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Could you give me a scientific approximation on the possibility that the Big Bang was a natural occurrence?

2007-05-02 19:24:19 · 14 answers · asked by sww_35 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

14 answers

Hi. Science can't explain the reason why the theory (there's that word again!) of the Big Bang happened in the first place .
They are not concerned about what happened prior to the beginning.So they leave it as is.Yet they rule out a Creator because it can't be scientifically proved.Strange isn't it.Anyway they are happy to wait for scientific reasoning to fill in the missing pieces.

2007-05-02 23:45:31 · answer #1 · answered by ROBERT P 7 · 0 0

The universe is a finite entity,it had a beginning and it has an end.
the big bang started just after time zero.
It was initiated by a finite potential that evolved into the universe we see and experience to-day.
One day it will go out of existence and enter a state of eternal nothing,an incident that ran it's course and will never happen again.
A god gives us an eternal universe and no reason for all the laws and principals that are active in the universe all the time.

2007-05-03 10:30:57 · answer #2 · answered by Billy Butthead 7 · 0 0

Excuse me, but what difference does it make?

Before the big bang, all laws of science were null and void, that is why it is impossible to say what happened before the big bang.

For all I know, some old looking guy in a white robe said "Let there be light." and you get a big bang.

In fact, the first person to suggest the big bang theory (although he did not call it that, he called it a primoridal atom) was a Jesuit Priest trying to prove a moment of creation.

In the end, and in the universe we live it, we will never KNOW what caused the big bang, so you believe what you want to, just don't try to make be believe the same. . .

2007-05-03 06:24:31 · answer #3 · answered by Walking Man 6 · 0 0

Hard to quantify such a thing, but there are numerous theories about how our universe might have naturally come into existence without the help of a creator. And spontaneous intelligences have big conceptual problems before you even begin to look at omnimax creators like God. Out of all the imagined supernatural things, God is about the least likely yet paradoxically is the most believed.

BTW, LOL to the juxtaposition of the first and second answers to this question! It's so ingenious it almost makes me want to postulate a God fellow in order to explain it! It's very effective at dispelling the myth that atheists are as or more dogmatic than theists. Bless you, second answerer, bless you, sir!

2007-05-03 03:11:09 · answer #4 · answered by Logan 5 · 0 1

anything that happens in or to the universe is considered natural. therefore the big bang is natural. however, god is in the hearts and minds of the individual. so if you beleive in a god who is the creator of the univeres then i guess you must believe that god created our observeable universe starting with the big bang. who knows, maybe god snapped a couple of fingers together and created that spark. maybe god farted and walla the univeres came into existence. all i know is that no matter what "god" did, the universe most certainly started with a "big bang"

2007-05-03 09:09:20 · answer #5 · answered by Bones 3 · 0 0

Personally, no. But I seriously doubt you can provide "scientific approximation" that the Big Bang WAS created by a god.

2007-05-03 02:33:25 · answer #6 · answered by Voodoid 7 · 1 1

Big Bang .. Big Blunder.
But, that blunder was necessary to start something. Now, if you go before the big bang, the theory is like..hen or egg..

Going in detail, if the God is existing in the universe, how he helped in the big bang...?? Universe was created after the big bang, isn't it?

It is an endless loop of questions. Just believe in the Big Bang of all starting...that puts the full stop on what was there before. We should be more interested to know what's after the big bang and NOT before it.

2007-05-03 03:11:54 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

You can call the Big Bang God as it is the beginning and the ending

2007-05-03 02:32:41 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

We don't understand the physics of the "cosmic egg" before the "bang". The 4 fundamental forces that we know of today had not separated yet into distinct forces. Hence it is literally impossible for us to describe in any way what this egg was realyl like or what may have caused it to expand.

2007-05-03 02:31:53 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

This is a tautology. Big Bang = God.

2007-05-03 04:39:21 · answer #10 · answered by Lorenzo Steed 7 · 0 1

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