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I understand this argument John, but to that argument I will ask you this question:If our universe occurred within this nothingness, producing waves and fields restrained within our present physical "water droplet", it's logical to assume that this same process can repeat itself again somewhere else in your defined nothingness.
Or is our present location the only place where a universe can form? And why would we assume to limit this event to a single location?
As you may have already figured out, I tend to believe in either flat space or the Multiverse concept.
In either case, space would be infinite.
Given that this may be an accurate view of physical reality, can you see where this view of things would involve an infinite arena or place where present reality exists? If not, why only one finite universe?
Murphy's Law; If it can happen it will. And if it happened once, it will happen again, and again, and again..........
It's no substitute for scientific evidence. And we have scientific evidence that the universe is flat, and is expanding. I think that's also scientific evidence for a finite universe.
By that logic, anywhere on the road is the middle, which makes 'middle' meaningless in this context.
Half of infinity is still infinity. You have two infinite roads.
Yes. An infinite extent can have a beginning.
You may say that the start is a specific point on the road, and the PIF, infinitely far away, are also at a specific point on the road, but these two points cannot be related by measurement;
No, both infinities in this thought experiment are the same size. If you want to know about different 'sizes' or orders of infinity, check out Georg Cantor's Transfinite Numbers.
I don't know what you mean by it, but there are different orders of infinity. For example, there are an infinite number of natural numbers, but a larger infinity of real numbers.
Maybe now's a good time to remind you that the word universe comes from "uni" as in one and "verse" as in vice versa. It means turned into one. It means everything. What you're asking about, is more than one everything. Does the universe, this everything, go on forever? If the answer is no, it doesn't make sense to say there's an infinity of other everythings beyond it.
......better minds than anyone of us conclude that flat space defines an infinite universe.
I think I'll have to agree with Pete about things here. When ever I hear someone use the term: "it seems to me", that usually means they are not bright enough to understand or they simply refuse to consider the facts.
The conclusion of this lecture is that the universe has not existed forever. Rather, the universe, and time itself, had a beginning in the Big Bang, about 15 billion years ago. The beginning of real time, would have been a singularity, at which the laws of physics would have broken down. Nevertheless, the way the universe began would have been determined by the laws of physics, if the universe satisfied the no boundary condition. This says that in the imaginary time direction, space-time is finite in extent, but doesn't have any boundary or edge. The predictions of the no boundary proposal seem to agree with observation.
Possibly you and Ethos are understanding different things when using the word “universe”.
It is unclear if you are saying that you consider “middle” to be meaningless, or just that the logic I applied would make it meaningless. However, I would contend that middle, beginning or end; or indeed any position, in infinity is meaningless, but that’s probably a step further than we would be ready to go until we can progress beyond constantly returning to mathematical “infinities”.
You have two unbounded roads, but I argue that unbounded and infinite are not necessarily synonymous.
Beginning and end are directional concepts. Turn round and your beginning becomes an end which, by definition, infinity cannot have.
I too believe that points in infinity cannot be related by measurement; but take that logic a step further and it becomes: Two points in infinity cannot be distinguished from each other.
Cantor’s infinities are valuable as mathematical tools, but let’s not forget that even Cantor had problems dealing with “absolute infinity”.
... Cantor’s work on infinities is a masterpiece, but it should not be expected to apply beyond the sphere of maths.
That has to be one of Pete’s more elitist comments.
No..............better minds than anyone of us conclude that flat space defines an infinite universe.
Either way, you seem to have missed my points JD. I think I'll have to agree with Pete about things here. When ever I hear someone use the term: "it seems to me", that usually means they are not bright enough to understand or they simply refuse to consider the facts. Which ever case is true concerning this debate is something we will all have to decide at the personal level.
Whether material space is infinite or whether nothingness is infinite, the fact is, that infinity is inescapable. I suggest that if our material universe is finite, then your supposed nothingness beyond our present bubble is infinite.
If you can't "seem to get this" we have nothing left to discuss.
I think we are running into semantic troubles here. John, correct as your etymology of “universe” is; you have to allow language to evolve.
I hesitate to keep on about John Gribbin’s usage, but it does tend to militate against confusion. Possibly you and Ethos are understanding different things when using the word “universe”.
As far as what “better minds than anyone of us conclude”, let’s not forget that most of the best minds in geology thought that Wegener was wrong.
It seems I may not be “the voice of one crying in the wilderness”. Unbounded does not necessarily equal infinite! Even Stephen Hawking agrees with that.http://www.hawking.org.uk/the-beginning-of-time.html Quote The conclusion of this lecture is that the universe has not existed forever. Rather, the universe, and time itself, had a beginning in the Big Bang, about 15 billion years ago. The beginning of real time, would have been a singularity, at which the laws of physics would have broken down. Nevertheless, the way the universe began would have been determined by the laws of physics, if the universe satisfied the no boundary condition. This says that in the imaginary time direction, space-time is finite in extent, but doesn't have any boundary or edge. The predictions of the no boundary proposal seem to agree with observation.
Let's ask ourselves; "What existed before the big bang?" While proving any particular theory about this question is impossible, most of us will reason that what existed before the big bang was simply nothing.
But it would also be a step forward to define what we mean when we say "Nothingness". My point with these thoughts are this: Before the big bang, nothingness was truly infinite. If nothing else existed in this historical epic, then nothing anywhere but nothing is logically an infinity of nothingness.So to clarify my position on what I mean when I say: "Universe""All that is." This would include our present material existence and all that nothingness which our present material universe sprang up within during the big bang.
Quote from: Ethos_ on 20/10/2014 21:42:13Let's ask ourselves; "What existed before the big bang?" While proving any particular theory about this question is impossible, most of us will reason that what existed before the big bang was simply nothing.Not me. I just don't believe in creation ex nihilo.
Let's ask ourselves; "What existed before the big bang?" ... most of us will reason that what existed before the big bang was simply nothing. And even now, as we exist in a universe which many assume is finite, this present universe sprang up within this nothingness.
... it would also be a step forward to define what we mean when we say "Nothingness"
Before the big bang, nothingness was truly infinite. If nothing else existed in this historical epic, then nothing anywhere but nothing is logically an infinity of nothingness.
... you believe our universe is a finite region of material existence lying within a region of absolute nothingness. If that is so, why didn't that nothingness also exist before the big bang?
See it? The depiction looks like a balloon with a hole in it. Like a black hole really is a hole. A hole in space. I have a hunch the early universe was something similar. Only there wasn't any space around it. Maybe this deserves a thread all of its own.
Quote from: Ethos_ on 20/10/2014 22:34:26... you believe our universe is a finite region of material existence lying within a region of absolute nothingness. If that is so, why didn't that nothingness also exist before the big bang?A finite region of nothingness? how does that work?
Quote from: Ethos_ on 20/10/2014 21:42:13Let's ask ourselves; "What existed before the big bang?" ... most of us will reason that what existed before the big bang was simply nothing. And even now, as we exist in a universe which many assume is finite, this present universe sprang up within this nothingness.I'd like to see your data supporting 'most of us'; I, for one, don't reason that.
I didn't say "a finite region of nothingness." I was referring to what I understood JD's vision of reality was. A finite region of material existence lying within a region of nothingness.