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@Amoranemix
The laws of thermodynamics are valid in a lab on earth, but not for universes. The first and second law can be broken.
I won't even bother with this response.
How does option 2 violate reason ?
That something can come from nothing is impossible. Nor can the universe cannot be self-created as that would require the universe to exist before it existed.
Some Christians argue that the uniformity of nature (i.e. that the natural laws don't change) must require God, as without him they should change. Keeping that argument in mind we have even less reason to believe that the natural laws as we know them also ruled prior to the Big Bang.
I have not made that argument.
Fruit_Inspector 76 :I ask because if time has a beginning, then it seems that time coming into existence must be a product of time. So if you believe time has a beginning, you have the same problem I do and you should reject the idea of time having a beginning.You know too little about the topic to make such a claim. Experts think that time can have a beginning. See for example en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hartle–Hawking_state. FLRW talks about that hypothesis in post 86.
This comment was bringing Double_R's claim to it's logical conclusion. I reject his reasoning that every cause is the product of time.