The very fact of our existence is a miracle that causes surprise even the greatest minds. For primordial self-organizing matter is impossible, and hence it spontaneously acquired this self-organizing property which led to the emergence of the Universe followed by the birth of life on planet Earth and the formation of Homo sapiens.
If infinite space filled with eternal self-organizing matter is possible, then there arises a situation where there is an intelligent world that doesn't know its beginning, which is contradictory. Therefore, the primordial self-organizing matter is impossible. The such matter must have a beginning, and if there was other matter before it, it must have been without such property and also not infinite in space. At some point, this primitive matter accidentally acquired a property capable of giving birth to ultra-complex, whimsical phenomena over time. This moment can be considered the beginning of time, the origin of the universe and true being, and before it — the Era of Nothing.
What should the world be like for its existence to be possible? A world that, like ours, is capable on its own and without cause of giving birth to intelligent beings. In particular, should it be finite or infinite, having a beginning or being beginningless?
The absolute mind, by definition, possesses perfect absolute knowledge, knowing anything and everything. This means it is aware of its first reasoning and the date of its origin, which implies that it is not infinite nor eternal, i.e., not absolute. Is the arising contradiction logical?
The absolute mind, which creates worlds, according to logic, thinks, plans, and possesses memory, hence it knows its first creation and its own beginning, so to speak, its 'birthday.' The question arises: how can a beginningless mind exist?