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December 05, 2008, 09:00:43


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Author Topic: Why is there something and not nothing?  (Read 1019 times)
Alan McDougall
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« on: May 09, 2008, 04:40:13 »


Hello all,

The ultimate question??

Something instead of nothing?
Why is there something instead of nothing? The interesting conclusion of this ultimate puzzle is that, we can be sure of, it that at least something exists. There is a Universe, we see people, and things, and light, and while we may debate what it means, how it came into being, and how it works, we can be sure that there is at least `something'.
Many physicists search for the most elementary laws of physics, and believe that a law is more likely to be true, when it is simpler, more elementary. Some think that at some moment, humans will understand how the Universe and everything works, and, even more, that we find out why the Universe is necessarily as it is. I cannot believe that, indeed, I believe humans cannot ever give a satisfactory or final answer to this ultimate of all questions. Why is there something instead of nothing?
With nothing, I mean the un-existence of everything. No people, no earth, no milky way, no universe, no laws of nature, no space, no time a total non-existence of everything. A mind-boggling, brain-, brain-numbing and brain- twisting overwhelming concept, terrifying, frightening, too awful to contemplate and impossible think about, without going insane and totally beyond understanding of any human genius. Making a mathematical model of nothing is actually easy. (Take an empty set, with no operations on it, and nothing else.) Nevertheless, one thing we can be sure of: this nothing is not correct: we do not have “nothing”, but definite and absolutely do indeed have ‘SOMETHING’. This shows that the simplest model is not always the correct one. The universe is almost infinitely complex and to me this points to the simple logic that it is the creation by an infinite, intelligent power. Nothing is the very most basic of all concepts and if there were nothing, there would be no creator, of course.
Some people may argue that the universe was created in the Big Bang ( but whom and what pressed the button of the big bang in the first place, so to speak?) , and that positive matter and positive energy are actually negated by the simultaneous creation of negative matter and negative energy. However, this doesn't answer the other question, where do matter, energy and laws of physics then come from in the first place?
Does this question have an answer? If something exists because it either was a modification of something or else, Something or Somebody else created it, then what caused that to exist? It seems that our logic is unable to deal with the question; indeed, I think the question shows there is a limit to our understanding of things by the very best minds of the human race. There are simply mysteries out there that will never ever be solved by mere mortal man. You see the universe has a strange Goldie locks condition about it, i.e., it cannot be too hot, or too cold etc, etc, etc, but it has to be just  absolutely correct, precise and right or life would not have come into existence and we would not be around to contemplate, debate or dialogue on this ultimate enigma. We would not exist. Life hangs on and depends on this knife- edge of harmonies conditions that have to be sustained over countless billions of years, for us to have come into existence and continue to exist. Makes one think, does it not

alan
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Psan
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« Reply #1 on: May 09, 2008, 20:53:14 »


Why is there something instead of nothing?

Yes indeed, this is an age old metaphysical question that no one can answer....well, not really, there are "explanations" which satisfy a few minds, but not all.

My favorite is...
This question arises because of the peculiar way in which our language and mind works.
How do we define nothing? Only as an absence of something..... the word "nothing" has no meaning without the opposite, as is the case with every other negative word.

Take the word "hole". Is there really such a "thing" (a real manifestation) as hole? No..because when we speak of holes, we are abstracting something which is not there. Its not a thing.
Now the being is defined as that which exists and everything that exists is being. We introduce nothingness by abstracting the absence of being. Absence implies that it does not exist, so nothingness does not exist. It can't. Its a construct of our mind.

Those who are interested may refer to western philosophers, and Sartre in particular (in this book Being and Nothingness). Consciousness arises when being introduces a negation in itself, so that it can "see" what it is by comparing itself with what it is not......

O my head hurts Cheesy
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CFTraveler
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« Reply #2 on: May 09, 2008, 22:27:10 »

Yes indeed, this is an age old metaphysical question that no one can answer....well, not really, there are "explanations" which satisfy a few minds, but not all.

My favorite is...
This question arises because of the peculiar way in which our language and mind works.
How do we define nothing? Only as an absence of something..... the word "nothing" has no meaning without the opposite, as is the case with every other negative word.

