lifegazer said:
And you call yourself a rational man?
Sometimes. More often I call myself **** Upchurch, but that's not important right now.
... Firstly you expect the readers of your own personal philosophy to believe that there was once a state of absolute nothingness. Zilch. Jack all. Not just empty space, but zero dimensions of anything (space included), and even a mind.
But that's not my own personal philosophy. It's the generally accepted scientific theory based on observation and logic. The same scientific theory, I might add, that you say your philosophy (which I'll point out
is your "own personal" as you are the only one that holds it) is in complete agreement with.
Then, you expect these readers to believe that suddenly, without any cause or reason, a whole universe of diverse relative-order came into being, by itself, into the preceding nothingness.
Sure. The phenomenon of quantum fluctuation is
well demonstrated in nature.
Cosmic Inflation is a tad less backed as a theory, but it fits the facts.
Actually, I'd have to take issue with the term "suddenly". "Suddenly" is a time based term and really isn't clear in the boundry situation that we're discussing, but I'm fine using it in the vernacular.
And what possible justification might you have for presenting this as a reasonable philosophy?
It fits with observed phenomenon, as explained above. To say that it is unreasonable is to suggest that observation is unreasonable. That wouldn't bode well for your philosophy which attempts to describe an alternate theory for the source of those unreasonable observations, would it?
- That in spacetime, individual particles are known to appear from no apparent source, throughout time.
Again, happens all the time. We see it in the form of Hawking Radiation which has been detected from here on Earth.
Yet this is not a justification for holding your irrational viewpoint. For when discussing the origin of existence, we are not discussing the pre-existing state of the spacetime arena in which such material events can occur.
I'm not sure what irrational viewpoint you are referring to. My original question was about the possibility that the "first change" (i.e. the beginning of time) was from non-existance to existance. This is supported by observed phenomena and backed by logic. I fail to see how it is "irrational" in regards that it is "without reason".
In other words, quantum fluctuations are individual material events which occur in pre-existing spacetime.
Ah. No. Perhaps this is where you are confused. Quantum flucutuations occur co-existant with spacetime, not pre-existant. Now it is entirely possible that there "were" other spacetimes "prior" to our own. (English is such a poor language to talk about these things.) But those other spacetimes go away with the mutual anilation of the particle pair.
Whereas the origin of the universe is the sudden mass-introduction of practically all of the matter in the universe, into a spacetime that didn't even exist (absolute nothingness, remember?) before that matter existed.
No. You don't understand. Matter/energy and spacetime are interdependent. There is no such thing as one without the other. Their origins absolutely coincide. One cannot proceed the other.
It's a tough idea. People have been struggling with it for less than a century and people who are unfamiliar with the nuances, like yourself, struggle all the more.
So, your fluctuations occur individually, within pre-existing spacetime.
No. Within a co-originating spacetime.
Whereas the origin of the universe considers the origin of mucho spacetime and mucho matter-stuff, simultaneously.
Mucho compared to what exactly?
Hence, not only is your belief irrational (something from nothing and without cause, is irrational); but it is also without basis, since you found your idea upon individual quantum events within pre-existing spacetime.
This has been your strongest argument so far. Congratulations.
I've made no secret that Quantum Mechanics is probably the most frustrating subject in physics for me. I don't understand probably 90% of it. So, in that respect, I do take a lot of what I've read on the subject on faith.
Not a blind faith, however. I know that the people that I read have gone through the same peer review process that all scientific work must go through. If the results are generally accepted, that means it has been verified on many levels by people who are much smarter than I am. It also means that if I truly applied myself (which, for me, would require giving up my current life and devoting years to study), I could verify those results personally. As I happen to like my life as it is, I'm going to take the lazy route and accept what has gone through the process.
So, how do they extrapolate a phenomenon that occurs in a already-existing spacetime (note the correct use of chronological terms) to a non-existing spacetime set? I have no idea. Someone does, though. I might have to take the time to research that someday.
We
do know that acausal events occur, disproving the notion that there
must be a cause for
everything. You, yourself, admit to something (God) being acausal. You just use circular reasoning to justify it. i.e. God doesn't have a cause because God is, by definition, without cause. The scientific theory, at least, uses phenomena that we know and can prove exists and doesn't rely on magical entities of whom we have no evidence.
Yet the idea of existential origin must focus upon a realm of absolute nothingness (in your philosophy) combined with the appearance of countless quanta.
But you haven't discounted it as a possibility. You simply refuse to consider it. So what? How
do you know that the first change wasn't from non-existance to existance? You still haven't answered that question.
If you can, just answer it so we don't have to go into "Upchurch's other question".