What is the Universe expanding into..

Do you think there was anything before the big bang?

  • I don't think there was anything before the Big Bang

    Votes: 56 12.5%
  • I think something existed before the Big Bang

    Votes: 200 44.7%
  • I don't think the big bang happened

    Votes: 54 12.1%
  • I think the universe is part of a mutiverse

    Votes: 201 45.0%

  • Total voters
    447
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I don't think think is possible. 'Infinity' is by definition the size that is larger than all other possible sizes (or numbers, or whatever).
So if you have two infinities, either they are the same size and then there really is only one, or they are not the same size. In the latter case, one is larger than the other, and that other is thus by definition not infinity.

I think.

Jan

Could a dimension be infinite? Or would infinity require a group of dimensions to exist?
ie time is infinite <<<>>>space is infinite.. 😕 are they the same infinity?

With time we seem to have an infinite which is not tangible.

The assumption is both time and space are infinite perhaps they aren't? But then where is the universe? (everywhere?)
Reminds me of the song your everywhere and nowhere baby..

If something is infinite then it can't theoretically be anywhere can it? (wherever you ask the question is part of itself)

The infinite something might not be the universe but as before like the layers of an onion after the last layer what comes next?
It seems there would have to be a final everything..

Regards
M. Gregg
 
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Just a scary thought,

If something is infinite and is the only infinite then it can't exist somewhere can it? it can only exist within itself..(so does it exist?)
I'm beginning to wonder if you thought of the answer everything would vanish and the wave front would collapse LOL (vanished in a puff of logic)

Its obviously wrong..😀 :scratch1:

Regards
M.Gregg
 
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So if you have two infinities, either they are the same size and then there really is only one,
or they are not the same size. In the latter case, one is larger than the other, and that other
is thus by definition not infinity

There are denumerable infinities (countable, like the integers or rational numbers), and nondenumerable
infinities (not possible to count in a systematic way, like the set of real numbers). Georg Cantor discovered
that a nondenumerable infinity is "larger" than a denumerable infinity. No matter how you systematically
"count" a nondenumerable infinity, there are always numbers that you will miss, in fact an infinity of them.
See the "diagonalisation argument".
 
Could a dimension be infinite? Or would infinity require a group of dimensions to exist?
ie time is infinite <<<>>>space is infinite.. 😕 are they the same infinity?

With time we seem to have an infinite which is not tangible.

The assumption is both time and space are infinite perhaps they aren't? But then where is the universe? (everywhere?)
Reminds me of the song your everywhere and nowhere baby..

If something is infinite then it can't theoretically be anywhere can it? (wherever you ask the question is part of itself)

The infinite something might not be the universe but as before like the layers of an onion after the last layer what comes next?
It seems there would have to be a final everything..

Regards
M. Gregg

Well 'infinite' doesn't exist in itself - you either have 'infinite time', or 'infinite size' or 'infinite distance' etc. Saying that the universe is infinite generally implies to mean 'infinite size'.

So you can't very meaningful discuss issue of infinity unless you specify 'infinite what'.

Jan
 
There are denumerable infinities (countable, like the integers or rational numbers), and nondenumerable
infinities (not possible to count in a systematic way, like the set of real numbers). Georg Cantor discovered
that a nondenumerable infinity is "larger" than a denumerable infinity. No matter how you systematically
"count" a nondenumerable infinity, there are always numbers that you will miss, in fact an infinity of them.
See the "diagonalisation argument".

Yes, but these are sort of philosophical constructs for the sake of setting up a consistent framework of thinking. It does not mean that it is mirrored in reality (whatever THAT is).

Jan
 
Could the universe be infinitely large but not infinitely old? Or vice versa?

I wonder.

The problem seems to be..anything that has a start point like a singularity cannot be infinite. Like expansion cannot be infinite size.

Infinite and size are diametrically opposed..its either infinite or has size..It cannot by definition be both at the same time.

The observable universe seems to be finite...so something else beyond would have to be infinite..(no barrier, no size, no end, and no start)
Theoretically life also if it was eternal would have to be the same..(no barrier, no size, no end, and no start) and would not be part of a finite universe.

Regards
M. Gregg
 
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