Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
The creation had a beginning, that is when time began. God was before that.If God created the universe that means time was involved. Creation implies taking some sort of time, but you say God is outside of time. How does that work?
Thanks - that's helpful, or at least intriguing. Which testable cosmologies evidence a universe without a beginning?
The universe did have a beginning, shown by the laws of thermodynamics;I can't think of why the universe itself couldn't just be some eternal thing.
IIRC, time goes incredibly wibbly just after the BBE, so the "beginning of time" might not be a coherent idea in itself.Essentially, physics is unable to answer the question of whether the universe began to ontologically exist at all at this time in either direction.
By the same logic, all of the (infinite) integers are infinitely large. After all, there's an infinity of negative numbers before zero, isn't there?Briefly, If the total amount of energy is limited and the amount of useable energy is decreasing, then the universe cannot have existed forever, otherwise it would have already used up all its energy.
How can there be a "before" if there was no time?The creation had a beginning, that is when time began. God was before that.
humour!
Ad-Dukhan(The smoke)
44:9 Yet they play about in doubt.
Sorry but I still believe that Allah had created you and your ancestors and he will make you die one day.
(1) Everything that has a beginning of its existence has a cause of its existence.
(2) The universe has a beginning of its existence.
Therefore:
(3) The universe has a cause of its existence.
(4) If the universe has a cause of its existence then that cause is God.
Therefore:
(5) God exists.
Are there any errors in this reasoning?
The universe did have a beginning, shown by the laws of thermodynamics;
1st law: the total amount of mass energy in the universe is constant.
2nd law: the amount of energy in the universe available for work is running down, that is entropy is increasing to a maximum.
Briefly, If the total amount of energy is limited and the amount of useable energy is decreasing, then the universe cannot have existed forever, otherwise it would have already used up all its energy.
None. Everything that had a beginning had a cause. The universe had a beginning because of entropy, that is the 2nd law of thermodynamics, that the amount of energy in the universe available for work is running down so entropy is increasing to a maximum.
According to Einstein's general relativity, since time is linked to matter and space, time also had a beginning along with matter and space at the beginning of the universe. Since God created it, he is outside time and so had no beginning in time so he doesn't need a cause. That's foolproof proof of God, brotha!
The questions bring up an interesting thought. If the universe had a beginning, what existed prior to the universe? If it was nothing, what is nothing? I imagine nothing to be void of time and space. A reality we cannot even grasp. Maybe such a reality is not possible.
So you're saying nothing exists outside our universe.It it probably what exists outside our universe.
The universe did have a beginning, shown by the laws of thermodynamics;
1st law: the total amount of mass energy in the universe is constant.
2nd law: the amount of energy in the universe available for work is running down, that is entropy is increasing to a maximum.
Briefly, If the total amount of energy is limited and the amount of useable energy is decreasing, then the universe cannot have existed forever, otherwise it would have already used up all its energy.
(1) Everything that has a beginning of its existence has a cause of its existence.
(2) The universe has a beginning of its existence.
Therefore:
(3) The universe has a cause of its existence.
(4) If the universe has a cause of its existence then that cause is God.
Therefore:
(5) God exists.
Are there any errors in this reasoning?
It it probably what exists outside our universe.
So nothing exists outside our universe and consequently meaningless to talk about an existence outside of our universe. Sounds good, but I feel confident in stating that the inhabitants of our universe will never know what lies beyond our universe or if there even is a beyond our universe.
(1) Everything that has a beginning of its existence has a cause of its existence.
(2) The universe has a beginning of its existence.
Therefore:
(3) The universe has a cause of its existence.
(4) If the universe has a cause of its existence then that cause is God.
Therefore:
(5) God exists.
Are there any errors in this reasoning?
Strictly speaking there can't be anything outside of "the universe," since the universe consists of all things that exist by definition. This comes down to splitting hairs though: usually when we say "universe" we're just talking about the cosmos (e.g., the visible universe in 3 spatial dimensions and one temporal dimension of physical objects).
Consider back when they found out that some of what they thought were "nebulae" were actually "island universe" (i.e., galaxies): when people were originally saying "the universe" they were probably just thinking of what we now call the Milky Way galaxy, when in reality the phrase "the universe" by fiat includes much more than that.
So, to get down to the point: no, by definition nothing can exist outside the universe. Of course not, since "the universe" by definition is everything that exists.
However, asking whether or not something might exist outside the visible or empirical universe is another story: as far as we know, that might be possible.
So you're saying nothing exists outside our universe.
I don't know if anything does or does not. We cannot assume either way.