This paper argues that the question “why is there something rather than nothing?” does not constitute a genuine problem but an epistemologically self-contradictory framing. The central argument is as follows: to formulate that question with full meaning it would be necessary to occupy a standpoint external to existence, from which it would be possible to observe that there is something, compare it with the possibility that there might be nothing, and ask why the former obtains rather than the latter. But that standpoint does not exist. Whoever formulates the question already exists. And in existing, they have already assumed, in the very conditions of formulation, that about which they purport to ask. The question is not difficult: it is ill-posed from the outset. The paper situates this conclusion in relation to the most relevant antecedents in the philosophical tradition. Wittgenstein observed that “that the world is” belongs to the mystical and that whereof one cannot speak one must be silent: a correct but insufficient diagnosis, which identifies a limit without showing the self-contradiction. Heidegger went further: he showed that the question of being cannot be formulated from outside being, and that we are always already within existence when we ask about it. But he did not dissolve the question; he converted it into the fundamental question of all philosophy. Neither took the step taken here: showing precisely that the question self-contradicts in its own conditions of formulation and is therefore not a difficult question but an ill-posed one. The paper also establishes a parallel with the critique developed in Iguiniz Agesta (2026) of Chalmers’s zombie argument. Both cases instantiate the same logical pattern: a question formulated from a standpoint that is, by definition, unavailable to whoever formulates it. The difference is that Chalmers at least constructed a fiction—the philosophical zombie—in an attempt to provide that external standpoint. The cosmological question does not even attempt this: it acts as though the external standpoint were simply given. Which makes it, if anything, a more elementary false framing.
Gabriel Iguiniz Agesta (Sat,) studied this question.