So, you simultaneously reject the "big bang" theory and the creation myth from most major religions?
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Not at all, quite the opposite and that's me point. No matter what model you choose, "something" has always been there. On the big bang, "everything" was already here just not in it's present state. Sure, it'll all coast to a stop, mountains crumble etc but you're looking at only a portion. If the mountain crumbles, "something" will still be there, same thing with a burnt out star. Just because it's state changes doesn't mean it's nothing. I've never stated either model never changes, I said "something" has always been there. "Something" doesn't have to be in or stay in it's present form to qualify that statement. No "matter" ( pun intended) if it was in a big hot cloud or something the size of a dot, the theory states it was always there, it doesn't state that it was in it's present form and will be forever.
All life comes from life and is powered by some form of energy. Forget about creation for a moment, where did this energy come from? No, not the gases in space, how did the gases get the energy the posses to begin with? Atomic? Where did the atoms get the energy in them from to begin with? You can get something from nothing so whatever energy source there is to used and burn out has always been there even if it doesn't last forever.
Major theism states the same thing, "something" has always been here. "Nothing" doesn't exist in either model, "something" had always been there from the beginning.
If you agree infinity exists mathematically you therefore unwillingly acknowledge time without end. Time and math co exist and there is absolutely no way to separate the two. If you can count numbers and never run out, you can count seconds and never run out of numbers. The square root of negative one doesn't limit counting positive numbers towards infinity so that example doesn't fit.
I don't dismiss a starting point in time, I merely state that no matter where you start with time, it still never ends. if no one is there to count time, does that mean that it stops? If time does stop because there is nothing to count it and never will be again, isn't that in itself an eternity?
The only thing I said about space is don't get me started on it. :wink:
There may be an end to space but that is completely unrelated to the measure of time.
Space is the measure of volume or distance, time is the measure of past, present and future; two completely different dimensions.
My garage being full has nothing to do with the fact that it's 3:15:17 PM...18....19....20