A universe without God.

Zero said:
YAY!!! We knew Iacchus would turn retarded at some point...we've apparently reached that point!
Are you saying you don't believe in synchronicity? It would almost have to be that way wouldn't it? ... If, in fact we were all of One Mind.
 
Dancing David said:

Oh, you foolish mortal! All that exists is energy, matter is energy, everything is energy. The material world is energy and therefore material.
But isn't it conceivable -- i.e., before the Big Bang -- that all that existed was energy, before it was converted to matter? Or else how do you explain where all this "latent energy" came from?

Or, how about this? ... Is it possible that energy is the medium and hence "barrier" that exists between the material and immaterial? ... Thus allowing the spiritual to become the cause of which the material is the effect?
 
"before" the Big Bang

Just a quick aside.

Several months ago, we had a thread that discussed what happened "before" the Big Bang. I can't find it, or I'd post a link. I'll summerize briefly.

There are a number of consequences that come from the Theory of Relativity, only the most famous of them is that matter and energy are the same thing. Another, only slightly less famous, consequence is that space and time are also the same thing. In other words, we live in a truly homogenous 4 dimensional hyperspace as opposed to a 3 dimensional space with a universal time dimension tacked on. In simple English, that means what we consider to be the "future" here could be "left" somewhere else. Those directions are determined locally, not globally.

An even less known consequence of Relativity is that spacetime is defined by matter/energy. Where there is no matter/energy, there is no spacetime. So, at a point where there was "nothing" (meaning no matter/energy) there was no spacetime. So in an absolute lack of matter/energy and spacetime, individual quantum fluctuations (the spontaneous generation of a particle/anti-partical pair that quickly annihilates one another) generate a brief "period" of local spacetime which disappears with the fluctuation. The current theory is that the "Big Bang" is a quantum fluctuation that, for some reason, did not end in mutual destruction (or, at least, not yet).

But anyway, back to the point of my post. It is impossible to talk about what happened "before" the Big Bang because there was no time "before" the Big Bang. No matter/energy means no spacetime. No time means no "before". It's a difficult concept to grasp, but no one ever said the universe was a simple place.
 
Re: "before" the Big Bang

Dancing David said:

Yeah , which is what I said, you are not even communicating, you are arguing with yourself, and not very well at that.
Do you want to know what I think? I think you're just p***ed off at lifegazer for ignoring your posts. ;)
 
Dancing David said:

Hey if the shoe fits you can wear it, but your foolish believe that matter is something different from energy shows that you cling to your mommy's skirts and hide behind them.
Ever trip over a radio wave? :D
 
Re: "before" the Big Bang

Upchurch said:
Just a quick aside.

Several months ago, we had a thread that discussed what happened "before" the Big Bang. I can't find it, or I'd post a link. I'll summerize briefly.

There are a number of consequences that come from the Theory of Relativity, only the most famous of them is that matter and energy are the same thing. Another, only slightly less famous, consequence is that space and time are also the same thing. In other words, we live in a truly homogenous 4 dimensional hyperspace as opposed to a 3 dimensional space with a universal time dimension tacked on. In simple English, that means what we consider to be the "future" here could be "left" somewhere else. Those directions are determined locally, not globally.

An even less known consequence of Relativity is that spacetime is defined by matter/energy. Where there is no matter/energy, there is no spacetime. So, at a point where there was "nothing" (meaning no matter/energy) there was no spacetime. So in an absolute lack of matter/energy and spacetime, individual quantum fluctuations (the spontaneous generation of a particle/anti-partical pair that quickly annihilates one another) generate a brief "period" of local spacetime which disappears with the fluctuation. The current theory is that the "Big Bang" is a quantum fluctuation that, for some reason, did not end in mutual destruction (or, at least, not yet).

But anyway, back to the point of my post. It is impossible to talk about what happened "before" the Big Bang because there was no time "before" the Big Bang. No matter/energy means no spacetime. No time means no "before". It's a difficult concept to grasp, but no one ever said the universe was a simple place.
So what -- i.e., there has to be a "what" which came before -- caused the Big Bang then?
 
Re: Re: "before" the Big Bang

Iacchus said:
So what -- i.e., there has to be a "what" which came before -- the Big Bang then?
Why does there have to be something that came "before"? Actually the question is nonsencical, because "before" implies the existence of time before there was time. It's not logical.
 
Upchurch said:
Why does there have to be something that came "before"? Actually the question is nonsencical, because "before" implies the existence of time before there was time. It's not logical.
So, our existence is totally inconceivable then? Is that what you're trying to tell me?

And what about the notion of time? Just because there was nothing "relative" to measure it against, doesn't mean it didn't exist did it?

