Dante Writer
Active Member
That statement is remarkably dumb on multiple levels.
(I'm beginning to detect a trend ...)
Here let me help you:
LAWS OF SCIENCE
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laws_of_science
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That statement is remarkably dumb on multiple levels.
(I'm beginning to detect a trend ...)
True. But there's no vantage point to the question then either. Vantage point means you can look at it from some perspective, but how do you have a perspective in something that is nothing?When you eliminate perspective and vantage point you lose the ability to have a ""context" of things, all-things, some-things, and no-things have no meaning.
Where do Science Laws come from and Why do they Exist at all?
All theories of evolution, abiogenesis, creationism and Intelligent Design must follow the laws of science.
Those science laws and were they came from and why they exist must be part of any science discussion.
1- The science laws we have are just what we have discovered.
2- Man did not create the laws but must follow them.
3- Science laws seem to apply to the entire universe not just to earth.
4- Without the laws of science we would have chaos or what?
5- Did the laws start with the big bang or was the big bang a result of the laws?
6- Are laws a form of intelligence or the result of intelligent design or just a happy coincidence?
I think all of our beliefs should be challenged routinely. What is it you would like to challenge specifically? However a lot of the answers to questions are simply unknown.
How about the bookshelf (or anything) not existing. Not even space existing. But I guess this is getting too abstract for me hereBecause the term "no-thing". To exist is to be something, in my opinion. Something exists. Nothing is when it doesn't exist.
Like Sapiens reference to a missing book in the shelf. Is there a book? There's nothing. In other words, there's no book there. So what kind of book is the no-book? It's not. Nothing is like the no-book to things. A something is like an actual book in the shelf. So if the book is missing and there's a nothing, we can't say that this no-thing is a form of a book.
Alright."a lot of the answers to questions are simply unknown."
The laws of science were once unknown. Only someone seeking knowledge will get knowledge. Seems to also be a law of nature.
You could start by just answering the questions in the OP without worrying whether it is right or wrong or if you will be judged.
That's my point. If nothing exists, then it is nothing that exists. But I think that "to exist" is "to be something", and not "to be nothing". To say "nothing exists" to me is to say "nothing is something", which is a contradiction (to me at least, not saying that it has to be to you). And this is the ultimate contradiction that can't be. Something has to exist.How about the bookshelf (or anything) not existing. Not even space existing. But I guess this is getting too abstract for me here
Yes, we are approaching, if asymptotically. To go back to the bookshelf. Vantage point is important because if you are looking fro the side you can't see in. Perspective is important because it defines that which there is "no-thing" of. No books, but sure, air, spiders, dust, etc. To be no-thing of nothing {shall we call that (nothing)squared?} is another story and I'm sure the calculus of that space is hard indeed. As I think about it, with respect to the big bang, I realize that time may be an important component of the vantage point and that the absence of time may knock the vantage point into the null set and render everything (as least in the way we think of it) moot.True. But there's no vantage point to the question then either. Vantage point means you can look at it from some perspective, but how do you have a perspective in something that is nothing?
--edit
I think I understand what you're getting at. "Nothing" means different things in different contexts. When you say "nothing" for a bookshelf, you really mean "no book". When we talk about "nothing" to exist before the universe, we don't necessarily mean not a single thing, but for instance a singularity, multiverse, or something that did exist, but there was "no universe", so in that sense "nothing." Am I getting your use of the word "nothing" here? Am I close?
Sure.Yes, we are approaching, if asymptotically. To go back to the bookshelf. Vantage point is important because if you are looking fro the side you can't see in. Perspective is important because it defines that which there is "no-thing" of. No books, but sure, air, spiders, dust, etc. To be no-thing of nothing {shall we call that (nothing)squared?} is another story and I'm sure the calculus of that space is hard indeed. As I think about it, with respect to the big bang, I realize that time may be an important component of the vantage point and that the absence of time may knock the vantage point into the null set and render everything (as least in the way we think of it) moot.
The Laws are derived from repeated observations. They are statements which are man-made understandings of the physical world. They exist as a reflection (or perhaps achievement) of scientific knowledge. Not sure if that explains why (exactly) but is closest I can come.
