Why is there actually something and not
just nothing?
It is
undisputed that something is there and not just
nothing, otherwise we would not be there either.
Since something is there, there has never been
absolutely nothing, because if there had ever been
absolutely nothing, it would always have remained
that way. After all, there would then, of course,
have been no possibility of this state ever
changing, because even the slightest possibility
would already be more than nothing. A SOMETHING has
therefore always been there, because if this
SOMETHING had come into being, there would have been
absolutely (without exception) nothing before it and
it would always have remained that way. “Nothing
comes from nothing!”
.
However, why hasn't there been nothing without
exception and why did it not remain so? Well, where would there
have been nothing without exception then? Nothing
without exception (any absence of anything) allows for
no dimension in which it could have existed or, relative
to which, everything could have been absent, as a
dimension would already be more than nothing. And when
would nothing without exception have been? Nothing
without exception also allows for no time in which it
could have existed or, relative to which, everything
could have been absent, as time would also already be
more than nothing. Absolutely nothing theoretically
could never have been, as even a theory would already be
more than nothing. The state of "nothing without
exception" (an absence of all that exists) could
therefore never have been. For even an absence would
also already be more than nothing, since an absence
requires something relative to which it can be absent.
What then could have been
absent relative to what, and when and where?
This is a
catch-22.
Absolutely nothing is the only state in
which the question does not arise, what came
before? However, absolutely nothing was
never possible. Something has always been there. Because
only something present (1) also creates the possibility
for absence (0) to be absent relative to something.
Somewhat comparable to numbers in mathematics. If there
would be no numbers, there would be no zeros. Without
one, there wouldn't even be zero. Without something,
there wouldn’t even be nothing.
.
Page 1 von 9
Something
and nothing
SOMETHING: A
singular, purposeless, sense-free, real being.
This SOMETHING has always
existed because, in timelessness, the moment is
simultaneously an eternity. This SOMETHING is the
totality of all being. However, it cannot refer to
anything. Without a reference point, this SOMETHING is
both there and not there. It fluctuates in rhythm
without an arrow of time. This causes a “mistake” in
NOTHING and thereby also enables the real existence of
the NOTHING in the form of infinite theoretical
possibilities that can be realised by the SOMETHING. The
NOTHING only exists in conjunction with the SOMETHING.
Without something, there wouldn't even be nothing.
NOTHING = infinite theoretical
possibilities. One of the infinite number of
theoretical possibilities actually exists in
practice, namely a SOMETHING. If this SOMETHING did not
exist, no further possibility could be realised because
only a real possibility can also realise theoretical
possibilities. This is somewhat comparable to the many
possibilities in a football match. Without SOMETHING (a
ball), there would be no theoretical possibilities for
playing football. Without a ball, there wouldn't be
football, just as without something there wouldn't even
be nothing. If I were alone in the NOTHING, I could only
stretch my hand into the NOTHING if the NOTHING gave me
the opportunity to do so. This means: The NOTHING =
possibilities.
SOMETHING +
NOTHING,
therefore, are the lowest common
denominator. Anything smaller would be less than
nothing. Hence, the lowest common denominator at the
same time also includes everything. And that is exactly
what we observe. In the micro, meso, and macrocosm, we
observe a mixture of SOMETHING and NOTHING. It cannot be
any other way, for SOMETHING without NOTHING would be
infinitely large and dense, with no possibility of this
state ever changing. And NOTHING without SOMETHING would
never even be nothing. But
both are not flawless!
The
imperfection
The
imperfection (the flawedness): SOMETHING causes a flaw in NOTHING,
thereby establishing the foundation of the basic
principle, the imperfection (the flawedness).
The SOMETHING itself cannot escape the principle it has
caused and is therefore also imperfect (flawed).
NOTHING, as an exception, contains SOMETHING within it,
and SOMETHING, as an exception, contains NOTHING within
it. Both cause a flaw in the other, as also somewhat
symbolised in the yin-yang concept. Whatever is
subsequently developed, formed and shaped from this
causally imperfect SOMETHING + NOTHING will remain
imperfect, as both are already imperfect in the lowest
common denominator. This is somewhat (symbolically)
comparable to the fundamental principle of Lego, the
studs. Whatever you build with Lego bricks contains
studs. You can build in a way that hides the studs, but
they are there. Without studs, Lego wouldn't be Lego.
Just as NOTHING without something would not be
nothing.
