To be philosophical you can perhaps ask: when you go north, and you keep going north, eventually you will reach the (true) north pole, what is north from there?Due to the nature of the big bang and the singularity there's no possible way to know. It is physically impossible to "see" beyond that point about 14b years ago.
Is this a satisfactory answer? Most likely not. Does it make the answer less true*? No.
This does however not mean, indicate or proof that the universe - or existance in general - is cyclic.
In fact the current consensus is that the universe won't stop expanding and may lead to an event called Big Freeze.
*Albeit it is actually a bit more complicated but to explain this is beyond my knowledge of astrophysics, quantum mechanics and general relativity.
What was before the Big Bang then?
I think most of it's followers acknowledge the cyclic nature of the Universe
Of course you know it is wrong
Any evaluations of the mass of the Universe, dark matter or the amount of dark energy are actually, in our state of scientific knowledge, the same funny fairy tales like the Greek Mythology![]()
Why?
Enlighten me then, please...
I only referred to the OP's thread main theme![]()
You forgot to add "with current level of development of Science".The big bang stats with a singularity, where the equations we use to understand the universe break down. We have good reason to belive that such an event reomoves all the information contained and thus there is no possible way to know what happended before.
So and nothing can be ruled out...
You forgot to add "with current level of development of Science".
We don't know which inventions and discoveries await us even in near future.
Radiation is a very recent discovery. But if you'd tell someone from two enturies ago that invisible death rays exist - you'll be claimed madman.
Electricity is known for ages byt became manageable and exloitable relatively recently too. But the concept of electricity transfer over wires looked blasphemous at the very least some five centuries ago.
Maybe we'll become able to handle Big Bang eventually.
I think here technical terminology and scientific terminology disagree. The big bang, when is that? Is it everything before the CMB (cosmic microwave background) shines out, or is it only after inflation but before the CMB? Is it the time before inflation starts?The Big Bang being a singularity or even the start of the universe are no longer mainstream concepts in physics. Since observations contradicts the possibly that the Big Bang could be one. Inflation Big Bang is what is commonly accepted these days. As for what happened before, we simply have no concrete ideas, which doesn't mean there was nothing btw. Just that we don't know; because we cannot observe it.
But they are a few theories for those interested.
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There Was No Big Bang Singularity
It's one of the biggest assumptions we've ever made about the Universe. Here's why it's wrong.www.forbes.com
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The Big Bang Wasn't The Beginning, After All
In the beginning, there was light, and matter, and antimatter, in an expanding and cooling Universe. But something else happened before.www.forbes.com
Well we don't seem to have physics for an uninflated universe, so I don't know how to know that it didn't break the arrow of time. Or any other laws of physics.The Big Bang is point of origin of the observable universe. Before the inflation started. What it is and when it was is not really known. Roughly 13.8 billions years ago is the best answer you're going to get.
The point was it not being a singularity means physics doesn't break down and so it cannot be the start of the universe or of space time either. There was an universe before the Big Bang. We have no idea what the universe looked before the Big Bang tough as we cannot see that far yet. Who knows? Perhaps one day we could extract quantum informations from particles and get a better picture of the early stages of the modern universe and perhaps of times even beyond.
The Aboriginals of Australia, the hundreds or thousands of nations of them might have a unique perspective on this. I have no idea what it might be.So I was poking around in some early mythologies and some other early writings, and wondered to what extent did old civilizations embrace the idea of "destruction".
Most (not all) civs - Egyptians, Greeks, Babylonians, Hebrews, Norse, Hindu - have some sort of the story of "Creation", the beginning of the world.
Creation stories are not always dependent on a Creator. In some mythologies, Creation is an intelligent act by some creator god yes. But in many cases the World just appears without explanation.
Curiously, most mythologies I've come across do envisage a remarkably similar pre-creation universe being a vast, dark, watery mess ("chaos"). Then either a god (or gods) bring order to it, and "create" the world. Alternatively, a bit of land just spontaneously emerges somehow from the water, then gods come into being, and the rest of creation follows.
The pre-creation "watery chaos" rests on what seems like a general presumption of many ancient people that the sky is made of water. I mean the sky is big and blue, looks a bit look a heavenly ocean. And we all know water comes down as rain. So it seems obvious there is "water up there" that leaks occasionally. Many posit that the world we are living in is some kind of land & air pocket between two oceans - one below us, one above us. So Creation often explains how that land pocket in the watery chaos came about, and "inserting" ourselves in it.
But that aside, what I'm more curious about is just as there is "Creation", is there "Destruction"? If the World has a beginning, does it also have an end?
This is a little harder to tell. I mean there are a lots of mythologies that talk about mass death of humans or even life on Earth - in some Great Flood or cataclysm by some angry Deity and the like. But I don't seem to come across myths of a clearly predicted end to the Earth itself. That is the destruction of this little earth mound & air pocket.
The ancients were clearly aware land is not constant. Mountains are eroded by wind and rain, landfalls from cliffs into the sea. Volcanoes, earthquakes and tsunamis are real and change the landscape. But following that observation, land of God's good earth is constantly being gradually lost. Does it get to a point where all land is eventually swept into the sea and disappears? Is there an "end of the world"? Just as it came from watery chaos, will it return to watery chaos?
Aristotle is bit tricky. For him, everything is biological - earth, planets, everything is to be compared to a living organism. Yet living organisms decay and die. Does the Earth die? In his Meteorology he is clearly aware that there are "signs of decay" - erosion and the like. But he posits optimistically that unlike animals or plants, decay on Earth is not a sign of impending doom of the whole. The decay in certain parts is counter-balanced by rejuvenation in other parts. Old mountains may disappear in one place, but new mountains "appear" in another place (doesn't explain how). So on the whole Earth persists - and will persist eternally.
But I've come across allegations that this optimism was uniquely Aristotleian. That other Greek schools (apparently Stoics & Epicureans) were convinced the Earth will "die". That these "signs of decay" are irreversible signs of the looming eventual death of the Earth. It is not that they think time or world ends altogether, but rather that it periodically destroys itself entirely, and re-creates itself entirely. But I can't find sources with details about that.
Cycles of death & re-creation seems to me to be a theme that is touched upon by many world religions. Clearly with humans - upon death, humans travel to an afterlife, or are resurrected or re-born. If they think about the world by analogy to a living organism, they would naturally also believe that Earth goes through a similar death & re-creation cycle. But I don't really find examples of that clearly articulated anywhere.
I was wondering if anybody had come across this kind of stuff, whether in mythologies or ancient writings. Creation myths are all over the place, but doom myths are a little scantier. I was just curious as to if and how they envisaged the End of the World.
Well there's at least one law that would be different - the one that makes inflation happen isn't currently (very) active. Might be it's the same phenomenon as dark energy, but then it's at an entirely different scale of operation.Well under our current understanding of physics it should not break anything.
Singularity are an exception the same way dividing by 0 is very different from dividing by a very tiny number that is not 0.
And modern astro-physician are pretty confident that the Big Bang was not a singularity.
That doesn't mean that you are wrong tough and that the Big Bang was not ruled by different physical law that now exist in our modern universe. Since we cannot observe pre-inflation, there's no way to know for certain. We can only go with what we know already and theorize from that base, which admittedly has its limitations.
The Aboriginals of Australia, the hundreds or thousands of nations of them might have a unique perspective on this. I have no idea what it might be.
Do not think of it as 'Destruction', think of it as 'Transformation'. The Evil of this world will be wiped away and all that is good shall be saved and take the place of that which has fallen.But that aside, what I'm more curious about is just as there is "Creation", is there "Destruction"? If the World has a beginning, does it also have an end?