Wizard wrote:My position is not a 'guess' inasmuch the "Big Bang Theory" is also a guess.
Your wording is denigration. As-if you have any evidence or proof of the Big Bang? No, you merely repeat what scientists tell you. Did you do any of the reasoning/experimentation yourself? Probably not.
Again it is much simpler to grant the premise that the universe is infinite, not expanding, and then see where this reasoning+logic takes us.
It solves too many "scientific" problems in one fell swoop. The problem is this—science is too ingrained in its BBT postulation. Similar to how Roman Catholics and general Christianity is too ingrained in Creationism.
But this is all anti-philosophical. This is a philosophy forum. So everybody should agree with me, not science, not religion.
Side with reason.
I do side with reason, which is why I more trust the expertise of serious researchers to an anonymous person on an internet forum. Renegades may make the breakthroughs but the strength of the human race has come from shared accumulated knowledge, which requires at least some trust of others' expertise.
Still, like you, I have done my own speculating, some of which I have now mentioned twice on this thread but seemingly yet to hit the mark. However, not only does all the math and observations point to a beginning and end - at least of what we call the universe today - but it strikes me as intuitively more logical than anything else I've heard. After all, everything else is subject to entropy and has a beginning and an end, so why not the universe?
Once we thought we lived on a flat Earth surrounded by a canopy of stars. Gradually we broadened our conception to realise that our solar system is a minuscule part of a vast galaxy. Then we found that there are billions of galaxies. So I figure there's a decent chance that our conception will be expanded again, and String Theory suggests that the Universe is just one amongst many.
This raises the question of defining "universe". As I've said here before, the title may be a misnomer, given that "universe" is supposed to mean
everything, not just a vast array of galaxies and dark matter and energy amongst billions of other such entities. M-theorists refer to this larger entity containing the theoretical billions of "universes" unglamorously as The Bulk. For the purposes of this conversation, I have referred to the Universe as per the common conception, not The Bulk.
For all I know, The Bulk is eternal, and that intuitively fits for me but, again, it can only be guesswork.
The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated—Gandhi.