On Mon, Jan 13, 2020 at 1:18 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

*> My hunch, and that's all it is, is that "the substratum" from which the
> BB emerged, is infinitely old, and the concept of spatial extent probably
> doesn't apply to it. There could be many BB's, possibly an infinite number,
> but all finite in spatial extent if they had beginnings. AG*


If, as this one does, all the Big Bang's have a finite number of particles
and are all of finite spatial extent then there is only a finite number of
ways those particles can be arranged. But if there are a infinite number of
those Big Bang's then in one of them (actually in a infinite number of
them) there must be an arrangement of particles that are identical to you
in every way except he spells his last name "Greyson" not "Grayson". So I
guess both Mr. Greyson and Mr. Grayson have changed their minds and now
believe in the existence of the Multiverse.

John K Clark

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