Space is where matter lives, it's what dimensions like length or depth give us. Time is the arrow of entropy, the way in which matter in the universe interacts. Without matter there would be no time, just as there was no space before the big bang that started the whole thing off. What came before that we cannot know.
I don't believe anything, but quantum tunnelling is a good guess as to how space got started. Whether it will stand the test of time or get superceded is beyond me but it's a universe without need of gods or prime movers or unified consciousness (whatever that might mean) so it appeals for a lot of reasons, the main one being that involving creators of any sort doesn't answer any questions it just pushes them further down the line to some presumably ineffable and unmeasurable superbeing. Which is what your quantum wave idea does. However you want to look at it, if something has been projected there must have been a projector and someone who decided what gets projected. The two ways I told you it was a non-starter hold up: We live on an evolving world and quantum waves (which are mathematical descriptions anyway) can't contain more information than what they consist of because they wouldn't be quantum, and therefore random, anymore. ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <jr_esq@...> wrote: Salyavin, How do you suppose that space/time was created in the universe? Do you believe that a random quantum fluctuation created this concept? I'll explain my ideas after I get your responses to the questions above.