You used the word "create" :)
where did the energy to create the universe come from? God Almighty. The Alpha and The Omega. The Creator.
2006-10-11 00:23:15
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answer #1
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answered by David 6
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It came from light. First there was nothing but light and then there was something. The light had all the energy and there was nothing there except energy. As the light traveled in every direction for trillions of years it got redder and cooler. The light changed state and matter was formed as a precipitate. This matter was the fundamental component of the physical reality. The fundamental tone caused by the natural interaction between all of the ingredients of the Universe created a logical relationship spanning all the fundamental physical reality.
The interplay between light and all the forms of matter and energy produced the Universal Awareness, who said: "I AM." followed by "I am everything." I am everywhere." and "I am alone." and "I am bored." and finally, "What can I do about this?" These statements were spaced about a billion years apart in today's years. At the time, (time had begun when matter precipitated out of light,) the statements seemed to only take a second or two.
;-D I am not really sure about the first statements. They may have been in a different order.
2006-10-11 11:52:58
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answer #2
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answered by China Jon 6
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The energy to create the universe comes from the smallest of smallest particles/energy that you can imagine. An enormous amount of energy is required to hold a molecule together. When a molecule is split, this energy is released, which we see when a bomb goes off. Now, lets go one step smaller, to the size of an atom. Even more energy is required to hold an atom together. When we split an atom, even greater energy is released, which we see when a nuclear bomb goes off. OK whats smaller than an atom. Well we have electrons, protons, neutron, photons, gravitons etc etc. Whats smaller than these sub atomic particles, ie, what are these particles made off and how much energy is required to hold them together. Science doesnt really know, but what we do know is that conciousness plays a role. Do an internet search on the double split experiment and you will see that particles and energy are the same thing, particles are just waves of energy that have collapsed by consiousness, (observation). So nothing really exists until consiousness makes it exist. Therefore, the only thing that really exists is pure consiousness, which is the smallest unit of existance, with infinite energy, which created all universes, and is the ground of everything.
2006-10-11 08:21:19
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answer #3
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answered by sunline 3
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Science has no anwswer for this that is backed up by any evidence whatsoever.
As a fanous physicist once said:
"The Big Bang theory says nothing about what banged, how it banged, why it banged, or even if it banged at all."
So it's possible to speculate on how it happened without a higher power. Or it's possible to speculate that a higher power did it. Both speculations are equally unspported by evidence. So, by scientific standards, neither explanation is known to be more likely.
If more scientists would admit that, we could convince more people that it started 13 billion years ago, and changed radically over time, and didn't flash into existence as a whole 6000 years ago.
2006-10-11 11:51:00
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answer #4
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answered by Bob 7
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Sorry, If it didn't come from God, then you have to assume the energy was always present in some potential well, somewhere, that at one point, overflowed and the excess energy spilled out of that potential well and created our universe. If that were the case, then somewhere (other dimension, other reality, IDK) there exist a potential well that still has one heck of a lot of energy in it. Now if you can believe in this Potential well always being there, continuing on forever, Why then is it so impossible to believe in God. A God who has intelligent design for the Universe and has a long and sophisticated plan to evolve us human beings from lower forms of life, to what we are today?
2006-10-11 09:15:04
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answer #5
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answered by SteveA8 6
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Wow, I was going to say God until I saw your details.
Well, there was some interesting theories in the Parallel Universes paper that came with the Scientific American magazine. It was mostly about the different levels of PUs, but they hint at some possibilities to your question. Sorry it to complicated and detailed to begin to relate here. Hope this helps ya.
2006-10-11 22:09:31
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answer #6
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answered by whoevermeam 3
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Current theory suggests the energy that resulted in the Big Bang was released by the collision of two 'membranes' (a.k.a. 'branes') which are two-dimensional extensions of superstrings.
The majority of the matter which is the universe condensed after the collapse of the (still theoretical) Higgs field at the end of the early inflationary period, which was from 10^-60 seconds until about 10^-30 seconds after the Big Bang.
2006-10-11 08:15:07
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answer #7
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answered by poorcocoboiboi 6
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who knows is the best answer cosmology can give you today
the theory we use for such things, namely General Relativity, happens to break down (ceases to be valid) at "singularities" such as the Big Bang, where it would predict a single (mathematical) point of infinite density, which just doesn't feel right.
For all we know, the mass of the visible matter in the universe is of the order of magnitude of 1E43 kilos. And the total mass, including the dark matter, could be 3x as large. That's of course a very large number, but it is also very very far from infinite.
2006-10-11 09:52:16
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answer #8
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answered by AntoineBachmann 5
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As matter is unborn as it is indestructible , it existed in the universe.It is not necessary or imperative something should always come from somewhre else and should not exist in space itself. The particles of energy such as electron and proton , which are the building blocks of the matter were inviscible as they are en now and they always existed and they did not need anybody or anypower or any place except the empty space to exist.. They did not and did not have to, come from elsewhere . Everythings else came from them..
2006-10-15 01:24:30
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answer #9
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answered by Infinity 7
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The universe may have existed without creation, it does not have a start, it has been there, just that. The cosmos expand and then come back to that small point we know (big bang), in this moment, the universe is expanding, but one day, it will come back, and expand again, ...
2006-10-11 07:47:25
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answer #10
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answered by AdrZZ 1
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