Upchurch said:
....aaaaand we've reached the limit of what I can contribute from a position of knowledge. On to the conjecture....
There is no reason to believe that there was necessarily anything unique about that particular QF, except that it triggered our particluar spacetime. It is entirely possible that every QF that does not occur in a pre-existing spacetime behaves the same way and creates it's own spacetime set.
This shouldn't be confused with the Many Worlds interpretation which postulates that there are many parallel worlds within a single spacetime set. What I'm suggesting here is multiple spacetime sets. The difference is that there is a possibility of interaction between the former collection of "many worlds" and I couldn't imagine any such interaction could exist in the latter. That would require some kind of meta-hyperspace*, I think.
On the other hand, if not all QFs in the absence of a pre-existing spacetime don't identically create their own spacetime set, we wouldn't be here to ask the question of our particular QF hadn't sparked this particular spacetime. Unfortunately that's a circular argument: our QF was special because it did something special. 
Fair enough. We've long since passed
my limited understanding of this stuff, so I thank you for sharing what you know.
I've heard of the multiple spacetime sets before... as I recollect, it's a theory that suggests multiple universes that have absolutely nothing connecting them (not even origin-wise). The only commonalilty is that they exist in some kind of meta-dimension. Damfino where I read that, though... might have been the NY Times Science section, I think.
The last part about the circular argument isn't all that circular, really. It's one argument that bugs me because it's utterly consistent and utterly unprovable. "We exist in a universe that supports life because if the universe didn't support life, we wouldn't be here to observe it." Weak anthromorphic principle, I think it's called... when I first read about it, it was in context of a discussion for an ongoing set of expanding/collapsing universes. The last "version" may not have supported life, and the next "version" may not, but since the one we're in does, that's why it appears to be designed for life. I think it was dropped eventually because it didn't solve the "What started the first one" issue.
As I said, I think the collapse/rebirth theory's been killed, but the basic anthromorphic principle is still intact. Although if there are no multi-universes... or one continually expanding and collapsing series... then the odds of a single version having
exactly the right parameters for life are rather disturbing, if one thinks in terms of a non-planned universe.
Upchurch said:
Unfortunately, I learned of Cosmic Inflation after I had left my life as a physicsist, so I neither have anyone to explain it to me nor have I kept up the necessary skill to read about it on my own and understand it in any great detail. I don't have any idea why a QF went gang-busters instead of distroying itself, but I'm sure there is someone out there who has an clue or the idea wouldn't have lasted this long.
Makes sense... but after following this stuff for a while, I've come to the conclusion that there are factions even among scientists that keep certain ideas alive long after they should have been discarded. I don't have an update on this one; I was hoping someone here might.
Upchurch said:
eh... mostly. Just remember that for there to be something there, there has to be a "there". Just like there is no time "prior" to the Big Bang, there is also no space either. So, we're not talking about an "object" with no dimension. We're talking about a complete absense of anything and literally something appearing out of nothing. It's counter-intuitive, but like I said, our intuition wasn't necessarily developed for this kind of stuff. It's more of a hinderance than a help.
That's probably the hardest part of this for me to get my head around. No wonder the creationists claim it supports "LET THERE BE LIGHT." Something out of nothing is rather miraculous.
Upchurch said:
Within our spacetime, QF usually just appear and immideately disappears. The most noticable exception is when a black hole is at the exact right distance and a Hawking radiation situation occurs.
Yeppers, that was the first place I read about 'em. For those that haven't read this stuff, I think Hawkings called them "virtual particle pairs". They're generated by QF's, and remain "virtual" until one is sucked into a black hole. When that happens, (occasionally) the remaining particle will go off on a vector allowing it to stay out of the Swartzchild radius. Then both particles become "real". (Adding to the overall mass of the universe while it's mirror anti-particle reduces the mass of the black hole... causing it to appear to evaporate and return mass to the universe at large.)
It was a great concept and an elegant revelation when I read it. Thought it was utterly cool - and I still do! I could never get one thing straight, though.
Hawkings stated that anti-particles appearing within the radius would eventually reduce the mass of the black hole by annihilating with the existing mass, reducing it by one particle's mass at a time. (I may be wrong wtih the specific terminology, but I'm pretty sure that was the overall concept.)
What I still can't grasp is why
more anti-particles would fall inside the radius than regular particles during a QF "split". It seemed to me that in a fully random situation, the number of anti-particles generated in the radius should equal the number of regular particles generated inside, as well... and that should balance out the situation, preventing evaporation.
(sigh)
Gonna take that asprin and water Shera was nice enough to provide - thanks, Shera and thank
you, Upchurch!
(Edited to correct spellings and some poorly phrased sentences)