A theory is still just theory, in any case Someone or Something (GOD) had to light the fuse.
2007-01-23 09:39:10
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answer #1
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answered by St. Mike 4
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Definitely backwards theory, but not in the way you expect. The question should be, how did the perfect order of the Big Bang become today's clumpy universe?
Because the Big Bang supposedly occurred only about twenty billion years ago, nothing in the cosmos can be older than this. Yet in 1986 astronomers discovered that galaxies compose huge agglomerations a billion light-years across; such mammoth clustering of matter must have taken a hundred billion years to form. Just as early geological theory, which sought to compress the earth's history into a biblical few thousand years crumbled when confronted with the aeons needed to build up a mountain range, so the concept of a Big Bang is undetermined by the existence of these vast and ancient superclusters of galaxies.
These enormous ribbons of matter, whose reality was confirmed during 1990, also refute a basic premise of the Big Bang - that the universe was, at its origin, perfectly smooth and homogeneous. Theorists admit that they can see no way to get from the perfect universe of the Big Bang to the clumpy, imperfect universe of today. As one leading theorist, George Field of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, put it, "There is a real crisis".
2007-01-23 10:31:31
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answer #2
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answered by Someone who cares 7
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The Universe isn't believed to be a "systematic" order. Most scientists believe that our Universe works on Chance and Probability.
Which proves your theory wrong: If a carpenter piles up all of his materials in a big pile and tries to create a building by random explosion, it is entirely possible for the carpenter to create a perfect building. You see, everything and anything is possible when you are dealing with Chance and Probability. Why? Because Infinity Exists.
I'm trying to prove your theory wrong with another theory of course. So we're both wrong. So stop arguing. No one will know how the Universe was formed. Where there is Theory, Doubt Follows.
2007-01-23 09:45:29
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answer #3
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answered by BerlingBurg 1
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Yes, your theory is backwards. The "order" we know is the only one that could exist because it is the only one that DOES exist. Assuming that your perceptions of this order are objective is simple hubris. In other words, if you did make your dynamite pile it would be without any other office building to compare it to. The new "order" would be whatever shape the finished product took; this on top of that, this distance from that, at such an angle, etc. And being the only "office building" in existence, it would now define what an office building is, and therefore it WOULD be perfectly constructed.
2007-01-23 10:07:41
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answer #4
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answered by quiet-darkness 1
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Man, you just keep on reaching don't you? And yet you're constantly falling far short of anything remotely intelligent about this. LOGIC decrees that an act of destruction (i.e. assembling the known causes and conditions to destroy something) will tear something apart and an act of "construction" will use causes and conditions to put something together... but are construction and destruction really "finitely" defined?
Now let's look at this Big Bang theory again (according to your POV)... and let's slip off your narrow goggles of perception of linear time for a moment, IF you TRULY dare... destruction can cause something else to come into existence. When YOU die, your body becomes the causes and conditions for a whole host of bacteria, worms and so forth to party hearty, then what's left of your body becomes fertilization (perhaps) for plants to grow... YOUR destruction has become a vast sea of life for other organisms....
So... you see? Your perception is WRONG and you really need to go back to square one, and the Big Bang THEORY is logical in various ways.
_()_
2007-01-23 09:50:54
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answer #5
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answered by vinslave 7
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No, it is actually the opposite. The Big Bang theory says that all matter was in a neat ball at first, then it quickly expanded...into chaos. It went from order to chaos, not the other way around. Human beings tend to see order even where there is none.
2007-01-23 09:41:19
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Order comes from chaos all the time; it's simply a property of the natural world. Who are all these people saying there's no order in the universe? Science is possible only because we observe repeatable, structured, ordered events and systems.
2007-01-23 09:42:49
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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The order of planets and stars is due to random occurences on the quantum level over billions of years. The Big Bang did not create order. It spread the matter around, but didn't directly create the Earth or any other Heavenly body.
2007-01-23 09:38:30
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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As I have told you before, in the Religion section, you clearly don't understand big bang theory. Stop getting your answers and questions from Answers in Genesis and try picking up a physics book for once. It's quite obvious you have no idea what you're talking about.
2007-01-23 09:40:32
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answer #9
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answered by eri 7
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I beg to differ
The Big Bang may be the way God chose to create some very important elements.
Friend, you seem to be the same as me. You enjoy the scientific. Try: www.reasons.org
These are old earth Creationists - they believe Jesus is Lord, Messiah, The Way . . . and they think that science is part of the tools God gave us and reveal many of "the reasons to believe."
2007-01-23 09:45:10
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answer #10
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answered by Clark H 4
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Of course. By Big Bang they mean the biggest pile of dynamite in history right?
Where do these simplistic pseudo analysis come from?
2007-01-23 09:39:02
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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