Yes, I agree with you: there is no real conundrum. In the past, we’ve solved many “conundrums” (for example, Zeno’s paradox and the Liar’s Paradox). By induction, I believe that any conundrum is just a problem (often a math problem) that hasn’t been solved yet.
While I would say that the solution to Zeno’s paradox “exists”, I think this is just a semantic mistake I made; a solution exists in a different way than a theist argues that God exists. (This is just something I need to work on.)
Regarding the physics: I understand how a state may not causally depend upon the one proceeding (for example, if the state is randomly generated). I don’t understand (can’t wrap my head around) if that means it wasn’t caused… it still was generated, by some mechanism.
Yes, I agree with you: there is no real conundrum. In the past, we’ve solved many “conundrums” (for example, Zeno’s paradox and the Liar’s Paradox). By induction, I believe that any conundrum is just a problem (often a math problem) that hasn’t been solved yet.
While I would say that the solution to Zeno’s paradox “exists”, I think this is just a semantic mistake I made; a solution exists in a different way than a theist argues that God exists. (This is just something I need to work on.)
Regarding the physics: I understand how a state may not causally depend upon the one proceeding (for example, if the state is randomly generated). I don’t understand (can’t wrap my head around) if that means it wasn’t caused… it still was generated, by some mechanism.