Quote:
Originally Posted by Mutt
If the answer is 'nothing', define 'nothing' and how can something come from nothing?
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The answer isn't 'nothing' in the sense that you understand 'nothing' within the context of our universe. This, thankfully, allows you to state that something can come from 'nothing' simply because it is only our universe that we know for a fact is bound by the process of cause and effect.
You cannot think of concepts outside of our universe using restrictions that can only be proven to exist in our universe.
If A, then B > A, therefore B
Is only logical within the context of how things function in our physical surroundings. Outside of our universe? Who knows and, more to the point, who can prove it?
tl;dr: the inability for 'something' to come from 'nothing' is a boundary attached to our universe and thus, it is incorrect to assume outside of our universe this is the case.