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If you agree that the laws of physics can not be broken, and one of these laws states that nothing in this universe can be created or destroyed on an atomic level (atoms), then the begining of time must have created everything as we know it, correct? And when no more life exists in the universe, what will happen to the 'matter' since it is then obsolete?

2006-07-08 09:37:03 · 6 answers · asked by Jerad Maplethorpe 1 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

6 answers

this is simple every one ask s this question.
After nothing there is nothing which is 0+0+0=0
There fore there most always be a 1.
All matter started from 1 which may or may not be 1 alone it may be things existing for always. So something will exist for always there you go.

2006-07-08 10:18:01 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

First, matter can be created and destroyed. Haven't you ever heard of atomic energy?
Second, Matter will not be obsolete just because there is no life. The laws of physics do not depend on "life"

2006-07-08 09:47:50 · answer #2 · answered by October 7 · 0 0

I don't think time needs a beginning or an end, but rather time is just there. We may measure it in seconds, hours, days etc. but the start and end are both obsolete. Think about this...Take a second and divide it in half. You have .5 of a second now. Now take half of .5 and you have .25 now do it again...and again...and again...and again and you will see that there is an infinite space between everything(this niffy trick works for everything, try measurements) Nothing reaches zero...the start and the end of almost everything. When there is no life, the rock we call earth will just remain in orbit until the sun burns out, but who cares...we wont see that...;)

2006-07-08 09:46:05 · answer #3 · answered by mhf119 1 · 0 0

who says atoms can't be made up of even smaller particles?
I don't think this question is suitable for a website, since uh, if anyone knew the answer, then the rest of the world would already know, and you wouldn't be asking it. And if there is a solitary person or two who figured out the answer and decided to keep it to themselves, why would they tell you the answer?

2006-07-08 09:52:32 · answer #4 · answered by bow_to_da_maxter 2 · 0 0

Hey I can blow your mind even further. Sub atomic particles can now be so divided that there is apparently NOTHING left in other words NO MATTER at all. All we can know is that we can know nothing. Remember Des Carte's "Cogito ergo sum" - "I think therefore I am". Well, it maybe should be restated, "Cogito cogito ergo cogito sum" - I THINK I think, therefore I THINK I am".

2006-07-08 09:45:45 · answer #5 · answered by ckswife 6 · 0 0

Time isn't matter. Therefore, that law doesn't apply.

2006-07-08 09:40:44 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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