11 February 2019 4 2K Report

I don't know whether we can understand the observable universe as an average of innumerable and different situations. Particular entropy within the fold of space-time may or may not be repetitive or symmetrical. In the case time sensitive repetitions of particle entropy is missing, then why did Big Bang happen? If there was nothing before Big Bang, then what is meant by that 'nothing' ... Should we call it infinitely void (zero), or should we call it the absolute finite (indivisible singularity)? We can't divide zero, but we can divide 'one' into fractions. In that case, before Big Bang, was there a lone situational semantic of zero or unity? I feel all of these questions can be answered if we go to 5 dimensions ... length, breadth, depth, time, and temperature. Neither more, nor less.

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