Man did create the laws.
We'd have a scientifically lawless existence. IOW, we'd be fine.
The laws were conceived of, on earth, a few billion years after the alleged Big Bang.
Clearly the result of intelligent design, i.e. scientific method
Sure.
It's another aspect of existence, time. Even space. I can't imagine how something can be nothing and exist without time, space, energy, or anything. Every time I try to think of a nothing like that to exist, I fill it with a black hole or square in my mind, which is not nothing, but a black hole, so it's a thing that is a hole that is black. A complete nothing would be an infinitely small non-spatial, non-temporal, point without mass or energy.
Well, yeah, that's kind'a of what I think too. It doesn't sound right to me, but I could of course be wrong like I am about many other things, so I can only tell what my opinion is. And it's that, nah, not ever nothing, always something. But of course, it was something else than this "something" we have here.That old something from nothing theory is a load of garbage in my opinion.
Which means that the potential and energy was somehow present. Agree. Something isn't right. (or should I say nothing isn't right. )The same scientists that say the big bang started from nothing also claim the big bang released huge amounts of energy that we can still trace.
True. Can't argue with you there.Well that violates your own law of energy that can not be created or destroyed.
Right.The energy had to be there before the big bang and that means the laws also existed before the big bang or at least the laws of energy which seem to effect all other laws.
I take issue with this assumed premise (same source).Why do elements have different reactions since they all came from the same source?
Alright.
1- The science laws we have are just what we have discovered.
True.
2- Man did not create the laws but must follow them.
Well its more like we are ruled by them.
3- Science laws seem to apply to the entire universe not just to earth.
Seems so.
4- Without the laws of science we would have chaos or what?
Probably literally nothing. I don't mean an absence of change but with nothing to govern the laws of reality we have no reality.
5- Did the laws start with the big bang or was the big bang a result of the laws?
Probably both
6- Are laws a form of intelligence or the result of intelligent design or just a happy coincidence?
I would imagine its neither of those two possibilities.
Where do Science Laws come from and Why do they Exist at all?
I think "come from" is a narrow way to look at it. why do they exist at all? Without them we wouldn't exist. So the fact we exist is dependent upon them. It wouldn't be totally wrong to say that it is because they are necessary.
I take issue with this assumed premise (same source).
^ wow - he's discovered Wikipedia.
Ah.Unless you have some other theory all elements, matter and energy stated from the big bang.
The first subatomic particles included protons, neutrons, and electrons. Though simple atomic nuclei formed within the first three minutes after the Big Bang, thousands of years passed before the first electrically neutral atoms formed. The majority of atoms produced by the Big Bang were hydrogen, along with helium and traces of lithium. Giant clouds of these primordial elements later coalesced through gravity to form stars and galaxies, and the heavier elements were synthesized either within stars or during supernovae.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Bang
^ wow - he's discovered Wikipedia.
Philosophical question this. I support the view that the laws of nature are inherent properties of mass-energy-space-time entity that constitutes all reality and had always existed. I will add the the things we call laws are approximations of the true or full laws of nature only.Where do Science Laws come from and Why do they Exist at all?
All theories of evolution, abiogenesis, creationism and Intelligent Design must follow the laws of science.
Those science laws and where they came from and why they exist must be part of any science discussion.
1- The science laws we have are just what we have discovered.
2- Man did not create the laws but must follow them.
3- Science laws seem to apply to the entire universe not just to earth.
4- Without the laws of science we would have chaos or what?
5- Did the laws start with the big bang or was the big bang a result of the laws?
6- Are laws a form of intelligence or the result of intelligent design or just a happy coincidence?
Where do Science Laws come from and Why do they Exist at all?
Because the elements are not all the same, and since they have different characteristics, they do not act and react all the same way. My sister and I come from the same source and yet we don't look at all alike nor behave the same way." they exist and there simply is no indication that some deity/deities made them."
Maybe the law is an indication though it may not involve a religious
deity.
Why do elements have different reactions since they all came from the same source?