The Bible God says he made it from nothing.
2007-06-14 09:17:41
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answer #1
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answered by JOHNNIE B 7
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First, the "big bang" was not an explosion as we normally think of explosions. It did not explode into space but rather it itself was space expanding. Secondly, there was no "bang" as sound needs a medium to travel in such as air or water. Thirdly, all matter in the universe came into being at the 'big bang'. It didn't come from somewhere else and enter the universe thru the big bang. So, no explosion, no 'bang' and no matter. The term big bang refers to a time when a tiny "seed" - a fluctuation in the quantum field - expanded at an extremely accelerated rate, creating in the process matter, energy, light and all the stuff of the universe.
2007-06-14 16:17:26
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Evolutionary cosmologists have no answer to this basic question.
According to the most basic laws of science it is not possible to create or destroy matter/energy.
The Big Bang hypothesis is riddled with problems. Many concepts have simply been invented to try to make it 'work'. (Inflation, dark energy, dark matter.)
The most obvious explanation is that the universe was created. Indeed this is what the Creator has told us, and he is the only one who knows for sure since he is the only one who was there.
It is not unscientific to believe in a creator. It is unscientific to reject 'a priori' the possibility of a Creator, which is unfortunately what many atheists do, pretending that naturalism is equivalent to science.
http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/3051/
2007-06-14 18:38:10
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answer #3
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answered by a Real Truthseeker 7
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Well, energy and matter are two types of the same thing, E=mc2.
So just after, energy forms matter.
Now the question is wheredid the energy come from.
And, what caused the Big Bang and why does it go to all the bother of existing int he first place. (although i doubt that space-time has a sense of bother.)
2007-06-14 16:17:41
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answer #4
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answered by | König | 2
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It is believed that the matter from the 'Big Bang' was in a very dense 'ball'. When all the forces in the Universe began to push on it, it exploded. But where the matter came from, I am unsure.
2007-06-14 21:18:08
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answer #5
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answered by El.. 4
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No one knows for sure and the Big Bang is just a theory that hasn't been proven but I believe that universes forming and falling is a cyclic event. So I believe that before the Big Bang there was another universe that imploded and got small to as small as it could possibly get and it just exploded and started forming again. Then our universe will just keep on getting bigger and then eventually get to a point where it will just implode.
2007-06-14 16:20:33
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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The 'Big Bang' theory isn't one that has the answers to all of the questions. It's basicly just saying that there was a big explotion that formed the universe, it doesn't say where the matter came from.
2007-06-14 16:17:53
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answer #7
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answered by cassandra n 2
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Thats one of the greatest questions in our current understanding of the universe. Some beleive it was an act of god, some beleive it came for our demensional space coliding with other "universer" per say. Another woderfull theory is that it came out of nowhere if equivalent amounts of everything was created along with its anti everything then as a whole the universe still contains a net nothing but we get to experience it since we havn't anniliated with the anti everything around us.
2007-06-14 16:13:42
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answer #8
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answered by sd d 3
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God didnt make light until the 2nd or 3rd day so are ya telling me he did all the first bits in the dark? what a clever bloke! I know what I belive and thats science not religion. However this is just that question tho isnt it i think it will be a very long time before we find the answer although its nice that finally quantum physics is being taken seriously, String theory and suchlike. maybe one day quantum will find all the answers we are looking for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2007-06-14 21:18:15
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answer #9
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answered by ooo my word! 1
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Theoretical physics today maintains that it cannot make statements about the universe before Planck time (order of 10^-44s). That oviously includes nothing being known about t=0.
Erm... okay, that one seems fairly accurate yet understandable.
2007-06-14 17:05:13
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answer #10
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answered by The Arkady 4
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If I knew it for sure I`d be polishing my Nobel prize for science right now!
I think there are some things that the human brain doesn`t have the capacity to process , and this is one of them.
2007-06-14 16:13:21
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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