We as humans know little about what nothing is. Technically we have never encountered nothing. Personally I think the universe exists in a infinate void of nothing that God (existing in another deminsion where time and space mean nothing) created it. I have a theory about what nothing is. First off, think about the color black. According to our brains there is nothing there. If a black ball was on a table, to our brains there is a void in the table where nothing exists. But we know this is not true, we know something is there because we use other sences and common sence to tell a ball is on the table. Our brain thinks there is nothing there because light is not being bounced back to our eyes. In fact not only is there nothing on the table but everything (everything being all wavelengths of light). Same thing goes for nothing. There isn’t no matter or energy outside of the universe in this void, but all raw ingredients of matter and energy. This void the universe is in is what God used to create the universe. He did not create matter and energy out of nothing to create the universe. God put order to the chaos of nothing. Don’t think I’m says God used already existing materials other than himself to create the universe. I’m saying that this is the nature of nothing, it is in fact everything (leaving nothing left to perceive). The reason nothing is everything is only because God is there is perceive it.
Welcome, CAK:
When you say, “
This void the universe is in is what God used to create the universe. He did not create matter and energy out of nothing to create the universe,” don’t you think that such a conception of the beginning reduces Creation to something that seems to have to have something pre-existing it and added to it? (I’m not talking about God either.)
I mention this because it is the Christian perspective on Creation that God created not "out of nothing,’ but rather, “where there was absolutely nothing.” So, instead of having a sort of substance from which to create from - as is the case with causation - God conceived the universe and it came to be, a very different and extraordinary effort.
Now, let’s say that rather than there being some
place where a void existed, some place wherein God could do his work, let’s say that God
is existing nothingness. Further, let’s say that God is
Infinite Nothingness. Let’s further say that Infinite Nothingness, or continuous space, like Spiritual substance, is that which we can’t sense or stub our toe on. In other words, whereby continuous space ( a/k/a nothingness) and spirit are at least analogously, if not exactly, identical? Here we have a quandary of “words” - a quandary of words which we must get past, but we have only our limitations of language to support us.
If we could but get past our predilection-via-ignorance that “nothingness” must have this deleterious, super-negative connotation, we might be able to think of Infinite Nothingness as analogous to Spirit, or rather, as equivalent (in some way) to Infinite Substance.
There has always been a perennial problem, which is that between philosophical and religious language (besides the normal, everyday language difficulties). God is not space - however, within space is God. God is not living bodies - however, within living bodies (as well as everything else) is God. God is not magnitude - however, infinity implies magnitude - especially when one juxtaposes it with Omnipresence. (Our problem with the word,“magnitude,” is that it implies parts, regions, places, etc., whereas infinity does not.) When we say God is “without limits,” aren’t we including his omnipresence?
Consider the size of our universe. If God does not permeate it, then he is outside of it. If he is outside of it, he is thereby limited. If he is thought to be something other than that which permeates it and is coterminous with it, then he is nonetheless outside of it and nonetheless limited - or, the word being used is a synonym. This points out another problem, that being the problem between philosophico-religious language and scientific language. If certain thick-skulled individuals herein would take the time to read my thread called,
Space, or Yppop’s thread called,
God exists, but how? one would see that these threads are not apologetics for pantheism.
God bless,
jd