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Is the cosmos omnipotent?

A lot of people will agree that the cosmos is infinite and eternal, and that by it performing an infinite number of operations it thus guarantees the existence of life on many worlds.

Yet how many people so inclined will also think it plausible that the cosmos could provide an infinite series of lifetimes? If people change during a single lifetime could they reappear in changed form on another world? And how much change would make this idea viable?

I don't want to hear from people believing the amount of creation is finite and constricted to a single space-time point. I'm looking for people who suspect a natural form of afterlife is possible through the concept of parallelism and an understanding of cosmic balances. This is a think tank for intrigued people.

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Ferric67 · M
The Laws of physic state that energy can not be created nor destroyed, are you implying the same energy in simpatico all throughout existence
Or
A little piece, here and there from the same sprout?
Sounds as if you want to imply the latter and not the former,
MissPerfect · 22-25, F
@Ferric67 Physical laws play no role in arguing for natural afterlife. They exist but are the domain of physicists and such.