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Theoretical physicists are in the process of answering this very question. It has been shown, in fact, that something does come from nothing. Matter pops in and out of existence all the time in empty space.
fantôme profane;2458876 said:Oh yeah Mr. Smartypantsscienceguy, answer me this. If the universe came from nothing then where did the nothing come from?
We as humans have limited perceptive abilities so it's impossible to know something that is out of the realm of our reality.
We as humans have limited perceptive abilities so it's impossible to know something that is out of the realm of our reality.
I see you have even less knowledge in the physics, cosmology, and astrophysics fields than you do in biology.
No shame in that, after all, they are very difficult subjects.
On the other hand, pulling unwarranted claims about physics out of thin air only makes you look like a fool.
"Not nothing" does not necessarily equal the Christian God.Nothing can come from 'nothing'. Every theory needs something, and no matter how hard you try to contend it, you will find yourself needing something.
No physicist has ever tried to say that the universe came form 'nothing'. It's always been a charge, a quantum, something.
"Not nothing" does not necessarily equal the Christian God.
Heck - it doesn't even necessarily equal any god at all.
Alright, so it seems 'nothing' created reality. Not possible. Something not subject to the realms of existence did it.Oh, and it's impossible to go back before the theoretical '10th dimensional singularity' because we are the 10th dimensional singularity. So that makes us unable to perceive anything outside of it. Not that 'nothing' cannot be observed. I can observe it right now. ... .. ... it has been observed.
What exactly do you mean by "something not subject to the realms of existence"? AFAICT, it seems to mean "something that doesn't exist", but how can a thing that doesn't exist effect change in the physical universe?You probably missed this edit:
Alright, so it seems 'nothing' created reality. Not possible. Something not subject to the realms of existence did it.
Why? What in this suggests "divine being" as opposed to something else?Its seems pretty solid that it came from a divine being to me.
So the prevalence of an idea is an indication of its truthfulness?It may not be my God, but the Abrahamic God seems the most prevalent one in the world to me. So it's a safe bet in my opinion.
Every idea of how the universe began scientifically hits a massive brick wall. The actual smartest people in the world or at a complete loss.
I think the word "God" is full of ambiguities. If by definition one just simply defines God as the laws and principles which caused the world to happen sentient or not, and it pans out the world happened by itself just simply by obeying the laws of physics. Then by that definition the world is a part of that God. It would not be a conscious god, or a god that judges us and listens and answers our prayers but the only form of god that sits well with me.I guess if you include enough in your definition of "the world" then that is true whether you're atheist or not
I think the word "God" is full of ambiguities. If by definition one just simply defines God as the laws and principles which caused the world to happen sentient or not, and it pans out the world happened by itself just simply by obeying the laws of physics. Then by that definition the world is a part of that God. It would not be a conscious god, or a god that judges us and listens and answers our prayers but the only form of god that sits well with me.
I think the word "God" is full of ambiguities. If by definition one just simply defines God as the laws and principles which caused the world to happen sentient or not, and it pans out the world happened by itself just simply by obeying the laws of physics. Then by that definition the world is a part of that God. It would not be a conscious god, or a god that judges us and listens and answers our prayers but the only form of god that sits well with me.
I assume you have a Bible verse for this. Care to share?God is infinite. He has no beginning or end. Such is the only thing that can make 'reality'.
This is a prominent question that is yet to be answered convincingly by atheists. I mean the world can't have come from nothing, can it?
Wow!:clapI've heard this so many times, and yet not even a hint of contrary reaches through.
Nothing can come from 'nothing'. Every theory needs something, and no matter how hard you try to contend it, you will find yourself needing something.
No physicist has ever tried to say that the universe came form 'nothing'. It's always been a charge, a quantum, something.
So if I were you, I would stop with the bashing because your not going to get anywhere in it. At all. In fact, it just shows the true element of yourself.
Oh, and it's impossible to go back before the theoretical '10th dimensional singularity' because we are the 10th dimensional singularity. So that makes us unable to perceive anything outside of it. Not that 'nothing' cannot be observed. I can observe it right now. ... .. ... it has been observed.
it can't.
So if your claim is that there at one point in time was nothing, then not even your god can exist.