Chap wrote:I think you need to consider the possibility that the two categories you have just used in that sentence - 'existence' and 'non-existence' don't really work very well when you leave the macroscopic non-quantum world that our central nervous system has evolved to deal with.
So it's not surprising that your program crashes when you try to use it out of its proper range of application. It's not the fault of the physics, which does not really use concepts like that any more. The same applies to the common-sense notions of causality that Aristotle elaborated in his analysis of 'coming into being and passing away'. People take it for granted in everyday life that 'things can't happen without a cause', just like 'nothing can come out of nothing'. But if you look at the world at the quantum scale, the rules of the game don't seem to work like that any more.
If however you learn the right language to talk about this stuff, the language of mathematics, it all makes pretty good sense.
I get it that some laws of physics don't cross the border into the Q., but that doesn't mean terms can't. It doesn't take sophistication or science degrees to use a straightforward rendering of the term nothing, or non-existence.
As per Dr.W - "From my foxhole, I would point out that one strict definition of nothing might be no matter and no energy, which would, in turn, mean no gravity, which would mean no spacetime.
By this strict definition of nothing, however, there would not even be a box, let alone anyone to worry about whether or not it was truly empty."