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OK, so some say the Big Bang came from multiple dimensions. I heard M theory, all that. But, still, that just brings you back where you started. Where did those things come from. Is there a point where we will have to admit that the question is unanswerable, or do you think we will hit some fundamental answer?

2007-02-26 19:42:02 · 18 answers · asked by Cpt_Zero 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

18 answers

I think that it depends on one's beliefs.there are many scientists who had already supposed many theories about the universe formation.but they all suppose that the universe was created by hassard and not by god.
so if u believe in god then u won't agree with them and will never find an answer for ur question in science book.but only in ur religion books.and u u don't believe in good u will agree with those theories which in my point of u are not logic at all

2007-02-26 20:18:22 · answer #1 · answered by Pinka 3 · 0 0

The answer will always be speculative.
We know the universe is finite so it must have started somewhere.
If you go back to point zero nothing existed but a potential,the potential had to be finite or it could not have produced anything.
About 10 to the minus 95 seconds from zero a single space-time pulse came into existence. If it had stopped there nothing would have happened.
The third pulse gave us a single four dimensional space-time quanta that was the precursor to the universe.
For one-thirty billionths of a second it accelerated radially until it reached the speed of light,then the acceleration stopped.
At this time we had a mature precursor to our universe that would eventually evolve into what you experience to-day and into us.

2007-02-27 12:37:57 · answer #2 · answered by Billy Butthead 7 · 0 0

I think we will at some point, but the answer will no doubt raise further more fundamental questions, such as what was/is the origin of the multiverse within which this 'universe' resides? We're beginning to understand that we need a better word than 'universe' as 'uni' implies there is only one. The true universe would have to include all states of existence in all dimensions as well as the one we inhabit.

2007-02-27 06:05:26 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think there are 3 ways you can see the universe: as matter, energy or information (that means the shape of the other two). The information is the next step of understanding of the universe, maybe the answer lies there. I think that in a way this question is irrelevant in any step of evolution, because if we would find the answer then it wouldn't exist (see Ontological Argument). There is this interesting idea, linked by the theory of entropy expressed here:
http://infohost.nmt.edu/~mlindsey/asimov/question.htm

2007-02-27 04:27:59 · answer #4 · answered by Trufas M 2 · 0 0

It is not Big Bang. People may ask then where did the big bang come from. This question is answerable to a little extent. Universe has been created by GOD and he only created us. Now no one question god's existence.

2007-02-27 09:55:00 · answer #5 · answered by Shreyan 4 · 0 0

No. The word "universe" means everything there is, was, and will be, including space and time.

Science deals with the universe. There is nothing "else" for the universe to come from. If there was, it would be part of the universe, not separate from it.

You are asking, will science ever find something separate from everything. But if they did, it would part of everything.

2007-02-27 08:56:12 · answer #6 · answered by morningfoxnorth 6 · 0 0

I believe we will answer the question of where this all came from. compare astrology to Newton, then Newton to Einstein. Extrapolate from there. The "where" and "how" of it is not that far off. the big question is "WHY?" The whim of god? The divinely guided result of some cosmic, interstatial, septic drainage? or a random bombardment of pointlessness and coincidence?

2007-02-27 03:59:25 · answer #7 · answered by Buckyballs 1 · 0 0

science never find an answer beciase it is too broad for a man to answer and besides alot of things are missing... only god knows where the universe came from.

2007-02-27 03:48:05 · answer #8 · answered by jocktheholics 1 · 0 0

Go back a hundred years which isn't that long ago really, and our main mode of transport was still bicycle or horse, so no not for now, I wouldn't hold my breath...We're still in the embryonic stage me thinks.

2007-02-27 03:45:48 · answer #9 · answered by florrie f 3 · 0 0

nobody knows and nobody will find out. Its one of those unanswerable questions.

and no, saying God made it makes no more sense than any other theory

2007-02-27 03:55:30 · answer #10 · answered by Squintz 1 · 3 0

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