In order to prove a point...

In order to prove a point, one of the gods goes rogue and plots to create a Sphere of Annihilation large enough to swallow the universe, to prove his theory that there is another universe on the other side.

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>it doesn't work
>the king of gods dumps him into a smaller one, so he can "prove" his theory for himself.

>Anything within the Universe being powerful enough to destroy the entire Universe

That sort of goes in his favor no?

Obviously if he were able to make a hole big enough to take on the Universe, it clearly isn't from this universe.

>isn't from this universe

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe
>The Universe is all of time and space and its contents.
>The Universe includes all matter and energy.

There's nowhere else to come from.

By that logic there's nowhere else for matter to go.

And yet clearly stuff that goes into an annihilation sphere doesn't stay in this universe, else where is all the mass going?

Gods don't need time or space to exist, dude. Do you know what a God is?

>thinking gods can exist without time and space
>laughingathar.jpg

>The object is actually a hole in the continuity of the multiverse. Any matter that comes in contact with a sphere is instantly sucked into the void, gone, and utterly destroyed.

Proceeds on its way to oblivion.

>what is a multiverse
>doesn't think there are more dimensions allowing for multiple planes of space and time to coexist
Do you even 5 dimensional thinking?

>>The Universe is all of time and space and its contents
>>The object is actually a hole in the continuity of the multiverse

>Universe contains everything
>Existence of multiple universes
Choose one

>god having an existential crisis
How does it even work?

It comes out of a Sphere of Anti-Annihilation somewhere else ya dingus!

If there is a universe, and anything can "cease to exist" in it, it stands to reason that, as matter cannot be created or destroyed, it must have gone somewhere else.

Which means that the universe is not actually the universe--but because you were already calling it that, you probably won't stop, sort of like how there is technically only one solar system because there is only one Sol, the rest ought to be called star systems, but we don't call them that.

If you believe Aristotle's theory of God as the Perfect Reason, it probably exists in a permanent state of existential crisis, having completed all other rational thought possible and finally encountered the Solipsistic wall.

Maybe that's why it created the universe.

Thats because star systems means something entirely different already.

A star system or stellar system is a small number of stars that orbit each other, bound by gravitational attraction.

You're thinking of Planetary Systems.

>By that logic there's nowhere else for matter to go.

Well yes. The universe includes everything and everywhere. Wherever a thing might go or come from, whatever hitherto-unknown dimension or state of existence it might call home, is within the universe. It's like trying to say that a particular object is not a subset of the group called 'everything'.

The definition of universe means that it is everything. You can't go into or out of it, because its definition means there cannot be any thing or place external to the universe. If there is a place or thing you think might be external to the universe, it is in fact part of the universe.

>Which means that the universe is not actually the universe
>but because you were already calling it that, you probably won't stop
Which goes back to the point of what the rogue god was saying.

In /this/ 'universe' (which may not actually be THE Universe but a part of it) sphere's of annihilation don't actually destroy things, follownig the conservation of mass, but instead transport them to another part of the multiverse hitherto unknown.

Kind of like that.

Somewhere out there there's got to be "Sphere's of random shit popping out"

>as matter cannot be created or destroyed, it must have gone somewhere else.

Awww, baby thinks conservation of mass energy is still a thing in cosmic occurrences. I guess we don't live in a constantly expanding cosmos that is continually accelerating either.
I bet you believe that time existed before creation too.

They recently think that blackholes actually turn the matter into Hawking radiation.

>in /this/ 'universe' (which may not actually be THE Universe but a part of it)

Comic book science gtfo

>Comic book science
You mean asspull magic?

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