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Cosmogony
Cosmogony is any theory concerning the coming into existence or origin of the
universe, or an origin belief about how reality came to be. The word comes from
the Greek κοσμογονία (or κοσμογενία), from κόσμος "cosmos, the world", and the
root of γί(γ)νομαι / γέγονα "to be born, come about". In the specialized context
of space science and astronomy, the term refers to theories of creation of the
Solar System and their study (for example, the Solar Nebula theory).[citation
needed]
Cosmogony can be distinguished from cosmology, which studies the universe at
large and throughout its existence, and which technically does not inquire
directly into the source of its origins. There is some ambiguity between the two
terms, for example, the cosmological argument from theology regarding the
existence of God is technically an appeal to cosmogonical rather than
cosmological ideas. In practice, there is a scientific distinction between
cosmological and cosmogonical ideas. Physical cosmology is the science that
attempts to explain all observations relevant to the development and
characteristics of the universe as a whole. Questions regarding why the universe
behaves in such a way have been described by physicists and cosmologists as
being extra-scientific, though speculations are made from a variety of
perspectives which include extrapolation of scientific theories to untested
regimes and philosophical or religious ideas.
Attempts to create a naturalistic cosmogony are subject to two separate
limitations. One is based in the philosophy of science and the epistemological
constraints of science itself, especially with regards to whether scientific
inquiry can ask questions of "why" the universe exists. Another more pragmatic
problem is that there is no physical model which can explain the earliest
moments of the universe's existence (Planck time) due to a lack of a consistent
theory of quantum gravity.
Epistemological limitations to cosmogony
The assumptions of naturalism that underlie the scientific method have led some
scientists, especially observationalists, to question whether the ultimate
reason or source for the universe to exist can be answered in a scientific
fashion. In particular, the principle of sufficient reason seems to indicate
that there should be such an explanation, but whether a satisfactory explanation
can be obtained through scientific inquiry is debatable. Theistic explanations
for origins indicate one or more supernatural beings as the explanation, though
some atheist commentators point to this as an argument from ignorance or a God
of the gaps fallacy.
As a result of this, scientific cosmogonies are often supplemented by reference
to metaphysical and theistic belief systems, through three classical paradoxes.
These paradoxes (discussed by both Kierkegaard and Leibniz) are:
reconciling a doctrine of causation (similar to the 13th century proof of God
posed by Thomas Aquinas);
reconciling the conservation law ("something from nothing");
reconciling issues of temporal (as in Zeno's paradoxes) and logical regression.
A scientific examination of cosmogony using existing physical models would face
many challenges. For example, equations used to develop models of the origin do
not in themselves explain how the equations came to be in the first place.
Planck time limitations to cosmogony
Planck time (10-43s) is the time it would take a photon travelling at the speed
of light to cross a distance equal to the Planck length. This is the "quantum of
time", the smallest measurement of time that has any meaning.
Although the laws of physics lose experimental support at the Planck time,
modern science has sought to clarify the nature of these paradoxes, so far with
only limited success. For example, one can apply the current understanding of
grand unified theories (GUTs) – both quasi-classical (such as general
relativity) and modern (such as quantum gravity, superstring, and M-theories) –
to these three primary cosmogonic paradoxes in thought experiments. While these
result in some contradictions and lack completeness in a mathematical sense
(being based on axioms that are 'merely' self-evident, but not robust under the
stresses of radical scepticism) these paradoxes can nonetheless be analyzed
rationally using the subatomic applications of quantum cosmology, particularly
through the employment of the Schrödinger wave equations.
In each case, where general relativity fails as the curvature of space-time
invokes singularities from its equations at t=0, the statistically "grey" nature
of quantum cosmology tends to allow a scientific rationale to account for each
paradox, and in so doing allows for a scientific perspective on previously
theistic terrain. For example, application of quantum "fuzziness" (per the
Wheeler-DeWitt application of subatomic position and momentum equations to
universal radius and expansion) avoids boundary issues, as developed in the
Hawking-Hartle Wave Function.
All such equations are based on differentials, which assume a continuum, where
in our universe, affected by the Planck length and other minimum scales, this
continuum has only limited meaning, about which philosophy remains in a state of
semantic flux.
Scientific Approaches To The Meaning
of Life Entropy and Life
What is Life?
Philosophical views on the meaning of
life
Religion and Religious
humanism
Spiritual and mystical views Cosmogony
Abiogenesis
Emanationism Eschatology
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Spiritual Ideas
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