Imperfection is the basic principle
of all being. This is how it is and always will be. From
the smallest to the largest, everything is and remains
flawed.
By flawed, we
don’t mean wrong or defective but rather an
exception to the rule,
an irregularity within regularity, an asymmetry
within symmetry, a deviation from the
conventional,
a fluctuation in vibration, an uncertainty within
that which is certain,
an inaccuracy or fuzziness, something that is
missing within the fullness,
or succinctly put: an imperfection in perfection!
Imperfection is the fundamental
principle of all that is!
Page 2 of 9
Absolutely nothing (any absence
of anything) cannot be, for what should
then be absent relative to what, and
when and where?
Quoting
Harald Lesch, Astrophysicist: Absolutely
nothing is not something that can
be, for being able to be would
already be more than nothing!
However, even not being able to be would
already be more than nothing, because
not being able to be requires anything
relative to which it cannot be. This is
a catch-22.
A
SOMETHING has always been there and
causes a flaw in the NOTHING. Only a
flaw makes it possible for the NOTHING
to exist. For only the presence of a
SOMETHING allows the NOTHING to be
absent relative to anything.
The imperfection (flawedness)
as the most fundamental principle.
.
.
The SOMETHING cannot escape the
principle it causes
and is thus also imperfect (flawed).
A NOTHING causes a flaw in the
SOMETHING.
The duality: NOTHING and SOMETHING
can only exist together.
SOMETHING can only exist relative to
NOTHING; otherwise, the SOMETHING
would
be infinitely large and infinitely dense.
NOTHING can only exist relative
to
SOMETHING; without something, it would not
be possible to have nothing!
Everything carries its opposite
within itself:
The NOTHING with a SOMETHING as
an exception (flawed)
The
SOMETHING with a NOTHING as an
exception (flawed)
The fundamental principle, the
imperfection, keeps going round in a
circle.
Chance sometimes picks up its flaws at
the top, then again at the
bottom,
sometimes at the back, then in the
front, sometimes right, then left.
Sometimes inside, sometimes outside.
Sometimes directly,
sometimes indirectly. Sometimes visible,
sometimes invisible.
Chance
collects its shortcomings in
undulations (randomly).
Sometimes more, then less, sometimes
earlier, then again later.
Sometimes trivial, other times
fundamental shortcomings.
You can observe this everywhere in
everyday life.
On large scales, chance roughly
balances itself out. Both coincidence
and pseudo-coincidence. After millions
of rounds of the lottery,
all numbers have come up approximately
the same number
of times. Approximate
symmetry is a property on very large
scales.
Imperfection (flawedness) is
the foundation of all that is.
.
The proliferation of flaws (exceptions) caused the
diversity,
as no flaw is identical to another.
*
By flaw, we don’t mean wrong or defective but
rather an exception to the rule.
Page 3 of 9
I am the almighty:
The imperfection
Nothing can bend me, not even I myself!
Imperfection (flawedness) is the most fundamental of
all natural laws. It is empirically demonstrable at
any time and place, ad infinitum. No observation
proves otherwise. Does anyone know anything absolute?
Imperfection was already omnipotent in the primordial
and is above all natural laws, even above our lives.
Its omnipotence forces disorder into our daily lives
time and again. That is to say: The more we organise
our lives, the more disorder forces itself into the
order, so that the order remains imperfect. For this,
there is no cure.
The tragedy of perfectionism
Simplified symbolism:You dig a hole in a snowy field and use the
snow to build a snowman. The snowman is happy to be
finding himself in a snowy field without any flaws.
However, he then sees the hole. To create a perfect
world for himself, he begins to repair the hole. Since
the snowman himself is the material he needs to repair
the flaw in the snowy field, he starts destroying
himself.
The drive for
perfection brought suffering into his world!
Cause and
effect
.
The subsequent
course is then only a symptom
.
.
Before the snowman has destroyed himself, he will dig
several holes and build small snowmen to preserve his
kind. When these snowmen grow up, they are happy that
they are standing in a perfect snowy field, but then
they see their holes. To create a perfect world for
themselves, they begin to repair the holes. Since the
snowmen themselves are the material they need to repair
the damage in the snowy field, they start destroying
themselves. Not all snowmen will destroy themselves.
Some will attack other snowmen to obtain the snow they
need to improve their world. They will organise
themselves, defend themselves, arm themselves and, as a
last resort, go to war. Many snowmen will die as a
result; they will establish religions and sanctify war
to justify their dead. This sequence of events throws
the entire snowy field into chaos (with one exception).
