
Darkover
Archangel
- Jul 29, 2021
- 5,641
At the heart of reality lies a question no science, no religion, no philosophy has fully answered:
Why is there anything at all, rather than nothing?
This is not a casual thought experiment—it's the final wall every explanation crashes into. And if we trace the logic carefully, we arrive at a conclusion that many find unthinkable, but is almost impossible to escape:
Something must have come into existence from nothing.
Here's why.
1. You Cannot Explain Reality with Infinite Regress
Imagine someone asks: "Why does this exist?"
You answer: "Because it was caused by that."
Then they ask: "Okay, but what caused that?"
If this chain of causes continues forever—if every "something" is explained by a prior "something"—you never get an ultimate answer. It's like trying to support a building with an infinite stack of turtles: you never reach the bottom. You never reach solid ground.
Infinite regress explains nothing.
It delays the explanation forever without ever delivering one.
So if existence is real—and it clearly is—then it can't be built on an endless chain. There must be a starting point.
2. That Starting Point Can't Be Another "Thing"
If the origin of reality were just another thing—some particle, some object, some timeless energy—it would still demand an explanation. Where did that thing come from? Why does it exist rather than not exist?
Any "thing" you propose is still part of the problem. It's not a true foundation.
So the starting point of everything can't be another part of reality.
It must be outside the chain entirely.
And the only thing that fits that description is nothing.
3. Nothingness Is the Only Possible Starting Point
True nothingness means:
No matter
No space
No time
No laws
No potential
No existence of any kind
It is the absence of all things—including causes, rules, minds, and mechanisms.
But if at any point nothing truly existed—then it had no power to resist change.
There was no law preventing something from appearing.
Nothingness is the most unstable "state" imaginable—because it is not even a state. There is no law that says "nothing must stay nothing," because there are no laws in nothing.
So eventually, being must emerge—because there is nothing to stop it.
4. This Explains Why Existence Is So Fragile, Temporary, and Violent
Why does life suffer?
Why does matter decay?
Why is consciousness fleeting, and silence the default?
Because this isn't the product of eternal perfection.
This is what happens when nothing ruptures—chaotically, painfully, without design or meaning.
Being isn't inevitable—it's a breach in what should have remained still.
5. Something Must Have Come from Nothing—Because There Was No Other Option
If we accept that the universe had a beginning—and the evidence overwhelmingly supports this—then either:
It came from something else, which leads to infinite regress, or
It came from nothing, which is the only way to stop the chain.
Not because it's emotionally satisfying, but because it's logically necessary.
Existence must begin somewhere.
And the only true beginning is the absence of everything: nothing.
Final Thought
We are the consequence of the impossible.
Not because something else made us—but because nothing didn't stop us.
Something exists now. That is undeniable.
And that means, however unthinkable it sounds:
At some point, something came into existence from absolutely nothing.
Not by miracle. Not by logic. But because there was nothing to prevent it.
And now, we are here—haunted by the silence we came from, and destined to return to it.
Mathematical truths like:
are not dependent on the material universe existing. They're abstract truths—true in any conceivable system where circles exist, regardless of physical manifestation.
So you're pointing out:
And that's a very important distinction.
If something always existed, you always have to ask: what supports that?
But if nothing existed, and then something happened—there's no deeper "why." There's no cause behind the cause.
The emergence of something from nothing is the only option that doesn't rely on anything prior. It's a true origin.
It's not satisfying in the emotional sense—but it's logically terminal.
It goes as deep as explanation can go.
We came from nothing.
And one day, we'll return to it.
Why is there anything at all, rather than nothing?
This is not a casual thought experiment—it's the final wall every explanation crashes into. And if we trace the logic carefully, we arrive at a conclusion that many find unthinkable, but is almost impossible to escape:
Something must have come into existence from nothing.
Here's why.
1. You Cannot Explain Reality with Infinite Regress
Imagine someone asks: "Why does this exist?"
You answer: "Because it was caused by that."
Then they ask: "Okay, but what caused that?"
If this chain of causes continues forever—if every "something" is explained by a prior "something"—you never get an ultimate answer. It's like trying to support a building with an infinite stack of turtles: you never reach the bottom. You never reach solid ground.
Infinite regress explains nothing.
It delays the explanation forever without ever delivering one.
So if existence is real—and it clearly is—then it can't be built on an endless chain. There must be a starting point.
2. That Starting Point Can't Be Another "Thing"
If the origin of reality were just another thing—some particle, some object, some timeless energy—it would still demand an explanation. Where did that thing come from? Why does it exist rather than not exist?
Any "thing" you propose is still part of the problem. It's not a true foundation.
So the starting point of everything can't be another part of reality.
It must be outside the chain entirely.
And the only thing that fits that description is nothing.
3. Nothingness Is the Only Possible Starting Point
True nothingness means:
No matter
No space
No time
No laws
No potential
No existence of any kind
It is the absence of all things—including causes, rules, minds, and mechanisms.
But if at any point nothing truly existed—then it had no power to resist change.
There was no law preventing something from appearing.
Nothingness is the most unstable "state" imaginable—because it is not even a state. There is no law that says "nothing must stay nothing," because there are no laws in nothing.
So eventually, being must emerge—because there is nothing to stop it.
4. This Explains Why Existence Is So Fragile, Temporary, and Violent
Why does life suffer?
Why does matter decay?
Why is consciousness fleeting, and silence the default?
Because this isn't the product of eternal perfection.
This is what happens when nothing ruptures—chaotically, painfully, without design or meaning.
Being isn't inevitable—it's a breach in what should have remained still.
5. Something Must Have Come from Nothing—Because There Was No Other Option
If we accept that the universe had a beginning—and the evidence overwhelmingly supports this—then either:
It came from something else, which leads to infinite regress, or
It came from nothing, which is the only way to stop the chain.
Not because it's emotionally satisfying, but because it's logically necessary.
Existence must begin somewhere.
And the only true beginning is the absence of everything: nothing.
Final Thought
We are the consequence of the impossible.
Not because something else made us—but because nothing didn't stop us.
Something exists now. That is undeniable.
And that means, however unthinkable it sounds:
At some point, something came into existence from absolutely nothing.
Not by miracle. Not by logic. But because there was nothing to prevent it.
And now, we are here—haunted by the silence we came from, and destined to return to it.
Mathematical truths like:
π = circumference ÷ diameter
are not dependent on the material universe existing. They're abstract truths—true in any conceivable system where circles exist, regardless of physical manifestation.
So you're pointing out:
Just because the physical universe came from nothing doesn't mean logical or mathematical truths also came from nothing.
And that's a very important distinction.
If something always existed, you always have to ask: what supports that?
But if nothing existed, and then something happened—there's no deeper "why." There's no cause behind the cause.
The emergence of something from nothing is the only option that doesn't rely on anything prior. It's a true origin.
It's not satisfying in the emotional sense—but it's logically terminal.
It goes as deep as explanation can go.
We came from nothing.
And one day, we'll return to it.
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