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jonesthecurl wrote:(1) What happened before time began?
There can be no "before" time, by definition.
jonesthecurl wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:In any case, mpjh, from what I can gather of that rather wordy bit of quotation, I think that as far as you are concerned I am set to move on to point 2.
Simply waiting on Jones and then we'll be set
No no no.
"logic" allows us to examine the question of whether causality is absolute.
I contend that logic tells us it is not. As stated before, logic tells us that things either began or did not. in either case the logical conclusion is that cuasality (not logic) fails. If time never began, causality is never breached, it just goes back and back.
jonesthecurl wrote:If time did begin, logic tells us that there must have been a single first nanosecond, a first event, with no "before" and no cause.
This does not defy logic, it is determined by logic.
mpjh wrote:Not really. I think you can use logic and existing knowledge to postulate hypothesis, which is what I think you are doing.
mpjh wrote:The next step is evidentiary exploration. Whether there was a beginning or not is a question for scientific exploration, and not something beyond such exploration (which is the OP position).
Artimis wrote:I wanted to respond last night but I didn't have time as I had to go to work instead.jonesthecurl wrote:(1) What happened before time began?
There can be no "before" time, by definition.
That question is not necessarily as ridiculous as you might think, time is the 4th dimension of existence and is an emergent property of our universe after expansion. We're still struggling to understand what propels time from past to future(times arrow), no doubt an interesting answer awaits us. I'm glad I'm not a theoretical physicist who has to think about this sort of thing everyday, I'd go flipping bonkers otherwise!
For every beginning there is an end and visa versa. An aspect of existence defines it's own opposite and cannot exist without said opposite. Examples: Beginning & End, Light & Dark, Hot & Cold, Life & Death, Fast & Slow, etc and so forth...... The cosmic law of two is an immutable truth. The universe came from somewhere.
Artimis wrote:For every beginning there is an end and visa versa. An aspect of existence defines it's own opposite and cannot exist without said opposite. Examples: Beginning & End, Light & Dark, Hot & Cold, Life & Death, Fast & Slow, etc and so forth...... The cosmic law of two is an immutable truth. The universe came from somewhere.
Artimis wrote:
For every beginning there is an end and visa versa. An aspect of existence defines it's own opposite and cannot exist without said opposite. Examples: Beginning & End, Light & Dark, Hot & Cold, Life & Death, Fast & Slow, etc and so forth...... The cosmic law of two is an immutable truth. The universe came from somewhere.
CrazyAnglican wrote: I think though that we are speaking of "the Universe" as the space and everything in it. In that case it's perfectly logical to ask "where did all this stuff come from". How is it perfectly logical to think of an apparently infinite space with an apparently finite quantity of matter bouncing around in it changing forms, without the obvious question "How did this particular quantity of matter get here and how did the process of bouncing around changing forms get started". Under your definition the "things" in the Universe have been doing just that. As far as I know matter can't be destroyed or created merely changed. One is certainly tempted to ask where it came from in the first place.jonesthecurl wrote:If time did begin, logic tells us that there must have been a single first nanosecond, a first event, with no "before" and no cause.
This does not defy logic, it is determined by logic.
Logic doesn't say that exactly. What it says is that something must have caused the first event.
mpjh wrote:The conclusion is that nothing can be caused by there being no true contradictions, any more than it is possible to suppose that, were there true contradictions, any given situation would not have arisen from the fact. It is impossible to cogitate a situation where there are true contradictions to begin with; hence, if P is a necessary truth, it is not merely untrue, but utter nonsense, to do thinking along the lines of: "If not for P, such and such would not have followed."
Hence, both from an epistemic and ontological perspective, causality is never a logically necessary relation.

porkenbeans wrote:Both of you are still falsifying the definition of "logic".When you say, logic states this, and logic states that, This is a misnomer. Logic is only, in itself, - The gathering of available evidence, and then postulating the truth from that evidence. There may be evidence that you are not able to see, or uncover. This does not make your logic flawed. With this hidden evidence reviled, your logic will change, and may postulate a different truth. In other words, where your logic takes you, can turn out to be a false or incorrect postulation. Logic in itself can never be false. because it is made up of evidence that is factual. The more evidence that you have, The more reliable your logical postulation becomes.
The reason that I keep stressing this point is because, The equations that are being offered are miss defining the word logic. Your math is suffering as a result.
jonesthecurl wrote:Do you not see that you have just contradicted yourself?