Time has a start
The possible models for the origin universe can be divided into deterministic ('can’t get something from nothing') and non-deterministic ('can get something from nothing' - quantum fluctuations). We can also subdivide these models into those of finite and infinite time. When combined, that gives 4 possible types of universe model. My argument is that 3 out of 4 of these model types leads to a contradiction and therefore we can conclude that time has a start.
A note on the method of my argument:
I will start with two axioms A and B, and show that all but one of the following combinations leads to an absurdity:
A and B
~A and B
A and ~B
~A and ~B
axiom A = 'Can get something from nothing'
axiom B = 'Time is finite'
So I will argue that ~A and B apply by showing the other three possibilities lead to absurdities:
A and B - 'Can get something from nothing' and 'Time is finite'
If time is finite, ‘anything can happen will happen’ does not have sufficient time to work its magic so there is no way for the universe to be created by natural, random processes (IE quantum fluctuations).
If time is finite but very, very long this is admittedly still an outside possibility.
~A and B - 'Can’t get something from nothing' and 'Time is finite'
So probably a start of time coincidental with creation. This is the Big Bang theory. This is a possibility.
A and ~B - 'Can get something from nothing' and 'Time is infinite'
If matter/energy is created on average (and it must be because we are here) and time is infinite, we would have reached infinite matter/energy density by now.
Also if creation events are naturally occurring and time is infinite, we would expect an infinite number of Big Bangs. There is evidence of only one Big Bang
~A and ~B - 'Can’t get something from nothing' and 'Time is infinite'
This would mean matter/energy has existed ‘forever’ which is impossible; the matter/energy would have no coming into being so could not exist; it is logically incomplete without a temporal start.
We can also argue against this model by arguing against an infinite regress of (say) particle collisions (arranged by time). With infinite time, the number of collisions must be greater than any number, which is a contradiction (can’t be a number AND greater than any number).
Summary
So my argument is the following are false:
B and ~A
~A and ~B
The following is very probably false:
A and B
And the following is possible:
~A and B
So:
B - time is finite - is true in all possible cases
and
A - Can get something from nothing is very probably false.
Footnote: God
My argument as presented above is not proof from intervention by God. So I argue that the existence of God implies time had a start:
- An eternal in time (presentist) God exists in a universe where time has no start.
- Such a God has no start in time; no coming into being; so cannot logically exist
- Or if the God had a start point in time, there would be an empty stretch of time before him and nothing to cause his existence, which is also impossible
- So God must be timeless
- Implying time has a start
A note on the method of my argument:
I will start with two axioms A and B, and show that all but one of the following combinations leads to an absurdity:
A and B
~A and B
A and ~B
~A and ~B
axiom A = 'Can get something from nothing'
axiom B = 'Time is finite'
So I will argue that ~A and B apply by showing the other three possibilities lead to absurdities:
A and B - 'Can get something from nothing' and 'Time is finite'
If time is finite, ‘anything can happen will happen’ does not have sufficient time to work its magic so there is no way for the universe to be created by natural, random processes (IE quantum fluctuations).
If time is finite but very, very long this is admittedly still an outside possibility.
~A and B - 'Can’t get something from nothing' and 'Time is finite'
So probably a start of time coincidental with creation. This is the Big Bang theory. This is a possibility.
A and ~B - 'Can get something from nothing' and 'Time is infinite'
If matter/energy is created on average (and it must be because we are here) and time is infinite, we would have reached infinite matter/energy density by now.
Also if creation events are naturally occurring and time is infinite, we would expect an infinite number of Big Bangs. There is evidence of only one Big Bang
~A and ~B - 'Can’t get something from nothing' and 'Time is infinite'
This would mean matter/energy has existed ‘forever’ which is impossible; the matter/energy would have no coming into being so could not exist; it is logically incomplete without a temporal start.
We can also argue against this model by arguing against an infinite regress of (say) particle collisions (arranged by time). With infinite time, the number of collisions must be greater than any number, which is a contradiction (can’t be a number AND greater than any number).
Summary
So my argument is the following are false:
B and ~A
~A and ~B
The following is very probably false:
A and B
And the following is possible:
~A and B
So:
B - time is finite - is true in all possible cases
and
A - Can get something from nothing is very probably false.
