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If it wasn't God that created the universe, then where did the "Big Bang" come from?

2006-06-27 15:01:16 · 31 answers · asked by alicat1298@sbcglobal.net 1 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

31 answers

The chicken because it most likely evolved from a prehistoric dinosaur. Birds and mammals first came about in the jurassic era whereas dinosaurs were in the triassic. One dinosaur may have evolved into the chicken. We do have one dinosaur called the acheopterix (Not sure if that was spelled correctly), which is considered the missing link between dinosaurs and birds. So most likely a prehistoric animal evolved into a chicken, which then laid the egg.

2006-06-27 15:07:01 · answer #1 · answered by Tahmid R 3 · 0 0

The chicken came first. An egg is produced by a chicken as a means of reproduction, as well as many other animals do.

I'm not sure the big bang theory is even correct. Sure there may have been a big bang that created the universe as we know it. However, the material that caused the big bang had to exist prior to that. Therefore, the universe must be bigger than we think and the universe we are aware of, through our current technology, is only a small fraction of what is out there. We just cannot see the distant universe with our technology. Any current telescope can only see so far.

If we sent the hubble 100 trillion light years away imagine what it might see from there. Of course by the time it got there the Earth and probably most of our galaxy might be gone, so there would be no humans left here to see the images.

I still think interstellar travel is possible, just not by any means we are currently aware of. Imagine what the dormant 90% of our brain holds, perhaps the knowledge is already in there somewhere. Self discovery might be our best place to put our effort. If we woke up the rest of our brain, perhaps everything else would be clear.

2006-06-27 22:37:33 · answer #2 · answered by jeffrey_meyer2000 2 · 0 0

Whether God or the big bang create the universe, you can always ask where did the first thing come from, but even if you find and answer, there will be a new first thing and you may ask the same cuestion about that thing. So I guess the only possible answer is this: the first thing is something that is the same as nothing. Now you may ask, how can nothing create the world if it's not something? just close your eyes and what you see is just nothing, but is also the black color, and the black color is already something. Is an idea created by us that is a part of a bigger idea, the idea of color. The same thing happens with silence, space (as absence of any physical phenomenon), and some others I don´t remember right now. The will is capable of seeing something where nothing is. But you may ask now, where does the will came from? The will have no laws, no properties, no characteristics, nothing, the real will doesn't even have time, it doesn't exist in a certain moment, it exist before the time, it actually created the idea of time, it's nothing, but seen itself as something. I like to understeand this with a metaphor: let's say that before I was born I was an angel that knew that I didn't exist, and I said God, hey, let me get into the world, and he told me, if you get there you will forget what you know right now, you will think that you exist and you will get confused, and I said, it's ok, I know right now that all of that confusion will be false, even if I think when I get there that it's real. So that's how I think that I exist.
Another example is Newton's statics law. He says: "An object at rest will remain at rest unless acted upon by an outside, external net force." If you think about it, that law says nothing, is the same as saying A = A, is a tautology. It says "If nothing moves an object, the object won't move". And I think that every phisical law is deep inside like this one, a nothing seen as something.

2006-06-28 01:48:23 · answer #3 · answered by juaneco_el_lokeko 1 · 0 0

It does sound puzzling at first, but how much does one have to think until one realizes that both chicken and egg must necessarily have come from something that is neither a chicken nor an egg? This answer was knowable centuries before biology came about, yet people assumed there was some unsolvable mystery behind the issue.

The modern chicken is generally believed to be a descendant of "Archaeopteryx", the oldest known bird. This 150 million year old resident of the Jurassic period laid eggs, and at some point of time, evolved into an animal that was one generation away from being a proper chicken.

2006-06-28 12:59:39 · answer #4 · answered by Its not me Its u 7 · 0 0

Actually, the CHIGG came first from the Mind of God, and morphed into a chicken, which then laid the first egg, which weighed 600 pounds. The Big Bang came when God took a hammer and struck a spark of fire which came from His nostrils.

2006-06-27 22:24:34 · answer #5 · answered by In Honor of Moja 4 · 0 0

the chicken came first , god did not put a bunch of eggs everywhere when he created the world.
the universe, it collided and went BANG

2006-06-27 22:09:05 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, Studies have shown that life started with a single cell organism. This was figured by the adaptation that they grew to multiple cells which were mammals. So the correct answer would be "The chicken came before the egg.

2006-07-04 02:59:58 · answer #7 · answered by Wolfie 7 · 0 0

Science believes that the egg came first and the big bang came from a primeval atom ( there would be enough energy to create a sun and a few orbiting plants).

2006-06-27 22:11:54 · answer #8 · answered by Brandon G 1 · 0 0

Chicken an egg came at the same time!

2006-06-27 22:05:40 · answer #9 · answered by Plain truth 3 · 0 0

The Chicken!

2006-06-27 22:04:35 · answer #10 · answered by Katie 3 · 0 0

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