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Author | Topic: The expanding Universe and Galactic collisions | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Taz Member (Idle past 3319 days) Posts: 5069 From: Zerus Joined: |
Spektical writes:
No, it's a dimension. This is why we say space-time, not just space.
Time is not a tangible thing It should be applied to anything.
Yes, because everything that we know of is bounded by space-time.
But if the universe always existed, then time is irrelevant and non-existant.
Can you explain how you arrived at this? I'm having trouble following your logic. Disclaimer: Occasionally, owing to the deficiency of the English language, I have used he/him/his meaning he or she/him or her/his or her in order to avoid awkwardness of style. He, him, and his are not intended as exclusively masculine pronouns. They may refer to either sex or to both sexes!
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Spektical Member (Idle past 6005 days) Posts: 119 Joined: |
what is the definition of matter?
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Spektical Member (Idle past 6005 days) Posts: 119 Joined: |
Can you explain how you arrived at this? I'm having trouble following your logic. You said that time is something that belongs to the universe, just like the north pole belongs to the earth. However time does not denote a location or co-ordinate, it denotes itself really. In other words the north pole exists as opposed to the south pole or the equator or the tropic of cancer. You're also saying that the north pole can only be applied to the earth, which means you're limiting yourself to the confines of the earth itself. My question considers that if the universe is in fact expanding in a particular direction, an outward one, then this implies a beginning which denotes a point in time (t=0). But t=0 only applies to the UNIVERSE, not anything BEFORE that. Thus time is eternal and there is no beginning. Edited by Spektical, : No reason given.
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Rahvin Member Posts: 4042 Joined: Member Rating: 7.7 |
Yes I understand. So just as the north pole is a characteristic of the earth, time is a characteristic of 'this' universe. More like the way length, width, and height are characteristics of the Universe, but yes.
However, this implies that just like the earth, the universe is a quantified closed system of a different quality. No, it doesn't, because the Earth is not a closed system. If you mean that the similarity is "North/South is to Earth as Time is to the Universe," I suppose that's a good enough approximation, and you could say that those specific directions (North/South/East/West) are "closed in reference to the Earth as time and the other dimensions are closed in reference to the Universe. I'm not sure what you mean when you say "of different quality," or that the system is "quantified," however. The Universe encompasses all that exists - that's it's definition (and of course the Universe is a closed system). Other Universes have been hypothesized, most popularly through Brane Theory, but that particular theory is a mathematical hypothesis only. We lack the technology to test any predictions from the hypothesis, and so the existence of other Universes is more of a thought exercise than anything else.
Is it the same as comparing a hydrogen atom to the earth? I'm not sure what you're getting at here, either. A hydrogen atom can be part of the Earth, but it's not a basic property of the Earth like dimensions are of the Universe. Every time a fundy breaks the laws of thermodynamics, Schroedinger probably kills his cat.
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Kitsune Member (Idle past 4328 days) Posts: 788 From: Leicester, UK Joined: |
Does that help? That's beautifully worded. You should be writing textbooks LOL.
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Rahvin Member Posts: 4042 Joined: Member Rating: 7.7 |
what is the definition of matter? ...anything that has mass and takes up space.
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Spektical Member (Idle past 6005 days) Posts: 119 Joined: |
so space can exist without matter?
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Rahvin Member Posts: 4042 Joined: Member Rating: 7.7 |
You said that time is something that belongs to the universe, just like the north pole belongs to the earth. However time does not denote a location or co-ordinate, it denotes itself really. In other words the north pole exists as opposed to the south pole or the equator or the tropic of cancer. You're also saying that the north pole can only be applied to the earth, which means you're limiting yourself to the confines of the earth itself. The North Pole is to direction as the singularity is to Time. Asking "what is North of the North Pole" is just as meaningless as "What was the Universe like before the singularity." Time is not the pole, it's the direction - it's just another dimension like width and height." And of course we are limiting the North/South comparison to Earth - North/South/East/West are directions that exist solely on a planetary body that possesses a magnetic field, like Earth.
