Wishful thinking.
2006-12-15 07:35:52
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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No-one knows. The event which allegedly brought the universe into existence was the Big Bang, which put simply was a huge explosion which produced matter, time and everything which is in space.
I'm not religious, but I'm not so sure about this theory, which it is. It is still a theory, no matter how much it is portrayed as fact.
That being said, I don't really see how the existence of a 'God' can explain the Universe. If some God made the universe, then who made the God? It's a very interesting paradox.
2006-12-15 07:37:19
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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You should ask yourself before if there is a cause for the Universe and everyting in it to exist, or if it only does, without any reason.
If you conclude there is a cause for it, maybe you can trace down what kind of cause is that, what purpose it pursues, and who is behind it. If you can reach that, you'll have your answer.
For Christianity, the cause it the major glory of God, the purpose is the reaching of the kingdom of heaven, and the thing who is behind all that is God. Or something close to that.
But you can find a whole different plot about it and live by it, just as any other non-christian people have, like romans, chinese, and pre-columbian people.
You will have to be happy with a philosophical answer, at least as we reach the technology to find that out scientifically. But that doesn't seem to be coming soon.
That's a whole lot of work -- good luck!
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Miran.
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2006-12-15 08:12:06
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answer #3
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answered by Miranto 1
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The Big Bang is a proven theory. Just like Einsteins Special Theory of Relativity, is a proven fact or proven theory, it's just symantics in which one you choose. Just the addition of the word theory does not make it unproven. The bigging of the universe can be simply explained like a bad stomach ache. At first you are normal, then something you eat or a temporary inbalance in the stomachs acid levels make you stomach unstable.
As some as you might know a particle has an antiparticle. That appears to come from know where. At the begging of the universe, an antiparticle might of thrown off the bablance of our quarter size universe. This create a changed reaction that create the expansion of our universe in a very short time. Our quarter size universe expanded making space, expanding into nothing our expanding into another universe
2006-12-15 07:56:08
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answer #4
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answered by G Constant 2
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Ex nihilo is a Latin term meaning "out of nothing." It is often used in conjunction with the term creation, as in creatio ex nihilo, meaning "creation out of nothing." Due to the nature this term, it is often used in philosophical or creationistic arguments, as a number of people say that God created the universe from nothing.Or you can say this did......>the Big Bang (disambiguation)....According to the Big Bang, the universe emerged from an extremely dense and hot state Since then, space itself has expanded with the passage of time, carrying the galaxies with it.In physical cosmology, the Big Bang is the scientific theory that the universe emerged from a tremendously dense and hot state about 13.7 billion years ago. The theory is based on the observations indicating the expansion of space (in accord with the Robertson-Walker model of general relativity) as indicated by the Hubble redshift of distant galaxies taken together with the cosmological principle.
Extrapolated into the past, these observations show that the universe has expanded from a state in which all the matter and energy in the universe was at an immense temperature and density. Physicists do not widely agree on what happened before this, although general relativity predicts a gravitational singularity (for reporting on some of the more notable speculation on this issue, see cosmogony).
The term Big Bang is used both in a narrow sense to refer to a point in time when the observed expansion of the universe (Hubble's law) began — calculated to be 13.7 billion (1.37 × 1010) years ago (±2%) — and in a more general sense to refer to the prevailing cosmological paradigm explaining the origin and expansion of the universe, as well as the composition of primordial matter through nucleosynthesis as predicted by the Alpher-Bethe-Gamow theory.[1]
From this model, George Gamow in 1948 was able to predict, at least qualitatively, the existence of cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB).[2] The CMB was discovered in 1964[3] and further corroborated the Big Bang theory, giving it an additional advantage over its chief rival, the steady state theory.[4]
2006-12-23 06:13:53
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answer #5
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answered by liljeremy504 1
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Existence!
2006-12-16 03:00:41
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answer #6
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answered by Billy Butthead 7
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There is no such thing.
Your question implies that there is a boundary, something outside the universe that created the universe. Okay, so where is this thing located in, and what created that universe, and so on, and so on.
There is no beginning, no end, no inside and no outside. The universe just is.
2006-12-16 03:12:59
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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There is no name for it because no one has solid proof of anything.The same could be said for the Big-Bang, Its all just theory,...If the Big-Bang happened & singularaty brought upon it self.what was before you ask ??? Nothing that you & I or any body else in the world could ever possibly comprehend...we are creatures both physicaly & mentally of dimension or in other words of time & space...Once again you & I cannot even begin to understand existance without time or space since our whole being is based on a spatial conprehension of our selves. But for the sake of simple Q&A's lets just call it God
2006-12-15 08:08:27
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answer #8
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answered by chris d 1
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lets agree on something supernatural with respect to all religions. scientists would say the 'Big Bang' out of a sol called singularity.
Since noone can really explain what was before, i think its wise to state that it was ....magic
2006-12-15 07:45:40
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answer #9
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answered by blondnirvana 5
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Physical laws.
2006-12-15 08:33:44
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answer #10
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answered by eri 7
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