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We have heard the new idea that the universe came from nothing, ..
We have heard the new idea that the universe came from nothing, according to quantum mechanics. I think S Hawking popularized the idea. Does this mean there were no quantum mechanics as well?
How does a scientist define "nothing"?
From my understanding of the dictionary and science, I go from the absence of light and matter, to no dimensions, and no nature, no universe with a nature, or anything at all. No god, or higher power.
I suspect that one of the reasons we run into difficulties with the concept of nothing is that we cannot really visualise nothing.
We can't visualise it because there's literally nothing to visualise. If there's nothing between two points or two planes, they are touching.
It is unfortunate that 'empty' space and nothing are often used as if they are synonymous, but they clearly aren't.
... can you have two spheres with nothing between them?
Any thoughts on infinite nothingness? Is nothing always infinite, or just non-existent?
If they're touching you could say there's nothing between the point of contact on each, but it's an arbitrarily small point.
So, in order to have two contiguous spheres you have to have "something" between all but the point of contact. Presumably this would be space, which we cannot define as nothing?
With nothing, there is no here or there.
The fact that you make that statement indicates that you accept that "nothing" exists, at least as a concept.We are aware that something exists. If something and nothing both exist, at least one must have location, relative to the other. Relativity says this must also apply the other way round, so nothing must be here and/or there relative to something.
Concepts don't have to have a physical location, they're abstracts. You can have a physical instance of something (some thing) but not of nothing.
If you have a single, solid something, and nothing else, then nothing exists outside the something, but not inside it. Is this not an example of the physical location of both something and nothing?