English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I can. More realistic then a diety. More proof to.

Any questions?

2006-09-27 02:33:07 · 32 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

32 answers

The universe is infinite & eternal.

Our visible universe is an insignificant dot in the infinite universe. The "big bang" was insignificant to the infinite universe.

What people call the "universe" is more correctly known as the "visible" or "observable universe" and is just a tiny little speck in the infinite universe.

The universe was not created, it has always existed. And will always exist.

2006-09-27 02:38:11 · answer #1 · answered by Left the building 7 · 1 1

Oh I definitely think a big bang could have created this beautiful universe. What I'm caught up on is how did the big bang come about? What predates the universe that caused the big bang?

It'd be easier to say that the big crunch works or that there's some sort of big fat mama universe out there that's eternally creating an infinite number of universes, but to think that I'd be going more into myth and superstition than actual fact. After much study I'd have to concede that by Occam's Razor, this universe was created in a big bang, yet started and directed by a very powerful consciousness to say the least. It's just the simplest explanation that fits ALL the facts.

The odds are just too great to think anything else.

2006-09-27 02:49:41 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes I can believe it. Look, life is weird. Somethings look impossible and yet unbelivable. Life itself it more complicated than the theory of the big bang.......and on top of that, that life (our life) is an intelliget one......that is really a miracle.

Look, an atom is compoused of a nucleus (protons and neutrons) and electrons which orbit the nucleus. Now wha will give you the hint is this: in comparison, if the nucleus is a small boy.............and the electron is a chicken. If the small boy is in (x) point, the chicken would be some 2 kilomiter (1.2 miles) away from the x point. Which means there is only empty space there. This empty space is what super massive stars compress to produce a black hold, where the gravitational pull is so strong, due to the super strong gravity produced by the huge amount of matter concentrated at one single point. NOW, imagene that it is NOT a super massive star that is creating this pull. Imagene for instance, that this pull is created by the full amount of matter of one galaxy........the pull would be so strong that maybe it will pull into it other galaxies. As more matter is sucked in, by the pull, the stronger the pull, and the more power it will create untill the whole universe could collapse back in to that single point once again.

The question that bugs me is this: If it all collaps into that single point once again. How did it bow-out when it was like that at the bigining? What made it blow-out? Who did it?

God? or may be some kind of fisic rule that we don't know about, mandates that matter is to blow out under unimaginable compression?

2006-09-27 03:50:09 · answer #3 · answered by Eddy Perez 1 · 0 0

No- that's whyI prefer Creationism and the book of Revelation.
FIrstly, if the Big Bang was true, then where di the preexisting matter that started it all come from. Why did it suddenly explode? Lab experiments have also proved that in the event of suvh an explosion most of the time only radiation and hot gas were spewed out. The chances of rock forming planets in big balls is also unlikely- for example, if the Earth was just one mile closer to the Sun, then it would ba a barren wilderness with no life at all. The positioning of the planets is also a little too exact to be pure chance, as are the formation of galaxies.
Man's word is fallible and ever-changing on the subject- each year hundreds of new theories on our existance com out, with no two agreeing on the same thing.
As for the deity theory, it is much more sound than the Big Bang Theory. It is little unchanged forom the original writings. Many scientists are in support of it and there is a growing field in creationist science and creation research. It is the perfext law, science, philosophy and counselling book in the world.

2006-09-27 03:06:07 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Jim, I am an atheist, not because I want there to be no deities, but simply because there's no evidence of them.The Genesis creation stories are demonstrably nonsensical, and conceptions of an anthropomorphic deity are just narcissistic. We have no reason to believe in the involvement of deities in the process at all, but then we really don't understand the process, do we?

I remember thinking how bizarre quantum mechanics was, and then string theory came along, and then evidence of 11 space/time dimensions, and quarks, branes, bosons...

I would be shocked to find a god plowing in the Higgs Field, but I would only be disappointed by that if the god turned out to be as small, mean, egocentric, nasty and utterly human at its lowest, as theists would have their gods be. I still half suspect the universe is a soap bubble in someone's bathtub.

But don't you love all the folks who try to quote the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics out of context who clearly never passed high school physics? They all seem so concerned to know the answers, but not concerned enough to take a class or read book on cosmology. It's just easier to decide , "and then magic happened."

2006-09-27 02:49:06 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No you're wrong, the Big Bang is not realistic. God is definitely more realistic. There is more proof that God exists. God created this universe and you can experience God's love and plan for your life once you make Jesus Christ Lord and Savior of your life. There is no proof to support the Big Bang Theory at all. I don't know where you got that from. God is 100% real, Amen!!

2006-09-27 02:39:32 · answer #6 · answered by blessedman 6 · 1 0

The problem with the big bang is not if it is easier to believe: it is where did the primordial atom come from. Did this object that contained all the energy, matter and plasma in the universe exist for eternity and suddenly have a complete entropy reversal? or did it just suddenly pop into existence and explode? The belief in an eternal existing God may be hard to believe, but eternal existing matter and energy isn't any easier. Nor is it easier to be lieve all the matter, and energy in the universe was formed from nothing, by nothing.

2006-09-27 02:54:37 · answer #7 · answered by » mickdotcom « 5 · 0 0

We can use the laws of physics to 100% predict where plantets, stars, etc. WILL be, therefore, the same laws can be used to 100% perdict where they WERE in the past. If we trace their paths back far enough, it shows everything emerged from a single singularity.

Can the same be said about any diety? I think not.

If the universe was truly "Created", it was Created in such a way as to not appear to have been "Created". Mysterious ways indeed.

2006-09-28 07:57:17 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No real proof. Just men sitting together basing facts and theories on the best sounding idea from people who weren't there to begin with! Man has trouble understanding the little things in life and thinks he can explain this? Some people just can't stand thinking their is not a HUMAN answer for everything. Go ahead, make yourself feel good with the big-bang theory if that makes you all warm and fuzzy feeling like you have an answer.

http://planttel.net/~meharris1/mikescorner.html

2006-09-27 02:37:44 · answer #9 · answered by green93lx 4 · 1 1

I believe in the Big Bang theory and a Deity. Why do people fall on one side of the fence or the other? People who are religious tend to only believe what they read in their holy book of choice. These books were written by man not a Deity and man is a great story teller. I am part of the science community and the discoveries we have made make me believe if there is a Deity it is greater than any book could ever explain.

2006-09-27 02:38:21 · answer #10 · answered by Brandon L 2 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers