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by mg 1481 days ago
My feeling is that there is no such thing as a "minimal configuration" when it comes to universes.

Because there is no way to evaluate how "minimal" a configuration is.

No matter which elementary property you assume the universe to have, one would have to ask "Is that a complex thing?". Is gravity complex? Is an electron complex?

1 comments

This reminds me of all the episodes of Closer to Truth[1] about the question "Why is there something rather than nothing?" He's absolutely relentless with that question, over two decades now, asking every single famous philosopher, mathematician and scientist he can find. Here's one from around Season 3 around 2009[2], another from season 12[3] a few years ago and so on.

1. https://www.youtube.com/c/CloserToTruthTV

2. https://youtu.be/cfmewf2DoKU

3. https://youtu.be/YkB-phz_2cA

This question is maybe the deepest of them all. What a great project, can't wait to check these videos out.

My understanding of an answer I've heard is along these lines:

If there is truly nothing then that means there are also no bounds/limits/rules, which means there is nothing stopping everything from being. Out of nothing comes the boundless cornucopia of existence, from complete lack of constraints that is nothingness.