For the duration of this discussion I am dropping my RedCream persona.
>>3modern cosmology says you're wrong
I seriously doubt that. We are limited about our universe from noting basic physical facts and then noting the limit of the 'observable universe'. Combine these and you can't rule out the concept of eternity.
About the only thing which is debatable is the concept of what is possible within meta-physical law over eternity. I use the term 'meta-physical' in the sense of universe formations in the hyperverse (which is itself speculation, since it can not be proven). All all possible permutations of physical law possible within the scope of this proposed eternity? As in entirely different universes blooming like flowers in the proposed hyperverse?
It is depressingly possible that our universe is the only one, ever, and shall always be. As it winds down, entropy approaches a maximum value, and all points of temperature approach absolute zero. And that will be it, forever.
What people tend to forget is that 'forever' or 'eternity' mean 'never ending'. All I proposed as
>>1 is that there's an implication to 'never ending' that comprises more possibilities that otherwise suspected.
I simply want people to discuss the possibility that if our universe seems to have had a beginning (not a creation, but an
origination event), then it's possible for things to begin again, and to have
begun before. There's reason to suspect there's a hyperverse, although as I said before, this can't be proven, since our universe is a
singularity.