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- nothingness - Does something necessarily come from nothing . . .
Throughout the history of time, it has been almost everyone’s intuition that something cannot come from nothing That intuition is so strong that many can’t even imagine this to be false But would
- What is nothing? - Philosophy Stack Exchange
5 Krauss' definition of nothing is the result of the allergy contemporary physicists get from philosophy; the philosopher David Albert posted a crushing criticism of the book in response and started a terrible fight: Where, for starters, are the laws of quantum mechanics themselves supposed to have come from?
- How can something come from nothing? - Philosophy Stack Exchange
The question should be 'How can something come out of nothing' not 'Why cannot something come out of nothing' Stephen Hawkings has recently argued as to how the universe can come out of nothing, but to my mind his argument is rather circular and it's not provable
- metaphysics - What is nothing - Philosophy Stack Exchange
How can nothing be real? The basic concept of nothing is the lack of something, so in that statement alone it makes it something The bible says that in the beginning there was a void and nothing
- logic - Can something be nothing? - Philosophy Stack Exchange
Yet even though nothing is something, something is something in itself, and therefore can not be nothing This could also apply to "Can something be anything (or everything)?"
- What happens when nothing happens? - Philosophy Stack Exchange
Nothing is the negation of logical categories, defined by context 'I'm doing nothing' would involve many biological processes, but a specific contextually relevant negation of say, intentional acts or activities of certain kinds, as given by implicit cues 'Happening' implies something interacting, changing
- Is there a philosophy which argues that nothing exists?
Is or was there a philosophy which examines a hypothesis that in fact nothing "exists" except maybe questions? I know there are philosophies that state that reality is a simulation etc but I mean
- Is Nothing actually imaginable? - Philosophy Stack Exchange
Sometimes, answers are simple Nothing cannot be imagined because one does not imagine absences of anything, only things (which may lack something, but then you are merely imagining a thing without another thing) @SAHornickel - Not imagining anything is not the same as imagining nothing Imagining-something is an act with an object, while a lack of imagining-something is not an act, and is
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