Elrohir said:
I'm afraid I don't understand. Are you saying that the matter that exploded in the Big Bang; along with all of space-time, just appeared right before the Big Bang? There was nothing before it happened? Not "We can't know what happened before", but "Absolutely nothing existed"? If not, then where did everything come from, to just pop into existence in time to explode and create the universe?
You are confused because you're using time as a measure of the passage of events... which all of us do, which is why it's confusing.
If you're going to ask "What happened before the Universe came into being?", you're going to have to use a measure of the passage of events which is
independent of our time.
Picture the entire Universe as a giant 4-dimensional bubble. There are 3 dimensions of space and 1 dimension of time. Any point in space-time can be pointed out in this bubble. ie. January 4, 1994 in downtown New York exists as a specific point in this bubble... as well as July 7th, 2029 in uptown London, Ontario.
If the bubble is inifinite in all directions, then asking "What lies outside of space?" or "What happened before time?" would be meaningless, since no such point exists.
If the bubble is finite in all directions, you
could ask "what lies outside of space?".. But nothing does.. and neither would anything like outside of/before time.
It's not that space-time magically popped into existence - it's that it's always existed - even if time is finite. You are just going to have to measure the passage of events using a ruler that's independent of our universe - and that's hard to do because we're so used to using time for that purpose.