My question considers that if the universe is in fact expanding in a particular direction, an outward one, then this implies a beginning which denotes a point in time (t=0). Yes. That's exactly how we extrapolate the existence of the singularity.
But t=0 only applies to the UNIVERSE, not anything BEFORE that. Again, "before the Universe" is inherently contradictory. The Universe is inclusive of time - asking what came "before" is like asking where a circle begins. The question is meaningless, because at T=0, time has no more meaning than the length or width of a single point. Think Geometry. Time is just another one of the lines like height, width, and length that intersect to describe the set of our Universe. It's only difficult to comprehend because we can only move one-way linearly through time, but can move through the spacial dimensions at will.
Thus time is eternal and there is no beginning. Kind of. This is the sort of thing best described by mathematics, not the English language, and so any description we can offer is base metaphor. The words "always" and "eternal" typically mean "for all of time," which means something that is eternal exists at every point on the line we could use to represent time. Saying "time is eternal" is like saying "length is infinitely long." That's true, but the English language suggests terms like the word "before" that simply don't exist in this case. "What came before T=0" is exactly like asking "What is shorter than a single point?" Every time a fundy breaks the laws of thermodynamics, Schroedinger probably kills his cat.
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Rahvin Member Posts: 4042 Joined: Member Rating: 7.7 |
so space can exist without matter? Of course. Atoms, in fact, are mostly empty space that contains no matter or energy. Simply space. Every time a fundy breaks the laws of thermodynamics, Schroedinger probably kills his cat.
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Rahvin Member Posts: 4042 Joined: Member Rating: 7.7 |
That's beautifully worded. You should be writing textbooks LOL. Thanks!
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Spektical Member (Idle past 6005 days) Posts: 119 Joined: |
"What was the Universe like before the singularity." But I wasn't asking this. I am asking what was before the singularity. Did the singularity itself exist in an environment? What I am suggesting is infinte largeness as well as infinte smallness.
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Spektical Member (Idle past 6005 days) Posts: 119 Joined: |
So did the singularity take up space? And you do have talent for explaining things
Edited by Spektical, : No reason given.
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Rahvin Member Posts: 4042 Joined: Member Rating: 7.7 |
But I wasn't asking this. I am asking what was before the singularity. Did the singularity itself exist in an environment? The singularity is the environment. It's the Universe. There is nothing "outside" of the Universe - by definition, it encompasses all that exists, including the whole of the dimensions time, width, height, and length. Asking "what came before the singularity" is asking "what was the Universe like before the singularity."
What I am suggesting is infinte largeness as well as infinte smallness. Infinite largeness and infinite smallness approaches the problem - as you could guess, math can break down when certain values are either infinite or zero (for speed, for instance, time can be neither). The singularity was an infinitely small point, so small that all four dimensions we are consciously aware of were equal to 0. Think Geometry again. A point is dimensionless, and this is why the singularity is so mysterious and interesting - our math breaks down, and we lose our ability to mathematically model its conditions. At t=0, you could simultaneously say that the singularity existed forever, and for only an infinitely small moment. Every time a fundy breaks the laws of thermodynamics, Schroedinger probably kills his cat.
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Rahvin Member Posts: 4042 Joined: Member Rating: 7.7 |
So did the singularity take up space? And you do have talent for explaining things Thanks! As to your answer, again, think of Geometry. We have lines, which denote one dimension, planes, which denote two...and points, which have zero dimensions. The singularity was a single, dimensionless point, where all dimensions were equal to zero. So no, the singularity had no space - that's the whole point. The expansion of space backwards leads us to the point where space was, essentially, nothing, with all that exists occupying the same, single point at once. Every time a fundy breaks the laws of thermodynamics, Schroedinger probably kills his cat.
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Spektical Member (Idle past 6005 days) Posts: 119 Joined: |
So the singularity is, and always was until it decided to expand? How's that?
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