PruePhillip
Well-Known Member
Does the existence of mathematics depend on the existence of the universe, or does mathematics represent something that could at least conceivably exist independent of any physical reality?
Why or why not?
We simply don't know.
Is maths a description of the universe, or does it exist independent?
Science believes in cause and effects, that there exists "reasons" for
what happens. The ultimate beginning of the universe (everything, that
is) has, by definition, no cause and no reason.
So I suggest that maths came with the universe. It's a descriptor of
that universe.
So, before everything began, before the Big Bang, before whatever
created the Big Bang - there was no maths.