Yes, quite true. Clearly, events in another spacetime are meaningless from our perspective, and not properly definable as "events" in the strictest sense of the term. Quite fun to think about though, at least for me.Umbran said:Yes, plausible. But there are a couple of things to note -
1)This would nto be an "event" as we think of them. It is not along the dimension we call "time". So, it isn't that it happened "before" the big bang. It would be just as correct to say it happened to the left of the big bang.

IMHO the whole concept of 'causality' as such is flawed, because the modern theories don't have an embedded 'arrow of time.' They're time-symmetric, and as you must be well aware (given where you work) there are a lot of experiments going on recently which are looking for some sort of symmetry violation to try to explain the arrow, none of which have given more than vague hints as yet (and certainly not enough to base broad statements on).Umbran said:2)Aside from this sort of accounting for the Big Bang, there is no cause to consider that our universe is ebedded in a larger space. There's no evidence of which I'm aware that we interact with such a space, and quite a few reasons to think that we don't. Interactions through larger spaces are a real headache in terms of causality. Occam's Razor applies - you don't go invoking spaces that are convenient, but which aren't actually necessary.
Time, to put it bluntly, doesn't move; it's a direction in its own right. So the notion that one 'event' (however you define that) can force another one to happen later in time seems just... wrong. It seems to imply a movement that isn't actually there, and even if that's the way our brains are constructed to think about the universe we live in, nothing says our brains are preceiving the whole truth (in fact, quite a few experiments have demonstrated that they don't). Causality as a notion has yet to come to grips with the lack of an arrow in the basic laws of physics- and that, to me, means that it needs to adapt.
The difficulty, of course, is trying to envision what a science without causality could be like.