| Re: Why? Tesla,
I think the moment we think of the concept of time and space is the moment we create the unresolvable problem you clearly point out, and thinking in those terms can quite literally drive you bananas.
This is partly what scientific logic is about in that they deal with the "real" stuff, and being in that position had no choice but to create the common model that is logical in the relative sense. In other words, the position is one that suggests there was no time or space in "the beginning" and in essense those terms are meaningless. The laws that make time and space possible break down at a certain point relative to our natural laws, and time and space cease to be - there was no "before" because there was no "space" (Planck space mind you) for there to be any correlating "time." |