OnlyAmbrose wrote:
Yes, there are an infinite amount of things you could do tomorrow. However, the time in which you may do them is limited.
If tomorrow was infinite, then an infinite amount of different things would happen. Given an infinite amount of time, everything MUST happen.
Though I must admit that I misspoke when I said that the probability of any one thing happening are zero. A better way of putting it would be that the probability of any one thing happening at a given moment are zero. Because that is one thing out of an infinite of things which could conceivably happen in an infinite timeframe, and one divided by infinite is mathematically zero. But the chances of them eventually happening are 100%, because given an infinite amount of time... an infinite amount of things must occur! And that infinite amount of things must therefore include anything we can think of.
Given that the universe, multiverse, or whatever-you-call-it-verse has existed for eternity (I'll explain that later), or that ANYTHING has existed for eternity, everything must have happened before now. Everything. Because it, whatever it (it being the Universe, or everything that exists in EVERYTHING, in the broadest sense of the word) is or was, has existed forever. And still, everything must continue to occur, forever, because even if this universe (the one we live in) ends, it's presumable that whatever else exists will carry on (it's a logical fallacy to assume that we came from nothing, which is why most atheists I've talked with resort to the theory of parallel universes to explain the existence of matter. For the sake of argument, we'll assume that's true).
In any event, infinite itself is a logical fallacy for this very reason. It's really a fascinating question no matter how you look at it, from a theist, atheist, or agnostic viewpoint: Where did matter come from? And where did the place that matter came from come from? And back and back and back. Yet... there can scientifically be no origin point. Infinite itself is a logical fallacy. Some of us refer to that logical fallacy as God.
Anyways, that was quite a ramble. Sorry if it didn't make much sense, I'm trying to put the long-considered philosophical musings of a teenager into writing. I would certainly appreciate a rebuttal.
I said before that the infinite possibilities of forces beyond our control allow infinite possibilities on Earth. I would also say that they allow anything to happen in any given amount of time. That would make the possibilities of tomorrow endless.
Your thoughts on the beginning of existance are intriguing, and I have thought about the kind of thing before. Doesn't the concept of infinity seem impossible? Take space, for instance. How can it go on forever? And yet, how can it end and have nothing beyond it? Time I am a little bit more skeptical on, because I think there are and infinite number of possibilities of things that could happen in the universe, so even though time has and will exist forever, existance has as many possibilities that something new could continue to happen surprisingly often (unless time repeats itself, in which case I will rejoice because a form of me will live on forever, but be severely put out because my head will have exploded from trying to figure out how).
Also, I don't understand how one divided by infinity is zero. If you could explain it, that would be nice. The way I see it is this: Imagine you have one pencil. Divide it half, and in half again, and again, and again. If you continue to divide it, you will get to icredibly small parts, like atoms, then subatomic particles, then quarks, then what? Zero? Nothing? I don't think so, I think that you will just keep getting smaller and smaller and get just what you had to begin with, 1/ infinity. The pieces will still be there (though admittedly, not to where we could use or even understand them). I don't think something can turn into nothing, no matter how many times it is divided.
Although I am enjoying the discussion, I do feel we're getting a bit off-topic and think we should return to the original points made in response to the question (namely the first paragraph of my post only), unless we still feel it is relevant to the argument, (I'm telling myself this as much as or more thananyone else).