PartSkeptic
Illuminator
I'm skeptical of this research of yours and the conclusions you've so broadly and smugly drawn.
Care to elaborate?
Let me start with one of the biggest distortions of reality by science. A Universe from Nothing. This is a blatant attempt to redefine “creation” because a Big Bang just might have an Intelligent Creator or First Cause. The physical universe without a cause may yet be eternal (as previously thought), but it is hard to say why it suddenly “decided” to spring into existence, or what series of pre-Big Bang conditions existed to cause the Big Bang.
The laws of physics describe physical happenings. Entities must exist for the laws to exist.
If time did not exist before the Big Bang, then quantum fluctuations could not exist. The Uncertainty Principle (which relies on the existence of time) could not exist and hence there could be no “spontaneous” production of “virtual particles”.
Krauss is the equivalent of a "guru" who dispenses wisdom to the masses. Smart, yes. But wandering into philosophical questions of why we exist, and the correct answer is "we don't know and may never know". I find him speaking as little sense as James Schwartz, a self-professed guru who I heard talking about the "non-duality" of Advaita Vedanta Hindu.
This has been debated in many forums. I am just going to present the essence and summary of my research summed up in the following.
http://blogs.scienti...r-than-nothing/
…I'm nonetheless going out on a limb and guessing that science will never, ever answer what I call "The Question": Why is there something rather than nothing? You might think this prediction is safe to the point of triviality, but certain prominent scientists are claiming not merely that they can answer The Question but that they have already done so. Physicist Lawrence Krauss peddles this message in his new book A Universe From Nothing: Why There Is Something Rather Than Nothing (Free Press, 2012).
…Philosopher David Albert, a specialist in quantum theory, offers a more balanced assessment of Krauss's book in The New York Times Book Review. And by balanced assessment, I mean merciless smack down. Albert asks, "Where, for starters, are the laws of quantum mechanics themselves supposed to have come from?" Modern quantum field theories, Albert points out, "have nothing whatsoever to say on the subject of where those fields came from, or of why the world should have consisted of the particular kinds of fields it does, or of why it should have consisted of fields at all, or of why there should have been a world in the first place. Period. Case closed. End of story."
Edward Feser: "What part of 'nothing' don't you understand?"
"The 'scientific' 'explanations' of the origin of the universe from 'nothing' one keeps hearing in recent years…aren’t serious physics, they aren’t serious philosophy, they aren’t serious anything except seriously bad arguments, textbook instances of the fallacy of equivocation."
There are more issues that I will deal with in other posts.