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see if the universe was born by the bigbang,what caused the bigbang,if by evolution what was its starting point. look i want some good and complicated answer for this question,not stupid ones

2006-10-13 20:54:37 · 11 answers · asked by genius sonia 3 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

11 answers

Hmmmm thats a tough one and I guess you are aware that we can only have theories we wont know for sure cause our technology isnt as advance. Now hmmm lol actually i can't even think of anything cause i was wondering there did the star came from in the first place WHERE DID EVERYTHING COME FROM ?? thats the first question before we can think of your question

2006-10-13 21:02:50 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

The "big bang" may have been a quantum fluctuation in something. If so, and if quantum mechanics worked in that something in the same way as it does here, there may have been no reason. It's here because it's here because it's here because it's here - - - -

No-one really knows and unless there is startling new evidence and/or a revolution in theory no-one is going to know for sure.

The age of the Universe can be estimated back to about 14.7 billion years ago, give or take a few hundred million. The Earth formed about 4.5 billion years ago, which is less than a third of the age of the Universe. Heavy bombardment of the planet by meteorites and asteroids stopped by about 4 billion years ago and by about 3.7 billion years ago some single celled life forms were probably around.

While evolution is affected by quantum mechanics it is basically a chemical process and has had little to do with the origin of the Universe, and also little to do with the origin of life. You have to have a population of organisms before evolution can really get going. That might have happened soon after the origin of life or it might have taken a fair old while

Multi-celled organisms were about the place around 670 million years ago, which is only about 15% of the age of the planet and more than half the age of the planet since the single celled organisms appeared. Compared to the single celled organisms they are infants. After another 100 million years the trilobites were around and very popular. They seem to have been related to crabs, insects, lobsters and spiders.

Eventually organisms came out of the oceans and got going on land. Those with backbones like fish developed into amphibians, reptiles and eventually mammals and birds spit off as well.

After another 605 million years the dinosaurs died off, probably because an asteroid struck the Earth about where the Yucutan Peninsula is today. Looks like they didn't all go at once, a few survived for a while. Mammals and birds which already existed survived in large enough numbers to be still around today.

Around a million years ago humans spilt off from their chimpanzee cousins, probably because a bunch of proto-humans got separated from the main gang. They started improving their technology and talking to each other, a pretty bad move some might say. So here we are.

2006-10-13 21:32:53 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

There are no reasons in the universe. If you could search every corner of the universe (known and unknown) nowhere in it would you find a reason. Reasons only exist in language. The universe is only how it is, in reality, until someone says it is how they say it is and gives a reason and then through the use of language they have created a reason for the universe being.

That the universe was created by God in an instant for the purpose of being home to all his creations is just as valid a reason for the universe being created as that is emerged out of the Big Bang for no real purpose. Neither reason is wrong, neither reason is right in reality until someone says that one or the other is right and that makes the other one wrong and then though the use of language we have created a reason for the universe.

There may be a being called God who snapped his fingers (don't get me started on what a snap or a finger is!) and the universe popped into existence. Of course that "popping" might be what we call the "Big Bang" Then again that same God might have picked his nose and pulled out a booger and said "hey look a universe" In which case one might argue that God picking his nose was a "Big Bang" or that him saying "hey look a universe" was a "Big Bang".

In reality the universe wasn't even a universe until someone named it a universe, before that it was nothing and then in an instant it was declared something and became everything. God was nothing until someone named it God and then it became God although in the past many people have named many things God or gods and many people still name other things God than the God that you or I might name God.

Such thinking may occur as circular and pointless, but in the end any contemplation of such things without first seeing that everything ever contemplated has been done so, and as a result is constrained by the rules of language is in the end utterly pointless can result in the perpetual expense of valuable resources that may be better directed somewhere else.

Of course here I am spewing language which you will immediate try to categorize and justify that may result in simply shifting those resources toward another equally pointless construct of language: "Why is he saying that?"

To that question I will leave you this answer: "Why not?"

Hopefully my answer is sufficiently complicated.

Enjoy

2006-10-13 21:39:44 · answer #3 · answered by Rob S 1 · 0 1

The term universe has a variety of meanings, based on the context in which it is used. In strictly physical terms, the total universe is the summation of all matter that exists and the space in which all events occur or could occur. The part of the universe that can be seen or otherwise observed to have occurred is usually called the known universe, observable universe, or visible universe. Because cosmic inflation removes vast parts of the total universe from our observable horizon, most cosmologists accept that it is impossible to observe the whole continuum and may use the expression our universe, referring to only that which is knowable by human beings in particular. In cosmological terms, the universe is thought to be a finite or infinite space-time continuum in which all matter and energy exist. Some scientists hypothesize that the universe may be part of a system of many other universes, known as the multiverse.

You could get more information from the link below...

2006-10-13 23:30:17 · answer #4 · answered by catzpaw 6 · 0 0

My belief is that both creation by God and the big bang theories can be intertwined.

So, say a big bang happened, Could that not be the result of God? I truly believe so. You'll have to forgive that I can't give references but in the bible it mentions that a day to God is like a thousand years to man. So the six days of creation can fit. It's not like there was nothing and all of a sudden the world in all it's splendor was here. It was gradual. My general knowledge tells me that after the big bang slowly creatures developed. What the starting point was in evolution I don't know. Frankly there is not a single person on this planet that knows what happened for sure. God is the only one who knows the full story. Believers in God and scientists can theorize, but will never get the full truth.

To me the whole idea of a big bang just happening, that all of the criteria was met by some coincidence is hard to believe. Things are just too complicated. Things like DNA for this all to be something that happened by chance.

It's not very complicated but that's my point of view.

2006-10-13 21:11:28 · answer #5 · answered by Norm 2 · 1 1

No one really knows for certain. There are scientific theories-The Big Bang and the Steady State. Big bang assumes the universe was created out of cosmic egg. They have no explanation of how this egg came about in the first place. There are also problems of singularities. Steady State argues that universe always existed. I go back to what my parents and elders told me. It was created by God and that is why it is there.

2006-10-14 03:26:47 · answer #6 · answered by openpsychy 6 · 0 0

One theory about how the big bang came about is the use of M-theory, also called Membrane theory. This is an extension of string theory.

In this theory , very basically the big bang occured as the result of two, perhaps more, hyperdimensional membranes touching each other. This produced the universe we see today.

It is likely that membranes touch each other frequently but produce laws of physics, or at least physical constants, like the values of G, electron charges, fundamental forces.

2006-10-13 21:07:52 · answer #7 · answered by cehelp 5 · 1 0

I have no idea really.. they say that the big bang bangs and then recompresses again to make another big bang. It really makes me wonder what is beyond our universe. I mean, space and existance can't really stop.

2006-10-13 21:06:31 · answer #8 · answered by Hessy 2 · 1 0

OK! The big bang is a stupid idea. Evolution is crap. The universe was created by God. End of story.

2006-10-13 20:58:01 · answer #9 · answered by triniqueen40 4 · 0 3

the big bang. some think it was created by God but how then was God created? He couldn't have just randomly appeared.

2006-10-13 21:08:13 · answer #10 · answered by Kat W 2 · 0 0

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