sealchan
Well-Known Member
When such questions arise, I almost instantly feel uncomfortable with all the "human" assumptions embedded therein. Assumptions which, imo, are really not valid or warranted.
For starters, in this specific context, what does "prior" mean?
As we currently understand physics and the universe, asking if there was something "before" the universe, is like asking about what is "north" of the north pole.
As far as we are aware, temporal conditions are a property of the universe. While our human minds that evolved as a macroscopic objects that only have to deal with sub-sound speeds and medium gravity, would logically assume that temporal conditions apply everywhere, we know for a fact that this is wrong.
In the presence of great gravity or approaching lightspeeds, temporal conditions take extremely counter intuitive turns. Time is literally part of the very fabric of the universe. While for the life of my I couldn't comprehend what it means to NOT have such temporal conditions in place, everything we know seems to point to exactly that: if you remove the universe, you also remove time just like you remove space.
Next: is "nothing" what is left when we remove the universe? I have no clue. What does "nothing" even mean in that context? Same problem. Everything that we would call "something" at this point is either existent IN the universe, or are integral parts of the universe. So all "something"s will be gone if we remove the universe.
Now, he universe came about somehow. I guess. What is the "universe incubator"? Is there such a thing? Is that "something"? What is "nothing"? Does it even make sense to ask the question?
These things make my head spin. For good reason.
In the words of Krauss: Our brains evolved to avoid being eaten by dangerous predators... not to understand quantum mechanics. Same principle applies here. Whatever kickstarted the universe, it's bound to be something that we won't be able to wrap our minds around. More then that, if we have valid ideas, chances are rather enormous that we won't have appropriate spoken language to communicate it. Likely we'll only be able to express it mathematically. And the math would be sound while at the same time the end model won't make (common) sense to anybody.
For that reason alone, I feel like every "deductive argument" we find in apologetics etc, like kalaam and what not, is doomed to failure even before it starts. Because it attempts to use mere spoken words to draw conclusions about things that no amount of words could accurately describe.
Even just saying "the universe was created" makes no logical sense in physics. Because "created" and "was" both are temporal in nature. Our very language falls short of addressing this problem.
So if we are ever going to solve this riddle - it most definatly won't be through semantic shenanigans.
My interest in this OP, which I intended but got lost (I blame only myself), was to explore whether the Universe is an open or closed system. This is different than discussing, as in recent posts, whether the Universe has an open topological expansion trajectory or not.
What I mean is whether the Universe is self-contained or whether it is an emergent layer of activity out of another layer just like atoms and their activity are emergent from sub-atomic particles.
I assume that particles, waves and their force fields are all components that in interaction form the space-time-matter-energy that we call the universe. Our Universe. It seems to me likely, if not easy to prove, that certain of our laws of quantum mechanics participate in a reality independent of our Universe. Otherwise we have difficulties with bootstrapping into self-created existence each and every law of physics when we go back in time to the BB.
So my belief is that it is more elegant to assume that outside of the Universe there is something and that something may be seen in certain aspects of our own Universe although we do not have the perspective from which to "prove" this. However, we do have the repeated experience of the complex, adaptive systems-layers in our own Universe to suggest that it is in a deep way like an ever-opening flower with petals of emergent phenomenon ever emerging out from a "lower" layer. Our own human consciousness and the transformations of the physical world that this consciousness is effecting is one example.
And perhaps most importantly each layer of emergent phenomenon not only arises from the lower layer but feeds back into it. So the two layers are not closed from each other but open and in dynamic interaction. Why not, then, the foundations of our Universe?