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2006-08-11 06:14:54 · 33 answers · asked by LHR 2 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

If the big bang happened. That means there was a huge explosion of energy from a vaccum of no light, no air, no molecules of any kind nor gravity.

2006-08-11 06:17:28 · update #1

33 answers

Physics suffers over the same question (the Ph.D. part of my education M.D., Ph.D. is in physics), "Where did all of this come from"? From philosophy I lean back on Plotinus idea of "that essential nothing capable of becoming anything." Of course he elaborated a bit more...

2006-08-11 06:18:55 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

Long ago, I read a book that answered your question (in a way)... There are four things which make up the universe...
1. Matter (all the stuff out there is made of something)
2. Space (all of the nothingness inbetween the matter)
3. Energy (the power that is within the matter - either individually or collectively

4. Time.. This is unique -as there is nothing in the universe which requires time. We can measure how long a proton does this or that - or how long a star will last, but the concept is an invention. A way for humans to categorize events.

For God, there may only be the first 3 elements and thus was never concerned with a beginning or start or ending.

I grant, it's an obtuse answer... but hey, how exact can we be with a universe that is billions of years old?

How about this...

There WAS a big bang... however, it was created by a BIG collapse of the previous universe. Kind of like an ossilation (sp) on a universal scale.

2006-08-11 06:55:39 · answer #2 · answered by words_smith_4u 6 · 1 0

The universe substitute into no longer continually right here, and this would possibly not be the only universe. "Our" universe is the only that all of us comprehend, and it substitute into created someplace between 15-17 billion years in the past. maximum scientists call the even the super Bang. Our solar is approximately 5.6-6 billion years previous and has approximately yet another 5-6 billion formerly it is going into its crimson substantial area. which will extremely be the top of our photograph voltaic gadget, or a minimum of earth. The universe is likewise no longer limitless yet is continually increasing on the cost of sunshine. stunning now it seems as though the universe is going to proceed to strengthen, meaning that finally photograph voltaic structures and galaxies would be pulled aside and each thing will freeze. the different concept is that perchance gravity will substitute into greater suitable than the rigidity inflicting the universe to strengthen and pull each and every thing back at the same time interior the "huge Crunch." they have weird and wonderful names for those products. the two way the destiny for the universe seems bleak. those are issues that maximum cosmologist have agreed upon, so it extremely is from a in basic terms medical point of view. i'm no longer announcing that god would not exist, yet he's what each and each guy or woman makes of him.

2016-11-04 09:09:37 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Here-in lies the only proof of God. Everything we have found or studied from afar was created by some event and will pass out of existance on some timeline or another. We have no explanation in any of our theories for something that continues without end, yet at the beginning of all of this something created or caused to be created every molecule of everthing in our universe.
At the bottom of all of our sceintiffic explanation we have a mysterious creator that is everlasting. Scientists can put whatever name on that that they'd like but Christians call it God.

2006-08-11 06:32:11 · answer #4 · answered by W0LF 5 · 0 0

One theory is that we are part of a chain of universes, that expanded and then collapsed.
One interesting idea was, that the highest civilization of the previous universe, set things up to make sure that the cycle would continue, in a way to ensure living things in the next one. They would be about as close as you can think to the 'god' idea so beloved by so many.
Now that we have found that the universe seems to be open (will never collapse), that either we are in the last cycle of a chain, or that an upcoming civilization (Trillions of years in the future perhaps!) will again have to make the changes necessary to continue the chain.
The explosion would not come from a vacuum, since even it is created by the explosion. It would have started from the same place that the universe is presently expanding into.
New theories speak of 'branes' (from membranes) that vibrate in that place (?) and when two make contact, a new universe is born via another 'big bang'.

2006-08-11 06:16:15 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Hi, I am a Christian and that is the first thing I am going to ask God. The big bang theory, just like Darwin, does not have anything to back it up. There is a group of books called "The Creation Series", it's really cool. I grew up learning the Darwin theory in school and then I learned the "right way". See for yourself.

2006-08-14 17:22:38 · answer #6 · answered by Merrilly C 2 · 0 0

This universe is one of an infinite series of universes that exist within a greater reality. As for what many think of as God, here's the real story.

In the beginning there was only All That Is. No more and no less. Only All That Is was. There came a point of focus when All That Is became aware of itself. That point of self-awareness was the origin of all self-awareness, all consciousness. With awareness of self came introspection and the first observation or thought. That first thought was the origin of all thought. And that thought was, "I Am". This was followed by the second observation or thought. That second thought was the origin of all action and experience. That second great thought was, "I Am... bored silly!"

There is still only All That Is. No more and no less. Only All That Is is... but All That Is is no longer bored .

2006-08-11 06:31:20 · answer #7 · answered by capt_sheffield 3 · 0 0

God can come from "absolute nothing," if you believe in such things, because God would be a supernatural being that transcended the laws of physics.

The Big Bang, as I understand it, didn't come from "absolute nothing." The theory is that it exploded from a single dot of matter that was incredibly tiny and incredibly dense at the same time.

Both are hard to grasp and believe, aren't they?.

2006-08-11 06:27:44 · answer #8 · answered by mistersato 5 · 0 0

This is in theory called the breathe of GOD. Since he gave everything life. We may never meet him. Since he may have lived on another dimension. Our existence is made up of energy to continue on forever. Expanding in the universe forever.

My theory: Someone or something invented time travel moved far back in the past and created it all and then died. This makes since our bodies are mostly made up of water and the most comon thing in the universe is Hydrogen. H2O. Random Events?

2006-08-11 06:21:43 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It has always been here, the universe that is. People have a hard time accepting this because our lives have a beginning and an ending. We created god to help us explain what can't be explained.

2006-08-11 06:25:52 · answer #10 · answered by grooveface 3 · 0 0

You are thinking of God in the material sense. God is spirit, love, energy, etc. All religions have a creation myth of some kind. And as much as we can more easily believe that all we know was just chemical reaction and evolution... I bet deep in everyone's heart they know there is something more, something greater than that which we can touch. That's your soul... your spirit.

2006-08-11 06:23:08 · answer #11 · answered by Sir Greggath 3 · 0 0

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