Comment author:Jude_B
19 September 2016 03:20:01PM
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So when you ask, "Why did Sherlock Holmes tell Watson that...?"
You assume that Holmes exists?
Also, when you ask why some complicated theorem in number theory is true, you are basically asking for a proof from first principles (say Peano Arithmetic), you don't need to assume that numbers exist (which would make you a Platonist).
Comment author:IdaWallace
17 October 2016 09:17:50AM
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Thanks for sharing some idea about Universe appeared from nothing. There's no such thing as a free lunch, or so the saying goes, but that may not be true on the outstanding, cosmic scale. Since I am assignment help folks writer, providing writing service, several physicists now believe that the universe arose out of nothing during the Big Bang which means that nothing must have somehow turned into something.
So when you ask, "Why did Sherlock Holmes tell Watson that...?"
You assume that Holmes exists?
Also, when you ask why some complicated theorem in number theory is true, you are basically asking for a proof from first principles (say Peano Arithmetic), you don't need to assume that numbers exist (which would make you a Platonist).
Thanks for sharing some idea about Universe appeared from nothing. There's no such thing as a free lunch, or so the saying goes, but that may not be true on the outstanding, cosmic scale. Since I am assignment help folks writer, providing writing service, several physicists now believe that the universe arose out of nothing during the Big Bang which means that nothing must have somehow turned into something.