Search by property
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This page provides a simple browsing interface for finding entities described by a property and a named value. Other available search interfaces include the page property search, and the ask query builder.
List of results
- The universe is too empty, too ancient and too vast to correspond to the God of religions. + (555)
- There should be nothing + (556)
- God exists because there cannot be an infinite number of causes + (557)
- God exists because there cannot be an infinite past + (558)
- Considering that God is the first cause explains nothing + (559)
- Nothingness is not governed by laws, so nothing prevents it from generating the universe. + (561)
- The existence of the universe is explained by the infinite chain of causes of physical events. + (562)
- The Borde-Guth-Vilenkin theorem (2003) demonstrates that there is no infinite past. + (563)
- There are various interpretations of the Borde-Guth-Valenkin theorem that allow us to assume an uncreated universe. + (564)
- There is no first instant of time + (565)
- The argument that God does not exist because there is no first instant of time commits the same error as Zeno's paradox. + (566)
- The universe has no beginning + (567)
- The beginning is not the origin + (568)
- God is everlasting + (569)
- The idea of time without beginning is inconceivable because it is contradictory. + (570)
- The idea of "contradictory" is not applicable to the Universe, which is based on the laws of quantum physics. + (571)
- The idea of time without beginning leads us to abandon the notion of time. + (572)
- The kalam argument commits the same error as Zeno in his paradox + (573)
- The connection between the kalam argument and Zeno's paradox doesn't hold water. + (574)
- The kalam's reasoning is only valid for a finite time. + (575)
- The presentation of the kalam argument is misleading + (576)
- The question of a finite or infinite past neither proves nor disproves the existence of God. + (577)
- The universe began to exist with the Big Bang + (578)
- The universe has no cause or reason for being + (579)
- Causality is not linked to temporal succession + (580)
- The first cause may be of a non-physical nature + (581)
- The exception to the principle of sufficient reason deserves justification + (582)
- Because the universe is contingent, it has a cause + (583)
- There are an infinite number of Big Bangs and Big Crunches + (584)
- There are infinite universes before our universe + (585)