Ever see the movie, The Truman Show?
 
Re: "before" the Big Bang

Upchurch said:


But anyway, back to the point of my post. It is impossible to talk about what happened "before" the Big Bang because there was no time "before" the Big Bang. No matter/energy means no spacetime. No time means no "before". It's a difficult concept to grasp, but no one ever said the universe was a simple place.

Yeah, this is a bit confusing...don't leave out the idea that there could have been an infinite number of universes "before" the one we live in. The poiint is not exactly that an "absolute nothing" existed(according to my understanding), but that there was no "before" in a practical sense. There is no practical way of speaking coherently of "before the universe", because time as we know it started along with this universe, and we can't look back any farther than that.
 
Upchurch said:

Ever trip over air? :D
But air has density, and it's possible to be blown over -- or, tripped over -- by a gust of wind. Do radio waves have density?
 
Iacchus said:
Are you saying you don't believe in synchronicity? It would almost have to be that way wouldn't it? ... If, in fact we were all of One Mind.
Define synchronicity. I double dog dare you.

~~ Paul
 
Re: Re: "before" the Big Bang

Zero said:

Yeah, this is a bit confusing...don't leave out the idea that there could have been an infinite number of universes "before" the one we live in. The poiint is not exactly that an "absolute nothing" existed(according to my understanding), but that there was no "before" in a practical sense. There is no practical way of speaking coherently of "before the universe", because time as we know it started along with this universe, and we can't look back any farther than that.
Do you realize that the Eternal Moment always Is, and always Will be, and doesn't exist within the parameters of time and space?
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:

Define synchronicity. I double dog dare you.

Oh, you provoke him... but when he does define it, you stay here and debate him :D
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:

Define synchronicity. I double dog dare you.

~~ Paul
First of all let me ask you if you believe in coincidences? If you don't, then there you have it right there. If you require a further definintion, I would say the material world is coordinated by the immaterial. If that doesn't help then look it up in the dictionary.

You can also look up the works of Carl Jung if you're the least bit sincere about it. ;)
 
Iacchus said:
First of all let me ask you if you believe in coincidences? If you don't, then there you have it right there. If you require a further definintion, I would say the material world is coordinated by the immaterial. If that doesn't help then look it up in the dictionary.

You can also look up the works of Carl Jung if you're the least bit sincere about it. ;)
Wow, can the nonsense get any thicker?
 
Iacchus said:
Ever trip over a radio wave? :D

Funny you should say that. A radio wave is an electromagnetic wave. Not only do EM waves have momentum and can push things, but they are also the mediator of the electrical and magnetic forces. When you touch things, or trip someone, you aren't actually touching them. you are just getting so close, that the rapid exchange of photons (EM waves) between the two objects do not allow you to get any closer.

So yes, in a way, I have been tripped by a radio wave.
 
Iacchus said:
And what about the notion of time? Just because there was nothing "relative" to measure it against, doesn't mean it didn't exist did it?
Nothing relative? Huh? If there are no apples, then there are no apples. There are not "apples relative to something".
Ever see the movie, The Truman Show?
No, but what does that have to do with anything.
Your posts have constituted jargon, circular arguments, meta-arguements, and engrish.
 
Iacchus said:
It's not matter is it? ... Then what is it? I suspect this may have been what the Big Bang was all about ... one huge conversion of energy into matter ... from whence we derive our materialistic world, and all the materialistic "meat-heads" which inhabit it.

Immaterial suggests a dualism, with matter and energy, there is no dualism, matter is energy. Also, it took a while after the big bang for matter to be able to hold together and apear at all, and even longer for matter as we know it (stable hydrogen)


You have the audacity to say this and then demand that I prove to you that God exists. And you want to call me a lunatic?The shouts of The Bacchae draw ever near ...

I can show you evidence if you like. The models we use to describe particles (such as quantum theories) can be used to "run the tape backwards"" to attempt to determine what happened further and further back in time. It quickly becomes aparent that the time and space dimensions become less and less dissimilar, and before, becomes more like "over there" until it doesn't really make sense to ask about "now and then". Similar to if the universe is very small, it doesn't do you much good to move anywhere, because you end up where you started really quick. I can show you the equations if you like. I say this not because it is what I want to believe, or I like it, or whatever, but because it is what makes the most sense out of what we know.

Your god however, and your visions, you cannot show me any evidence for.
 
Iacchus said:
Are you saying you don't believe in synchronicity? It would almost have to be that way wouldn't it? ... If, in fact we were all of One Mind.

But in a universe with relativity, although it might appear that we are all simultaneously retarded, to another observer, it would appear that we are retarded at different times, and to someone falling into a black hole, that we are retarded all the time.
 

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