05-06-2024, 05:03 PM
This post was last modified 05-06-2024, 05:17 PM by IdeomotorPrisoner. 
(05-06-2024, 06:13 AM)CCoburn Wrote: p
A Paradoxical Fork in the Road
When existence is reduced to a most fundamental extreme there remains two choices unless of course there is a third that for some reason I am not currently privy:
1. Something from nothing. (absurdity one)
2. Ever-flowing time. (absurdity two)
The first proposition attempts to resolve the problem of infinite regression in the form of a spatiotemporal negation, but is this absolutely necessary? And is it possible that it may just be a periodic/sporadic spatial negation in the presence of never-ending time?
The second proposition hypothesizes that time may not require a beginning from which to progress forward, but that there may exist some unknown eternal anomaly that somehow governs time in a way that transcends conventional logic and reason?
A God anomaly could most certainly be the case in either proposition, but in proposition one there would be an emergence factor constituting a primordial anomaly whereas in proposition two time would be indistinguishable from eternity thus rendering this "eternal anomaly".
Any preferences here or other possibilities unintentionally overlooked?
I don't like eating by own tail like a disabled snake, so what's wrong with God = Infinity? They are both pretty much an imaginary concept that cover alpha to omega to the same degree.
But in Vacuum Genesis there's infinite subspace.
In string theories there are infinities of infinity.
So I guess #2 ever-flowing potential.
Clearly there's more missing. The observable universe is most assuredly finite. But an infinite multiverse or infinite zero point field doesn't bug me, even being a parallel idea to an everlasting God.
I don't think it matters what you call it, the more we learn about the multiverse and beyond, the more it looks like God anyway.
I also find it hilarious that Hindu cosmology turned out to be the best one of all antiquity. Makes every theoretical physicist like a contemporary Sanjay or Arjuna viewing the avatars of the infinite, which looks nothing like a nuclear explosion.