All because the first snowman wanted the snowy field to
be the way it would be if he wasn't there, and as a
result the constant desire for improvement became the
meaning of his life.
He could have shaped
the entire snowy field as he wished.
However, he also wanted it to be perfect! .
The drive for perfection
brought suffering into his world!
Page 4 of 9
It takes a long time, for the
first snowman to realise that nothing can be without
flaws.
The decrease in the order of the snowy field is
contrary to the increase in the snowman’s
consciousness of order. The more the chaos in the
snowy field increases, the more the snowman realises
that he cannot fix the original flaw. This behaviour
runs like a common thread through all areas of our
lives.
The story of the snowman is universally
symbolic and can be applied to anything: politics,
economics, science, education, finance, legislation,
technology, medicine, healthcare, food,
administration, bureaucracy, upbringing, sport, media,
tradition, religion, world views and even the whole of
civilisation. If civilisation oversteps its bounds,
nature reclaims its natural order. - When
applying this story to oneself, one understands their
own imperfection. All attempts to prevent self-induced
flaws remain ineffective. Chance places its own flaws
haphazardly, as it was the same in the primordial. The
something is also randomly placed in the nothing
because of non-existent placement criteria without any
possibility of being placed in the wrong place. Due to
this causality, chance has no possibility of causing
something wrong for all time. Chance can do anything,
with one exception: it can't do anything wrong!
The tragedy of
perfectionism: Health
Once upon a time, there were two people. Let's
just call them "Adam and Eve" for fun. They were
healthy, with one exception: once a month (arbitrarily
assumed time frame) they got a pimple on their face
(symbolic illness), that disappeared again on its own.
One day, they thought: It is not good that there is an
exception to our health once a month and that we fall
ill. We no longer want to make this sacrifice. We will
build up our own perfect health. They successfully
used a medicinal herb against the pimple, resulting in
the next generation getting a pimple twice a month:
the system-induced pimple + the inherited pimple from
the previous generation. The sum remains constant, but
shifted in time! The next generation then used even
more medicinal herbs, etc. and this "original sin"
multiplied over time resulting in our present-day
ailments and diseases with all its countermeasures.
This process continues in waves until one no longer
treats the small, trivial illnesses (the exceptions)
but endures them. Then the expansion of the exceptions
ends. Slowly, but inevitably. Due to its
ineffectiveness, homeopathy is the best medicine
against small, banal illnesses (the exceptions).
Imperfection is always at least one
exception ahead of us. Comparable to a pressure relief
valve on a boiler. If one considers the loss of hot
water dripping out of the valve as a defect instead of
recognising it as a characteristic of the principle
and one fixes this "flaw" by sealing the valve, this
"flaw" multiplies in other places. And this is exactly
how diseases develop. Diseases are not caused by
ghosts and magic but by a failure to observe the most
fundamental of all natural laws, imperfection. It is
the treatment of the small, trivial, recurring
diseases (the exceptions) that exponentially multiply
exceptions with ever new exceptions and their
countermeasures. That's why wild animals - who are
without doctors, hospitals, and the pharmaceutical
industry - are generally much healthier than we
humans. This can be observed everywhere. Exceptions
confirm the rule.
Disability: Disabled people are
the exceptions to the intact. Both physical and
mental. Exceptions are the foundation of everything
that exists. If there were no disabled people, there
would be no unscathed people either. Honor the
disabled. Your disability carries us integrety.
Page 5 of 9
The
principle of life
That there is not
nothing is undisputed, for otherwise we would not be
here.
.
We are here, that cannot
be denied. Yes, but why are we here anyway?
We (this SOMETHING) are the exception in the nothing. We
are here because it is not possible
to not be here. If we were not here, then even nothing
wouldn't be here.
. But why are we alive?
Life is the exception (the flaw) in
the lifeless. The meaning of life is to live. Because
without life there is no lifelessness, without
lifelessness there is no something and without something
there would not even be nothing. However, to bridge
eternity, everyone should give deep meaning to each life
because eternity then lasts a bit longer after all. So
bad luck. Because recurring chance encounters with
oneself bring every injustice back into balance. Approximate symmetry is a property on
very large scales. And
suddenly the lost truth from days long past knocks at
the door. Somehow, somewhere, sometime.
