, without time 'before beginning' and 'after the end' would have no meaning.
What I can’t get my head around is WHY ‘is’ existence at all.
I guess I’m looking for a reason for existence and I’m going to be told (not for the first time) that there doesn’t have to be a reason and that it is nonsense to ask for a reason for that which simply IS.
So why has this question always tormented humanity (and me) when it has no obvious advantage as a survival skill and little chance of ever being answered except by guesswork?
I hope this isn’t off topic, ronjanec. You did kinda mention the same difficulty yourself towards the end of your OP. Great opening post, by the way, clear and comprehensive in the way you set out the problems.
charon wrote:ronjanecExistence began with no pre-existing cause
That's a contradiction in terms. Something can't 'begin' if it has no cause.
what is your point?
ronjanec wrote:Watson wrote:OK back to the OP, is "with no pe-existing cause" the same as "no pre-existing conditions"? I could answer yes and no on that. The cause could be the spark the ignited existence, under the right conditions, in which case they are different. Or, some pre-existing conditions slowly involved to bring about existence, without any particular cause, in which case conditions where the cause and they are the same thing.
Watson,
The definition of condition according to Merriam-Webster: Something essential to the appearence or occurrence of something else;
We are again talking here about the actual beginning of all existence here: So any condition could not exist in any way before this(or be a spark to anything else ) because something would then have had to have existed before the beginning of existence to have any kind of pre-existing condition.
Keep_Relentless wrote:Hello hello everyone! Quite a great load to read and consider when I wake up. :)
First, I agree with moranity that we do not really need to justify an infinite time scale provided there is no necessary temporal link between times, because existence is always limited in that the past doesn't exist in the present, making reference to it logically self-defeating. This is personally what I believe right now.
James, I'm not sure "conditions" and "happenstance" really apply for a beginning of everything. There could not even be a time factor.
The Nazican toss and turn as much as we like about it but that is an emotional reaction. In the case of existence especially, in totality, it seems we can't find a justification that we like, but what we like seems irrelevant, we aren't going to deny it and say that there is no existence. I can imagine existence beginning from nothing, no matter how detestable that thought may be.
Watson wrote:ronjanec wrote:Watson wrote:OK back to the OP, is "with no pe-existing cause" the same as "no pre-existing conditions"? I could answer yes and no on that. The cause could be the spark the ignited existence, under the right conditions, in which case they are different. Or, some pre-existing conditions slowly involved to bring about existence, without any particular cause, in which case conditions where the cause and they are the same thing.
Watson,
The definition of condition according to Merriam-Webster: Something essential to the appearence or occurrence of something else;
We are again talking here about the actual beginning of all existence here: So any condition could not exist in any way before this(or be a spark to anything else ) because something would then have had to have existed before the beginning of existence to have any kind of pre-existing condition.
Well if you want to go to the extreme of NOTHINGNESS, then we are at the mercy of your imagination to provide some direction, because starting there, that is all we can discuss, wimcycle delight and fancifull imagination, and fairies on the head of a pin, singing "Rain drops on roses and fleas on dogs noses...."
The op statement is a "contradiction" and obviously cannot be true? How could you know this for a fact charon?
so what does God have to do with anything in this particular discussion?
You have not changed one bit since the last time I talked to you
This subject is one of those, 'I just don't know', and even when knowing the whole picture this will probably lead to another question, like, 'why?'
The subject also demonstrates the innate drive the human being has in wanting to know where they came from and to understand its greater environment. Religion may actually free the mind of these thoughts, and act as a psychological tool.
FACTS:
Consciousness makes us aware
Awareness makes us think
Logic guides thinking
QUESTIONS:
Is consciousness inaccurate in that which it makes us aware of?
Is awareness inaccurate in the direction it leads our thoughts?
Is logic inaccurate in the conclusions it draws?
ANSWERS:
It can be but the majority have agreed an accepted norm.
It can be but the majority have agreed an accepted norm.
It can be but the majority have agreed an accepted norm.
QUESTION THAT REMAINS:
Are the majority correct?
ronjanec wrote:if we assume that it is in fact true that existence did have a beginning in the first place
ronjanec wrote:So I had to choose between two completely ridiculous and illogical conclusions, and I of course chose the one that was not as completely ridiculous and illogical as the other one. Or the one that Lomax again said may be correct.
ronjanec wrote:While it again must be true that there cannot possibly be a pre-existing cause of any kind existing before the beginning of all existence, there at least must still be a reason or why the same existence began at least in retrospect, despite the fact that there can again be no possible pre-existing cause of any kind existing before for any of this(or again, after the fact)
charon wrote:ronjanecExistence began with no pre-existing cause
That's a contradiction in terms. Something can't 'begin' if it has no cause.
charon wrote:Questions of life however are different. They require insight, a seeing into the problem, and that's not the result of calculation. They can't be worked out by the mind as in, for example, analysis. By dissecting a problem we may come to a greater knowledge of it but that in itself isn't an answer. It doesn't free the mind of the problem. What frees the mind is the instantaneous perception of the whole thing, which is insight.
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