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the expansion of the singularity, was nothing before that, and if so, what would be your thoughts on the meaning of "nothing"?

2007-09-15 18:49:14 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

or what "nothing" is.

2007-09-15 18:53:21 · update #1

6 answers

Nothing isn't anything. There's nothing to "mean" anything. No space or time, no anything. It's the same nothing that exists north of the north pole, the same nothing that you see behind your head or that you remember before you were born, or the integer between 1 and 2.

2007-09-16 00:31:20 · answer #1 · answered by ZikZak 6 · 0 0

nothing is the absences of everything
and if I'm not mistaken... there was something before the big bang... everything in this universe was compressed into about the area of a atom
at least thats what the scientific community thinks

2007-09-16 02:01:09 · answer #2 · answered by pokerfaces55 5 · 0 1

Yes, that's true. There was nothing before that. No energy, no mass, no light, no space, no time, no nothing.

Doug

2007-09-16 02:04:00 · answer #3 · answered by doug_donaghue 7 · 1 0

With regard to pre-Big Bang, 'nothing' = an infinite and absolute void.

2007-09-16 01:57:32 · answer #4 · answered by Chug-a-Lug 7 · 0 1

nothing is something. If there is nothing, there must be something as nothing is the something that contains nothing which is therefore something and so on...

2007-09-16 02:18:31 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

that's deep

2007-09-16 01:57:16 · answer #6 · answered by Lollipop 5 · 0 0

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