Let me start by saying that you are raising a question that minds far greater than mine - and I will politely suggest far greater than yours too - have struggled with for millennia.
I basically agree with what you are saying, although I think some nuances and other information is helpful. First, I believe that the laws of quantum mechanics really do allow for the possibility that the universe - time, space, and matter (the whole deal) - really can spring into existence from literally nothing. However, and I believe Stephen Hawking acknowledges this, there is still the mystery of explaining how the very principles of quantum mechanics themselves came into existence. As Hawking has written "who put the fire in the equations".
I certainly do think that human beings cannot, repeat cannot, conceive of an "effect" without an antecedent cause. However, we should be careful to be aware of the possibility that this may be a fundamental boundary on the nature of human thinking, and not necessarily some "law" that nature herself has to respect.
If you have a void, there is not space, time, material, nothing, you have nothing and it will be constantly be nothing infinitely. To think that a void can create something is unreasonable and it is such thinking that caused Atheists to ridicule those who claimed to believe in God without factual evidence.
Let's not negate reasonableness in our thinking, as to do so would be to make us unreasonable. Let's use facts to establish what we think, or else why are we discussing anything? If something can exist independently of consciousness, you and I cannot accept it as reality: as there would be no you and I. You and I cannot conceive of anything without first existing and so our existence is essential to the equation.
Should we create our theories upon unreasonable grounds, because we just believe it by faith: without any reasonable evidence what so ever? Can we have popped into existence from a void? Again I state: there must be an eternal first cause that has always been, in order for anything to exist; why is this simple truth so hard to understand and accept? It is reasonable and sound and to reject it, is to reject reason as a construct of theorization.
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