spotlight wrote:Or... were [you] told that math does not apply to fairy dust?
That's the crux of the matter to me. If disbelief has already been suspended to the extent that imaginary conditions and systems are being discussed, why do the finer details necessarily have to follow reality?
Notwithstanding, for example, a good sci fi story that begins with a one-time suspension of disbelief in single concept, followed by details that clearly attempt to apply realistic and actual scientific concepts, I'm not aware of any arbitrary requirement that the rules underlying an imaginary concept must be non-imaginary.
It would be satisfying, yes, and probably add to believability, like that good sci fi story, but if one is preaching to a choir that is already convinced of the original imaginary concept, why give up a good thing? Make up anything you want! Why limit your god creation to the mundane Laws of Nature??
Personally, my imaginary world would have laws of physics that could be reversed at will. For example I would invoke gravity up instead of gravity down, collapsible tessaract travelling instead of the shortest distance between two lines, and lungs that morph into gills.
So I think you are dealing with an enormous amount of speculation that is virtually unprovable and unfalsifiable. So while it's fun I can't honestly say it leads to any truth that we have evidence for. Does that make sense?
My point exactly. Fun? Yes. Make sense or lead to actual, verifiable evidentiary truth? Not a chance.