Does the nothingness exist? Where is it? How is it?
Perry Ellis
2006-03-21 11:28:28 UTC
the nothingness is dark? Can the nothingness be described?
Thirteen answers:
2006-03-21 13:39:35 UTC
our friggin human brains are not capable of understanding nothing. We are constantly searching for a meaning. There is no meaning.
tman
2006-03-21 19:58:38 UTC
Scientifically nothingness can not really exist as matter and anti-matter can suddenly come into being. To reach a point of true nothingness I guess that you would have to travel faster than the speed of light to where no energy from the big bang has reached.
Science_Guy
2006-03-21 20:49:06 UTC
Nothingness is possible. For example, if our universe was finite, then outside of it there is absolutely nothing, no space, no time, no dimension, nothing. Note that photons can travel in nothingness, however, the laws of physics as we know it breaks down at the edge of the universe, so maybe there's not even laws outside the universe.
Note: There's also no such thing as outside the universe since there's nothing there.
orang31na
2006-03-21 19:48:03 UTC
The best way I can think of to approach a description of nothingness would be to embark on a study of evanescence.
Notice the way living - and even simply organic - things tend to "peak" or become most themselves, most beautiful, just before they vanish, dissipate, or die?
One way to describe nothingness, then, might be to fully describe that summit of existence, and then simply imagine, by implication, its expiration.
Thermo
2006-03-21 21:38:53 UTC
You might think nothingness could be a vacuum. However every second a lot of radiation comes through it and there is any gravitational field. So nothing is not anything.
kar2988
2006-03-21 19:39:21 UTC
Nothingness may exist even beside you right now, You'll never know it because you'll never be able to imagine what you want to look at.
How can you look into nothing???
2006-03-21 20:17:37 UTC
Anti-matter is NOT the absence of matter! It is matter with opposite properties (proton with negative charge, electron with positive).
As for nothingness, even space is not truly empty, there is energy in space-time and virtual particles and quantum foam and other amazing things.
tootootoo
2006-03-21 20:00:54 UTC
There is a nothingness on a subatomic level.
2006-03-21 19:30:41 UTC
True nothingness could not be quantified.It's no where and has no description.
MCRloveralltheWay
2006-03-21 19:39:44 UTC
Hmmmm...are you refering to anti-matter? It's kind of like cutting cookies out of dough. The cookie part is matter. The place where the cookie was cut out of is anti-matter. It's real. For everything there is, including us, there is anti-matter.
estysoccer
2006-03-22 21:56:14 UTC
If a thing called "nothing" exists, then it won't be a "nothing" anymore. It'll be "something".
If you want to call something with the word "nothing" then that's up to you. But to everyone else it means "nothing".
MFM
2006-03-21 21:53:52 UTC
based upon your question I'm sensing that it is somewhere in your immediate vicinty
ellysium06
2006-03-21 20:07:31 UTC
Yes, it is nowhere, fine, thank you
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