. And where do we come from?
We have always been here, because without us, not even
nothing would have been here.
. And what are we doing here?
We do nothing other than just being here because without
us here, there wouldn't even be nothing.
. And where are we going afterwards?
We will always be here, because if we were no longer
here, not even nothing would be left.
About 3.5 billion years ago, life merged with the
lifeless to form the first cell (chance). 1.5 billion
years later, evolution brought death into life. Dying is
not a part of life, but a primitive apparition of
evolution in which matter separates from the information
of our life. And this cannot be irrevocably lost; where
would it even go? Information cannot dissolve into
absolutely nothing, because absolutely nothing does not
exist (see page 1); there is only relatively nothing
(relative to something) and these are possibilities (see
page 2). Died and resting in peace as a timeless
information of a possibility waiting for a new
coincidence.
. But who are we (this something in
nothing) really?
This question remains unanswered. Self-awareness also
remains forever imperfect.
Imperfection
is the fundamental principle of all that is. The
totality as an exception to this rule. Only as a “big
whole” is all existence absolute. If the details were
not flawed, the whole could not be perfect. Such is the
principle. The more holistically you perfect it, the
more primitive flaws chance introduces in the details so
that the whole can remain perfect. Only through our
imperfections in the details are we perfect. - That is
why causality is also imperfect. The something is both
there and not there due to the lack of a reference
point. It fluctuates (pulses) perfectly in time with one
exception (flaw). Therefore, causes are not followed by
absolute effects. And even with what is called the "Big
Bang," it was no different. One fluctuation
happened to be out of step (flaw). The SOMETHING
was already back, even though it hadn't completely gone
away. The something meets itself, just like the sperm
meets the egg for life to begin. The same principle as
with fertilisation. The "Big Bang" was by chance because
chances are exceptions in causality. - But chance
is also not flawless. The imperfection of chance
grants life free will. From the point of view of
causality, free will is consciously induced coincidences
and thus flawed coincidences. The less we fix what
happens by chance (both the good and the bad), the freer
our will is. Simply not fixing chance brings freedom
into our lives.
The more we live
with chance, the freer our life becomes.
Page 6 of 9
The motionless mover
The
principle of relativity
. Every uniform and
straight-line motion is relative
and can only refer to one reference point!
(Galileo Galilei)
The something can neither refer to
a beginning nor an end,
because it has always been there and will always
continue to exist. The something
has no reference point.
One would not
actually be able to determine a property of this
something
were it not for the principle of relativity, which
states: Motion can only
refer to a reference point!
Since the
something cannot refer to anything, it cannot move,
since it would only be able to move relative to a
reference point.
So let's establish a property: The something is
motionless!
On the other
hand, this something cannot simply be motionless just
like that
because it could only be motionless relative to a
reference point.
So let’s establish another property: The something is
in motion!
Without a reference point, the
something is both “in motion"
and "motionless” at the same time.
The missing reference point = The
motionless mover
The question of how
the missing reference point originated does not arise,
because in order to be missing, you need not have
originated.
One only needs something relative to which one is
missing.
The primal size: Since the something without a reference
point cannot have a fixed size either, (a specific size
can also only exist relative to a reference size, e.g. a
scale), it is both small and large at the same time.
The time: The same applies to time. Without a
temporal reference point (e.g. a clock), it is not
possible to assign the something to a specific time.
That is, the something exists in every moment as well as
for all eternity because in timelessness (time without
an arrow of time) the moment is timed for eternity.
The something
(everything that is) is both there
and not there (timed without an arrow of time). Without an arrow of time, the moment is
simultaneously also eternity. The something pulsates in a rhythm from small
to large and vice versa (space). It moves within itself in its motionlessness
(energy or mass as a possibility). The endless balancing of the
difference in motion between movement and rest does
the work.
The
SOMETHING is almost nothing, but not quite nothing. It
is almost infinitely small but not zero and it is almost
infinitely large. It moves periodically from small to
large relative to itself due to the absence of a
reference point, as it can also only rest relative to
itself when there is no reference point. We can perceive
this as a heartbeat. The fluctuating SOMETHING
(everything that is) also causes our hearts to beat.
NOTHING says to
SOMETHING: "As my heartbeat, you have
always belonged to me"
Page 7 of 9
Religion
Even in ancient times, people felt that they were
surrounded by an omnipotence. Due to ignorance of
its causality, they interpreted this power into
various gods and have maintained it to this day
and spread it across half the world for the
purpose of oppressing humanity. - We come into the
world and religions are already here. And no one
realizes that religion is not a natural part of
our nature.
