Pixel8 wrote:
If time began with the big bang what happened "before"?
This is something I think a lot about and try to fathom.
Larval wrote:
It's more or less impossible to really know what happened before the big bang, due to the inability to observe the metaverse (which by definition is unobservable and can only be inferred).
Namiko wrote:
Law of Conservation: All matter and (total) energy that is in a closed system (the universe) has been there forever and will exist forever, by the laws of physics. If there was a big bang, where did all the matter come from? That is what I would like to know...
I've no tolerance for religious explanations nor am I open to belief in creators. Science doesn't answer my questions but I'll stick with it. I've always wondered what was before things were. If there's a startpoint (big bang or some singularity acting as a catalyst), how can one say there was nothing before the beginning ? How can one say there was something before the beginning (bc. then that would be the startpoint) ?
Was there a point at which there was nothing ? If that nothing was something enough to lead to creation of something, then it wasn't really nothing, was it ? Where did stuff come from in the first place, could there have been such a thing as something where there had been nothing previously ? If there was always something, how could that be ?
Both the notions of eternity (it just was, always has been & will be) and finiteness (it didn't used to be, but one day it was, and someday it'll return to non-being) baffle & flummox me.
Drakilor wrote:
The universe could have been created in reference to another, where spectators can detect the beginning and end, if any.
Sounds as likely as any other reason, for example the Douglas Adams book "Restaurant at the End of the Universe" or final scene (of aliens playing marbles) in first "Men In Black" film.
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*"I don't know what it is, but I know what it isn't."*