(September 21, 2012 at 3:08 pm)MysticKnight Wrote: Will the universe is composed of very small parts. I don't think small parts can exist by themselves without something continuously causing them to exist.
To me whatever exists by itself is such that it must be rich in existence. But if it's rich in existence, why would there be a limit? There is no reason for there to be a limit in it's existence, rather it seems whatever it is, and whatever it must be to exist on it's own, would be unbounded/unlimited.
When I see quarks, I see a limit, something setting the existence to a limit.
When I see limits, I see a limiter. But the limiter must have no limit (be ultimate) because nothing was limiting it.
And exactly what limits do you see in this universe? Limits of size? Of time? What limits do you see being applied to the infinitesimally small and infinitely dense singularity that was the form of the universe?