A word of caution.
Science provides models that enable predictions which may or may not reflect reality and certainly make no claim about "truth".
I would argue from strictly a lay mans point of view, handy as I dont present a theory or hypothisis but merely speculation ...that there is no place where we find nothing.
If there is nothing there must be something.
Consider this.
Go to the center of one of the many voids in the universe what will you find?
I suggest thru any point there are or is an infinite number of trajectories. And so it will be for any point you can find anywhere in the universe...
But take one point and think how many particles or packets of energy rush along that tradjectory in both directions...just visable light for example but there is so much more than that...if you think about it for a while you will wonder how everything fits even in nothing.
When under the stars next think about what I have suggested and just how much is actually everywhere and if you can find a spot where you think there is nothing may I suggest look harder.
I like to think of tradjectories by imagining a giant sphere say ten billion light years diameter and sticking thin rods thru so the surface of our sphere is packed with rods that are ineffect tradjectories.the rods go from one side to the other so think how busy it may be at a single point..they all scribe the path of particles travelling from one side of the universe to the other...and that sphere actually works out to about 95 billion light years ( our observable universe)..
At any point although at first you will think there is nothing you will find that indeed a small part of every part of the universe passes thru in both directions.
So I say what is imagined as nothing simply does not exist.
That should get you thinking.
Alex
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