Thoughts are not of material matter

The Law of “necessity and sufficiency”
It is a mathematical logical function. Nothing demands an equal and opposite condition of Something.

This is going to get really close to religion and was my original attempt to find an equation that explains the notion of a creator agency (God).

I ended up with the idea of an eternal logical truth that “relational values” must react via generic mathematical functions.

I found this interesting treatise;

Did physical reality (spacetime) begin to exist?

Did the Universe—or all physical reality—begin to exist? Does the whole of space-time have an interval prior to which no temporally located event can exist?

  • Universe / Physical reality = def. All of contiguous space and time with its boundary points and contents.
  • Begin to exist = def. A state of affairs begins to exist if and only if there is a time-dependent state A, and at least one finite interval or point of time X, such that A does not occur prior to X.1

General Relativity’s Big Bang from nothing model is true

General relativity is true or adequate, describing with sufficient accuracy the full birth and growth of space from a singularity.

See this page to analyze 3 arguments

This is relevant because,

“If we push backwards far enough, we find that the universe reaches a state of compression where the density and gravitational force are infinite. This unique singularity constitutes the beginning of the universe—of matter, energy, space, time, and all physical laws. It is not that the universe arose out of some prior state, for there was no prior state. Since time also comes to exist, one cannot ask what happened before the initial event. Neither should one think that the universe expanded from some state of infinite density into space; space too came to be in that event. Since the Big Bang initiates the very laws of physics, one cannot expect any scientific or physical explanation of this singularity.” [Bruce Reichenbach, “Cosmological Arguments,” in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2017)]

more… A debate simulator for analyzing Christianity's 5 big claims