David --

> Humans can even imagine possible yet non-actual
> worlds as cosmologists do, when contemplating the
> anthropic principle and the questions it poses.

Humans can imagine lots of things, but imagination has no claim on logic, 
and conjuring up multi-universes violates Occam's razor without resolving 
the problem of creation.

Tolstoy once said, "There is no reality except for our experience of it". 
Astrophysicist  Archibald Wheeler said, "What we say about the universe as a 
whole depends on the means we use to observe it,  In the act of observing we 
bring into being something of what we see. ...Without an observer, there are 
no laws of physics."  Robert Pirsig said, "Experience = Reality".

Ham Priday says, Reality is the differentiated experience of Value.  The 
mode of human experience is dimensional.   When we differentiate Value, we 
objectify it as finite objects and events in time and space.  Therefore, to 
ask how did things begin is to ask how (and why) does the sensibility of 
Value become divided from the undifferentiated source?  Only a metaphysical 
theory can answer that question.

--Ham

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