Take the word "hole". Is there really such a "thing" (a real manifestation) as hole? No..because when we speak of holes, we are abstracting something which is not there. Its not a thing.
Now the being is defined as that which exists and everything that exists is being. We introduce nothingness by abstracting the absence of being. Absence implies that it does not exist, so nothingness does not exist. It can't. Its a construct of our mind.

Those who are interested may refer to western philosophers, and Sartre in particular (in this book Being and Nothingness). Consciousness arises when being introduces a negation in itself, so that it can "see" what it is by comparing itself with what it is not......

O my head hurts Cheesy

But it was worth it.
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« Reply #3 on: May 10, 2008, 21:19:33 »

This is what the Tao te Ching says about it:

Quote
When people see some things as beautiful,
other things become ugly.
When people see some things as good,
other things become bad.

Being and non-being create each other.
Difficult and easy support each other.
Long and short define each other.
High and low depend on each other.
Before and after follow each other.

http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/core9/phalsall/texts/taote-v3.html


Basically "nothing" is a concept that can only exist by contrast to everything.  Thus one gives rise to the other.

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« Reply #4 on: May 14, 2008, 00:34:50 »

A quantum metaphysical gedanken (mind experiment) ((and a pretty good Zen Buddhist Koan)) ---

How can you be sure that there is no Nothing just because there is obviously a Something???  huh

(Meaning, of course, that the Something (Multiverse, Reality, whatever name you give it) must exist Everywhere or else wherever Something does Not exist then there Must be Nothing  shocked)

Answers should be specific with lots of scientific proofs and scholarly references. lol  grin  grin  cheesy

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Kyrin Blair
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« Reply #5 on: May 17, 2008, 22:45:22 »

If something were truly nothing, there would be no interaction to speak of with it. Therefore, we wouldn't be able to think about absolute nothing, because by thinking about that nothing, we have just quantified it, it is no longer nothing.

Therefore, what is nothing is something that can not be thought about by us.
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« Reply #6 on: May 18, 2008, 03:34:34 »

Hi guys,

The concept of nothing simply cannot be expressed, I tried by saying the existence of everything "IS" nothing. But by using the word "IS" defeats my attempt to get my mind around this impossible Conundrum.

Space, void or total vacuums are something, three dimensional areas of space containing no matter or energy. Nothing?Huh?? inexpressible if you get my drift.

Blair said

Quote
Therefore, what is nothing "is" something that can not be thought about by us.

See what I am getting at , one simply cannot use "IS" for something non-existing. "IS" denoted a something.

Hek!! Guys I think it is time to go and wash my face and forget this.

Alan
 
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SHSS
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« Reply #7 on: May 18, 2008, 07:23:41 »

Hi Alan,


I think for humans there must be nothing.  In our reality of duality everything has it's opposite and just because our minds cannot conceive of it doesn't mean it doesn't not exist.
 grin grin grin

SHSS
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Alan McDougall
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« Reply #8 on: May 18, 2008, 20:26:23 »

Hi SHSS,

Are you the same SHSS that is on the other forum that I am a member of. If yes I just recently joined this forum as my spectrum of interest roam far and wide.

Quote
Hi Alan,


I think for humans there must be nothing.  In our reality of duality everything has it's opposite and just because our minds cannot conceive of it doesn't mean it doesn't not exist.
   

SHSS

Come how can you say a state of absolute nothingness can exist, this is an oxymoron statement. One cannot even express nothing as this word alone suggest that nothing is a something.

I brought this up more as rhetorical question ,but it is good to see people like you give it a bash anyway


 Psan
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O my head hurts

So does mine but it is fun don't you think to think about the inscrutable

Regards

Alan 



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SHSS
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« Reply #9 on: May 19, 2008, 02:47:19 »

Hi Alan,

Yes it's me and I have only posted the same as you.  I am new too.  I know how you meant this nothing cannot exist and so I was just adding a no-brainer.  I was thinking of NVB. Non Verbal Communication.  Perhaps there is some other way to 'not express nothing' and yet still have nothing.

Best to you,

SHSS   grin
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Alan McDougall
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« Reply #10 on: May 19, 2008, 14:40:39 »

SHSS,

Well who can say now that there is not a great interconnectedness of all things?