Footnote: God
My argument as presented above is not proof from intervention by God. So I argue that the existence of God implies time had a start:
- An eternal in time (presentist) God exists in a universe where time has no start.
- Such a God has no start in time; no coming into being; so cannot logically exist
- Or if the God had a start point in time, there would be an empty stretch of time before him and nothing to cause his existence, which is also impossible
- So God must be timeless
- Implying time has a start
Comments (32)
Nothing is spacetime absent of any matter/energy (except quantum fluctuations).
"Quantum fluctuations" can't be both quantum fluctuations and nothing. Quantum fluctuations are something. If they exist, then they're part of the universe, and explaining the origins of the universe would have to involve explaining where quantum fluctuations come from.
So either whatever exists suddenly appeared, non-causally, or something has always existed. There's no way around that.
I agree but my argument is directed towards current cosmological thinking where the origin of the universe is almost invariably attributed to quantum fluctuations.
If we treat quantum fluctuations (and any other similar natural processes) as part of space which is part of the universe then there really is nothing to cause the universe - except the start of time - so that must be the cause of the universe.
Quoting Terrapin Station
If it appeared non-causally, IE some natural stochastic process, we'd expect infinite occurrences of the universe appearing (with infinite time). We'd also have infinite matter density. So that's impossible.
Something can't 'always' exist; to exist something has to come into being first and if it 'always' existed, it has no temporal starting point to come into being.
There can't be anything to cause the universe, because that necessarily implies that something exists prior to the universe. But that can't be, because that existent thing would be (part of) the universe then.
So again, either the universe acausally began or something always existed. Those are the only two options logically.
Quoting Devans99
It can't appear from some natural stochastic process. That would be something. Hence, the natural stochastic process would be part of (or the whole of) the universe at that point.
Quoting Devans99
"Always existed" logically means that it never came into being.
All this goes for whatever we posit existing, including gods.
God could exist timelessly. He could cause the start of time and the universe.
Quoting Terrapin Station
Can you explain how exactly the universe can begin truly acausally? (not even quantum fluctuations).
Quoting Terrapin Station
There is nothing logical about the above statement. Would you exist if you were not born? You can't exist without coming into being.
Quoting tim wood
The exact definition of nothing used does not impact my argument.
If god exists and then the rest of everything does (your options are either that, or god existed and everything else did, too, or everything else existed and then god--there's no other logical possibility), then god--part of everything, either began acausally or always existed. Once again, we can't escape the two possibilities. Either something began acausally or it always existed.
Quoting Devans99
No one could explain either how anything can begin acausally--any explanation would imply a cause, or how anything could always exist (since that's completely counterintuitive).
Quoting Devans99
If I always existed, yes. I'd necessarily exist without being born. That's what the words "always existed" conventionally refer to.
Well if no-one can explain them and they are counterintuitive, then we can just rule them out? They are both impossible after all. Universes don't just pop into existence with no reason and 'always existing' is not possible.
Quoting Terrapin Station
But you can't exist without being born. Would the universe exist if we took away the moment of the Big Bang? Everything has to have a 'coming into being' to exist (else its logically incomplete). "Always existed" is an oxymoron.
Also as I pointed out in the OP, "Always existed" involves an infinite regress into the past which is logically contradictory.
Quoting tim wood
I notice you stick to generalities and avoid engaging on any of the specifics of my argument. If there is nonsense in my argument you could at least point out where.
Again, those are the only two options logically. Ruling them out means you just don't bother thinking about or talking about this issue.
Quoting Devans99
That's actually just a set of assertions, worded different ways, that it's not possible for something to always exist. It's not an argument for it.
Also, that would mean that it's not possible for god to have always existed.
You seem to want to be forwarding a logical argument, but where we're only allowed to assume the contingent, contemporary scientific consensuses. The two don't really go together. If you're going to try a logical argument, you need to stick to the domain of logic. If you want to argue that particular empirical claims must be true, you should focus on providing support of that.
But there is a third option, the universe began causally. If the other two options are impossible, it must be the third option that is true?
