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If you believe in the big bang, where did it come from (according to the actual theory)? Does that make it perpetual energy?

2006-07-07 07:09:30 · 8 answers · asked by Aloofly Goofy 6 in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

Also, please provide evidence of the Big Bang (according to theory! Please don't say silly things!) if you have that info too.

2006-07-07 07:19:48 · update #1

8 answers

Science supports the existence of God. According to science the universe was created 13.835 billion years ago. According to Genesis the heavens and the earth were created in seven days and nights (on the seventh day God, whoever He may be to you, rested) If you read Genesis each period consisted of two cycles "and the evening and the morning were the first day, second day" etc. That means 2x7=14 or 13.835 (round off to 14 cause the 'science' of light-doppler-shift is not exact and the end is not yet. When it started it was a tremendous explosion of energy beyond our ability to quantify it, measure it or duplicate it even on a chalk board. God said: "let there be light" and it was so, we "science-ize" it by calling it the "Big Bang" 'cause it most certainly was a tremendous event. Life exploded into nothingness all at once. There was so much energy that after 13 billion plus years it is still expanding. Allow for a little literal license and it makes sense. Remember the Bible was written at a unsophisticated time with non-science language and the Bible is not a science book. It is a book of revealing on how to teach one's spirit to mature. But all in all science supports the existence of God and the Big Bang. The Big Bang did happen, 100 years from now people will understand more and look back at us and laugh at us for calling it the 'Big Bang' in our un-sophisitcation.

2006-07-07 07:26:24 · answer #1 · answered by goldcrestmotors@sbcglobal.net 1 · 5 6

the theory of the big bang is just that a theory. to find proof of the beginning of the universe would be very hard but according to the theory which has changed over time all the matter in the universe gets compacted together to a point where it is very small, the size of all the matter has changed at one point it was miles across and now i believe its a molecule, and dense. Then it explodes and it has been expanding ever since. One way that scientist find out about the beginning of the universe is by accelerating molecules and crashing them together. One flaw in the theory however is that where did the original matter come from.

2006-07-07 14:43:35 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There is ample proof for the Big Bang, it even has the blessings of the "Church".

The Big Bang arose out of the dense condensate of matter packed to immense densities. The Universe most probably oscillates between expansion and contraction, so our Universe right now may have been born again and again wtih no memory of its history.

2006-07-07 14:17:27 · answer #3 · answered by ag_iitkgp 7 · 0 0

"Big bang" proponents have a problem with our own planet and sun. Were you to release a mass 0.716 miles from the core point of our planet, in one second it would accelerate past the speed of light. In our sun the distance is 400 miles from the core point.

What happens to the mass in these inner locations? If the concept of black holes were correct, the mass should turn into a black hole.

2006-07-07 19:38:14 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Instead of expanding like ours, a previous universe was contracting. When it contracted down to the size of a single molecule, the pressures built up to the point that it exploded into our current universe and started to expand again.

2006-07-07 14:16:12 · answer #5 · answered by JetDoc 7 · 0 0

well, you see all of the dust in space came together in one tiny ball and then it exploded and then that is how the big bang was formed!

2006-07-07 14:13:50 · answer #6 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

there was no such thing as the big bang though.

2006-07-07 14:32:03 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

it came from agnostics

2006-07-07 14:28:14 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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