someone answer pls
This is called "reality".
It could be, at the moment we have no way of telling.
The universe is the totality of intelligible, perceptible, and quantifiable reality that is the focus of human scientific research. It is a four-dimensional space-time continuum consisting of matter, energy, and forces. The universe consists of both inanimate matter (e.g. planets, stars, galaxies, asteroids, comets) and animate matter (e.g. plants, animals, humans, bacteria, fungi). The four fundamental forces in the universe are gravitation, electromagnetism, and the strong and weak nuclear forces. OR: The universe is everything, or the universe is everything around here -- thus, some talk about other universes. Sometimes the other universes are separated by distance, sometimes by time, sometimes by other imaginary conditions. The universe of real numbers does not include the square root of negative one -- another use of the word universe.
Because any border of the universe it not observable, the reality of it remains a theoretical pursuit; but generally, cosmologists agree that current data would tend to indicate the universe is infinite and "flat". One popular model (FLRW) posits that the universe is without boundaries. Research and mathematical models postulate both a bounded and unbounded universe, and some even purport that the universe might be bounded in some directions (or dimensions) but not in others; often models are speculative and hampered by inherent limits in experimental method. In particular, recent efforts have shown that we might not ever be able to distinguish between a flat, open or closed universe if the cosmological curvature parameter is sufficiently small.
In Science: Yes, the universe is infinite, since it is constantly expanding. In Theory: No, the universe is not infinite. Since space is full of curves, as theorized by Albert Einstein, maybe space is just one big curve. Maybe traveling in a straight line inevitably leads into one big curve, until we eventually end where we started. The immense gravity in the center of the universe might have pulled itself into an invisible circle that cannot be escaped. It can't be escaped because of the immense gravity of the center of the universe, but this is all in theory. I believe that the universe has an end. But the Universe is so immensely large, that humans simply cannot grasp this concept. Humans have a very limited perspective of infinity. So, what is infinity exactly? Does it just never end? Well, it has to begin somewhere...?? This is why humans won't ever truly understand infinity. Now, at the end of the universe I have absolutely no idea what exists. Maybe you just go back to the beginning of the universe? Well that is where science meets religion. If you are Christian, which I am, heaven must exist beyond the universe. But we will never truly find out the answer to this question until we die. No. Nothing can be infinite, as logically argued and proven by many philosophers throughout the ages, and the universe is demonstrated to be only finite by the absence of radiation with a wavelength of more than a certain amount (this amount being the size of the universe).
What is reality? ... The Big Questions: What is life? ... The Big Questions: Do we have free will? ... The Big Questions: Is the universe deterministic? ... The Big Questions: What is consciousness? ... The Big Questions: Will we ever have a theory of everything?
Consciousness is a result of physical reality, but this can not be proven philosophically. A philosophical question is whether you, and everything of which I am aware, exist only in my consciousness, not in reality.
What is reality? ... The Big Questions: What is life? ... The Big Questions: Do we have free will? ... The Big Questions: Is the universe deterministic? ... The Big Questions: What is consciousness? ... The Big Questions: Will we ever have a theory of everything?
This is called "reality".
It seems there might be a misunderstanding or misspelling, as "brahmasim" is not a recognized term. However, if you meant "Brahman," in Hindu philosophy, it refers to the ultimate, unchanging reality, the source and essence of everything in the universe. It is often described as pure consciousness or the cosmic spirit.
Zolo George Barnett is the author of the book "The Universe is Watching Us: How Consciousness Creates Reality." This book explores the connection between consciousness and the creation of reality.
This is one of the most fundamental questions for the human kind. Although a short and rather simple question, it highlights a crucial gap in our understanding of reality. Since we do not know the purpose of the universe, including the patterns we call humans, or even if there is a purpose to it, or if the universe is deterministic or non-deterministic, we simply do not have the answer to that question. What is lacking is knowledge and understanding. To just "feel" that something is important is not the answer. Individually feeling that something is important, for yourself, or for your community, for your country or whatever, might have been decided already at the Big Bang, if we live in a fully deterministic universe. On the other hand, one could argue that in a fully deterministic universe everything is important, every little change on the most fundamental level is a part of the purpose. But since we do not know and understand those fundamental levels we have no clue to what the purpose might be, or even if there is any. Only with an identification of a larger purpose for the whole universe, including the extremely small part that we humans constitute, is it possible to answer what is truly important and what is not. Whether we will ever be able to answer that question, is questionable. I believe that we will, but the answer will most probably not be something that we would like to hear today. Hopefully, that is why we can not answer it right now...
One of the most important questions in philosophy is "What is the nature of reality?" as it encompasses inquiries into existence, knowledge, consciousness, and the universe. This foundational question often leads to other inquiries about ethics, metaphysics, and epistemology.
The ultimate reality or ultimate truth is the inherent nature of everything. It is how things really are. Everything has an ultimate or absolute aspect and a relative aspect. The relative aspect is how things appear. The ultimate is how things actually are. These two aspects of everything are called "the two truths" in the Buddhist teachings. The two truths should not be understood as two separate things but rather as two aspects of one single reality.
Reality, existance, the universe, all creation... take your pick, there's not a set scientific term for everything as a unit.
A change in the nature of experience in which the intellect understands reality.
Pantheism is a religious belief that presents a unifying picture of the universe by viewing the entire universe as sacred and divine. It sees the universe itself as the manifestation of a single, all-encompassing divine reality, encompassing everything and unifying all existence.