Quoting Terrapin Station
If something always existed, it has no start. If it has no start, it has no middle or end. So it does not exist.
Quoting Terrapin Station
But God is timeless and finite - he has a start and end. He can always exist in a finite state by virtue of being outside time.
Does A=A? or does A=B? Can both be "true"?
Does 1+1=2? Which one? How many is one?
If 1+1=2, how the hell does A=A? Or A=B? Is A one thing and B another? Are they two?
How much confusion does it take to get those committed to such nonsense to ask a simple question about their fundamentals?
I'm not focusing on a narrow usage of the word "universe."
Whatever exists--whatever its nature, if we go back to the earliest thing, either it always existed or it began non-causally.
You can't have the earliest thing begin causally, because then something existed prior to the earliest things, making it not the earliest thing.
Quoting Devans99
Right, it has no start, and there's no meaningful way to peg a particular point as a temporal middle. It could have an end, of course. There could be something for which there's no way to peg a particular point as a temporal middle.
Quoting Devans99
If it's possible to be timeless and finite, then that's possible period. It can't be limited to just some things and not others.
But if you have a start of time and timelessness then cause and effect does not apply to timeless entities. So you can have an uncaused cause as God outside time and have him then cause the start of time and the universe.
Quoting Terrapin Station
But it has no start (call that time t), so time t+1 is not defined, nor is t+2 (because t+1) is missing. All the way to the end, it's undefined.
Or imagine a clock that has always existed. It can’t read infinity as it’s impossible to count to infinity and it can’t read any lessor number as that would be incompatible with ‘always existed’. So such a clock cannot ‘always exist’. We could fit such a clock to anything in the universe to prove that ‘always exist’ is impossible.
Quoting Terrapin Station
Fair point but my personal definition of God is the creator of the universe, so if other timeless things exist, they are not directly relevant to the issue.
1. The big bang is the only valid theory on the beginning of the universe, there is near unanimous scientific support for the big bang, and all existing time from right now, backward to a millisecond, before Time 0, is not in any real scientific dispute. Any argument anyone makes for this period of time that is outside the big bang, is in conflict with a near unanimous scientific understanding.
2. Right now there is no scientific theory ( technical definition) for anything that happened inside that millisecond. None.
3. The overwhelming scientific consensus is the universe is finite, meaning it had a beginning.
4. One is free to believe any reasonable option for the causation of the universe. Including God, or something other than God.
5. Epistemic humility should dictate generosity in the acceptance of these views that are contrary to our own.
If there can be something that's timeless, how would we get to any restriction on just what can be timeless? Why couldn't any arbitrary thing be timeless at some point if it's possible for there to be timeless things?
OK how about a region of space absent of any matter/energy?
Quoting Terrapin Station
It's a fair point, there maybe a whole universe of timeless things for all we know. But I think it ultimately causally traces back to a single creator.
It's the Big Bang theory with inflation that is regarded as the standard model of cosmology nowadays. And the multiple universes extension to that, Eternal Inflation is gaining credibility. That theory does address what happened before the Big Bang.
My point was based on a technical definition of scientific theory which is:
"A scientific theory is an explanation of some aspect of the natural world that has been substantiated through repeated experiments or testing. "
neither infinite inflation ( inflation directly after the big bang to our finite universe is real theory) nor multi universe comes in any way at all remotely close to this requirement. And can only be generously called hypotheses. They are concepts, ideas, guesses - no better or worse than such a thing as an un-created creator. That may well change at some point. But they are not there now.
'Many physicists also believe that inflation explains why the universe appears to be the same in all directions (isotropic), why the cosmic microwave background radiation is distributed evenly, why the universe is flat, and why no magnetic monopoles have been observed.'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflation_(cosmology)#Observational_status
The plain Big Bang theory does not explain these features.
- In the quantum era, cause and effect are under question. The prime mover argument relies heavily on cause and effect.
- The prime mover argument is inconsistent in that it uses cause and effect to trace back all motion to a single unmoved mover but then says that the unmoved mover is beyond cause and effect.
Thats the point; it's nothing. What is your definition?
Quoting tim wood
You are waffling rather than addressing my arguments. You have made 5 posts on this subject so far and none of them contain anything of substance.