Something cant come from nothing
This is merely for me, based on that theory
Has there been anyone who came up with the theory that, there is no such thing as nothing, rather something we can't see?
Just want information, no arguments
July 24, 2012
12 Comments • Newest first
[quote=ghostme]Something can't come from Nothing
Does that mean "Nothing can come from Something?"[/quote]
According to Richard Dawkins yes, matter and anti matter
what we see in our faces, is air...
Back a few centuries ago
People believed in Spontaneous Generation
Which says life will form out of nothing
But of course disproved, and we know that isn't true amiright
Something can't come from Nothing
Does that mean "Nothing can come from Something?"
We don't know if it came from nothing.
Maybe our universe is just a white hole or maybe just the product of two other universes colliding with each other.
[quote=Instinct]@33ask11: No, but seriously. In most schools, its taught that there was nothing before the Big Bang, so I take it thats the norm these days. But without nothing, its then 'impossible' for anything to have formed, so I'd guess there'd be something.[/quote]
lol yea but what im saying is ... sorry if this is rude but im not asking opinions, im just looking for a scientist who works on the idea itself, is there a certain someone who taught this?
[quote=Instinct]Well, if you're an atheist, there was 'nothing' before the Big Bang. Possibly.
Although, right now, it is somewhat physically impossible to create or have nothing, considering all the limits we know are bounded by the Universe. If there is some 'end' to the universe, then its quite possible there's nothing behind it.[/quote]
not judging you
is this information based on your intelligence, or a scientist, cuz the main point of my thread is for someone to lead me to a scientist who thinks about this idea o.o
@timmybitty: but think about this "physically possible to have nothing" major contradiction o.o
@33ask11:
I've never actually thought of it. It's just I don't think it's physically possible to have nothing. Unless we had a vacuum that could suck up space itself. D:
[quote=timmybitty]I don't think "nothing" is actually possible. I think there's always something.[/quote]
yes thats what im trying to get at, though im not a scientist, so im looking for someone who already pondered upon the idea
I don't think "nothing" is actually possible. I think there's always something.
uhm, how about no.