Of the thousands of forums of the net how unlikely was it that we should join this forum at close to the same time, while also dialogue from a completely different forum?

Alan
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RemoteTouch
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« Reply #11 on: May 23, 2008, 17:14:43 »

Good question, I was thinking about the concept of nothing last night (coincidence?) and I think the only answer that I can give you is this,

nothing is everything because God "is".  Creation is the sexual expression of nothing, which is the infinite singularity that is God...

God doesn't exist until he escapes a part of himself, then that part is then realized once it is again experienced.  God is divided into us so that he can experience what it is like to not be every part of himself.  When he is a, he is not b and c.  when his is b, he is not a or c.  These perspectives create God, through his own consciousness.  A fish does not know that water exists until jumps out of it.  So God does not experience himself until he escapes himself.

Truth is just the direction that a conscious body (slice of God) chooses through free will.  Subjective truth is the collective direction of conscious choice.  I've chosen for this to be my reality, you can choose what you want to be real for yourself, when you explore a new truth, you will expand (explore) that part of God, that as of now is nothing.

So the answer to your question is that everything is the expression of nothing.  Think of the white color on this screen.  It looks like nothing, but when blue is removed from the spectrum, orange is what remains.  Through division and confusion, God is expressing his spectrum through us, the colors.
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Alan McDougall
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« Reply #12 on: May 24, 2008, 00:42:54 »

RemoteTouch,

Quote
God doesn't exist until he escapes a part of himself, then that part is then realized once it is again experienced.  God is divided into us so that he can experience what it is like to not be every part of himself.  When he is a, he is not b and c.  when his is b, he is not a or c.  These perspectives create God, through his own consciousness.  A fish does not know that water exists until jumps out of it.  So God does not experience himself until he escapes himself

I like your philosophising around an impossible concept. Kahballa mysticism has a similar idea were God had to somehow withdraw from himself creating a womb like void within himself in which he made space to create the universe. This idea is as good as any and somewhat near to your thinking

Spelling of kaballa likely wrong sorry!!

alan
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« Reply #13 on: May 24, 2008, 06:11:22 »

Kahballa mysticism has a similar idea were God had to somehow withdraw from himself creating a womb like void within himself in which he made space to create the universe. This idea is as good as any and somewhat near to your thinking

Sounds interesting.
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« Reply #14 on: May 24, 2008, 16:34:17 »

Quote
Come how can you say a state of absolute nothingness can exist, this is an oxymoron statement. One cannot even express nothing as this word alone suggest that nothing is a something.

While I agree with the first part of the reply in an ontological way (only "things" can exist, as in the physical sense, verbs (like "to exist") require a subject), I do not agree with it in a more abstract linguistic way; on a conceptual level, we say that "states"(or abstract situations, such as symmetry, the occupation of a given space by a mass, or the resting of another mass in reference to an origin) can also "exist", which denotes that they have truth value- note that this does not make a comment on the existence or non-existence of objects, but rather on the truth or non-truth of a situation; thus, we can say things like, "An uneasy peace exists between France and Australia". What is this peace? Surely it is not an object hidden in a secret bunker someplace, but then who would question that a state, which is only a relation of objects, or even of others states, exists?

Other langauges also hold clues to this idea, as Mandarin is more a relation of states, rather than always a subject performing an action(one type of state): sentences such as:   [" Rain(s)" ]   are possible- the relation that rain is falling, without the need for a subject.

In the same way, we have the idea of zero- zero describes the lack of a number- zero doesn't exist in one way- the way that the thing it describes is non-existence itself- but in another, it does, as an abstract concept with meaning to us.

I think you might be pulling hairs with the first sentence, as everyone understands that "that which does not exist cannot posess existence" (this is a fundamental tautology of the universe lol, and if you want to question THAT, than it is another discussion altogether, lol) ;what was intended is not the negation of this tautology, but rather the statement of the existence of an abstract concept.

I understand the direction you are arguing from- I just think a closer analysis of linguistics might be needed to shed light on the concept- but I think we are all on the same page, but expressing the same idea in different ways, as is often the case.

Thanks,
Stillwater
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