1611AV
REPENT YE, AND BELIEVE THE GOSPEL.
That's the spirit! Even if you end up not agreeing with what you read, hopefully you'll be a little wiser for it, anyway.
QM is one of those things that says seems to throw "common sense" out of the window. What little I know is very interesting.
Yeah, Im not against seeking things out. It sounds interesting.
Trite, but, alas, not true. First, there's no evidence that something cannot come from nothing - there is no experiment, no concrete data that even suggest genesis ex nihilo cannot occur. Moreover, there is both theoretic and empirical reasons to believe that things do indeed come into existence ex nihilo.
It has to be said that the primary opponents of this are philosophers (there are philosophers against everything), and those theists attempting to shoehorn a Creator into being. They simply cannot accept that "something can't come from nothing" is wrong, since that invalidates their whole argument - that God must exist. To them, something can't come from nothing, so there has to be a God from whence everything came. Despite rather glaring theological and philosophical complications in this reasoning, its foundational premise is at best unfounded, and at worst at odds with established science - that some things do indeed come from nothing, without prior cause.
The much-loved intuitions of causality (every event has a cause) and simultaneity (two events are separated by a fixed and unalterable length time) have also taken a beating by science, but that's a topic for another day. Or today. I'm easy![]()
Well, I think you know me well enough in the short time we have spoken that I believe God created all things out of nothing. So I am not attempting to slip that in a sly way. I just want to know what science answer to that question is and you opinions as well as it is a fascinating thought for a Christian or non Christian alike.
Like sandwiches said, QM is not friendly to common-sense. Reality is what it is, regardless of those truths are comfortable or even comprehensible.
Yes, it definitely goes against generalized common sense.
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