God created the universe. The big bang theory is just that a theory. If a big bang could make this earth, then if I blow up a print shop, I should be able to make a dictionary come out of it. That is why we still have monkeys, because God created them at the beginning of the world. I know for sure I did not evolve from some ape
2007-04-14 09:51:47
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answer #1
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answered by Evelyn G 1
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> If the Big Bang created the universe I would think an explosion so great would kill rather than create life.?<
And you would be right. So if there was any life around at the time off the Big Bang, it would have been killed off.
Luckily the Big Bang happened about 18 billion years ago, and life only emerged (on earth anyway) about 4 billion years ago.
And BTW, that also means that no scientist thinks the Big Bang created life. Where do you get these bizarre versions of scientific theories? Certainly not from a scientist.
>Why do we still have monkeys?<
Because without monkeys, who would ask that "why do we still have monkeys" question on Yahoo Answers, and then ignore people who answer them?
Yahoo Answers would be reduced to people actually wanting to learn something, instead of people posting inane questions without any interest in the answer whatsoever.
2007-04-14 10:21:08
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answer #2
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answered by secretsauce 7
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I agree with you..... you are correct..... now since that happened billions of years ago and the Earth formed 4.2 billion years ago. It probably took a billion years just for the first cool enough to even support life. Then the molecules that are found in all stars were present. Changes took place in the atmosphere formed (probably have them on Mars but not enough gravity to hold it). Carbon molecules combine with other elements in the basic fundamentals of life started to form.
They've actually re-created this in the lab by taking a sterile container. Putting in sterile elements and then creating an electrical shock like lightning... the buildings block formed. And it was done in a lab in a very short period of time. Now give the Earth at 3.2 billion years (time to cool down) and you have a great deal of time for things will evolve from that muck.
Genetically we are certainly very close to those monkeys you mentioned. We have similar structural designs and can die from the same diseases. Recently AIDS jumped from monkeys to human... exactly how could that happen if we did not have some close relation. AIDS did not jump the birds or fish.
Something to ponder
2007-04-14 09:55:22
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answer #3
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answered by AdviceManHere 5
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Don't mix apples and oranges:
First, you speak of a period (Planck Epoch Time--10 to the Minus 43 seconds ago)approximately 16 billion years ago when one individual Force (Electromagnetic force, Strong Atomic Force, Weak Atomic Force & Frorce due to Gravity)divided and became four forces. There was no solar system at this time--hence no earth. The earth would first have to form and cool for hundreds of thousands of years. The Ice Age, Stone Age, the Paleolithic Age, the Neolithic would all have to pass including the Birth and Death of every dinasour on earth would have to come and go before we would see the first tetrapods come up out of the primordial soup unto land. Several more thousand years would pass before the same tetrapods would become bi-pedal. This was long...long before the Epoch of animals (Monkeys). There was no water at the time of the Big Bang. Hundreds of thousands of years would pass before the first cyanogenetic drop of rain would form.
2007-04-14 10:00:00
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answer #4
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answered by Ke Xu Long 4
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a sparkling false impression of nature and the way it truly works. contained in the starting up, there replaced right into a mass of count number that were given to be so large that it better a gravitational stress. As that stress higher, by ability of compacting of the count number and attraction of alternative, free count number, the gravitational field grew to proportions that were a strategies previous the means of that count number to help it really is personal weight. That created a factor of stress created warmth that brought about a number of the flamable count number to blow up, hence turning out to be lots of small bits of count number. As that count number flew by ability of area, it amassed different free count number and each and each particle grew in length turning out to be planets, suns and stellar structures. finally, some type of biochemical reaction occurred on a number of those worlds that created life. some thing else is evolution.
2016-12-04 01:02:57
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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It did not create life. Life came afterwards as the universe became sufficiently cool to support it.
Monkeys and humans came from a common ancestor.
2007-04-14 10:09:34
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answer #6
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answered by novangelis 7
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Yeah... I forgot that the Big Bang created life. How stupid of me.
2007-04-14 09:48:03
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I hate this Question 2 points
2007-04-14 09:48:22
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answer #8
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answered by Snooter McPrickles 5
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I'll let you in on a secret. You must promise not to tell anyone. They really don't believe in the big bang any more-they know it didn't happen-ever. But, be quiet now-they haven't told everyone yet. They don't know how-they don't have a replacement theory.
2007-04-14 09:47:51
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answer #9
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answered by Desperado 5
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You can't kill what is not there yet and anyway you can't be serious unless you are an American and then you might be.
2007-04-14 10:04:15
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answer #10
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answered by airmonkey1001 4
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