Only I alone am the omnipotence:
The imperfection (the faultiness)
I am the only "God"
There is no other God besides me!
I am eternal, omnipresent and almighty.
As long as you do not, like me, acknowledge and
accept
your own imperfections, you cannot be my image!
As long as you are not my image, I will let you die. I am an uncompromising God!
If you all become my image together, you will stay
alive with me. I am an eternal God!
As my image, I leave you the fruits of our creation. I am a selfless God!
I only
claim the imperfection caused by chance, I need
nothing more. Self-made sacrifices, rituals and
ceremonies are ineffective. I also disregard any
kind of veneration, glorification or worship. I am
just a structure, a pattern, a system, a
principle! No service can be rendered to me
either, with one exception: preserving your own
shortcomings is the only service you can render
me.
So that you become my image, I will destroy your
false gods and bring everything hidden behind them
to light. With salvation, it is not the case that
a clown comes along and says: “Tri-Tra-Trallala,
salvation is here!”
Good and evil
The faulty structure is good, the urge for
perfection is evil!
We are good with our mistakes, but fixing them is
evil!
Evil multiplies when we not only do not want our
mistakes in ourselves, but we also interpret them
in others and fight them there.
Genesis: You may eat of all fruits, but you
may not eat anything from the tree in the middle
(exception), otherwise you will die, because these
fruits are you yourself.
Related to the
snowman: You can design the whole snowfield,
but leave this one mistake (the snow hole) in the
middle of the snowfield (exception) untouched,
otherwise you will die, because this mistake is
you yourself. If you fix this mistake, you fix
yourself.
Page 8 of 9
The philosophy behind physics .
Without something, there wouldn't even be nothing!
And if one
wants to be really precise: Relativity itself is this
SOMETHING that fluctuates because without a reference
point, the relative is both existent and non-existent
(timed). Both relative (in detail) and absolute (as a
whole). But not without exception. For the relative
causes a flaw in the theoretically absolute nothing
and therefore cannot escape its self-caused principle
and is therefore also flawed. If relativity is there,
then it is not perfectly there, because an exception
is not there. If it is not there, then it is not
perfectly not there, because an exception is there.
What we call the Big Bang was a random fluctuation
(exception) in the vibration of relativity. An
asymmetry (flaw) in the symmetry that gives direction
to timelessness (rhythm without an arrow of time). The
beginning of time. From now on, everything is only
approximately as it was before. No two moments are
exactly alike.
Relativity is this
unintentional, meaningless, real existing SOMETHING
that fluctuates, which is why we too are only relative
to all others. That is why no two people are the same.
Each person differs from all others by at least one
exception. No two exceptions are alike, which is why
all people are only perfect with their very own and
inherent shortcomings. Everyone is relative to one
another! - The question of why relativity is the way
it is and not arbitrarily different remains
unanswered. Imperfection does not provide a final
answer. - Can we live without having a final answer?
Long story short: .
A SOMETHING causes a flaw in the NOTHING.
If that weren't the case, there wouldn't even be
nothing. Flawedness (imperfection) is therefore
the most fundamental of all natural laws. The
SOMETHING itself cannot escape the principle it
has caused and is therefore also flawed
(imperfect). And this imperfect SOMETHING
(simultaneously EVERYTHING) has also produced
itself as all of us (biological evolution) in
order to be able to observe itself, to question
itself, to think about itself, to recognize
itself, to see itself, and also to feel and
understand itself. Therefore, we too are imperfect
(faulty) in all our actions, insights, thoughts
and feelings.
.
Can we live with our imperfections?
We not only can, we must. Because the more we
repair our natural shortcomings, the more they
multiply. Don't allow others to speak ill of your
shortcomings. They are system-relevant and make
you unique. In reality, they only interpret their
own shortcomings into you and fight against them
in you instead of accepting them as a fundamental
principle within themselves. The snowman on page 4
can also testify to this: If one interprets their
own inadequacy, system-conditioned by the
fundamental principle of imperfection (symbolised
by the hole in the snowy field), into others to
fight against it there, others rightly resist. And
sometimes all those involved intensify the
confrontation to the point of waging war as a
final consequence.
. Final word: Pay attention to
coincidence. He is the guardian of imperfection.