Ah, Sweetie...it's Monday morning.
People are always a bit more grumpy on Monday morning...
But, to answer your question, it was reading that law that clinched it for me, too.
God, the source of all energy, created the universe, and everything in it.
2007-08-13 06:44:24
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Let me assure you, the scientific community is well aware of the Laws of Thermodynamics. We are not so stupid as to disregard them in our theories about the beginnings of the universe. One possible pre-Big Bang scenario has all the matter and energy of the present universe compacted into a single dimensionless point of infinite density, rather like the center of a black hole. The "Big Bang" is theorized to be the explosive expanding outward of this single point to generate the universe. In any case, conditions of the universe prior to and immediately following the Big Bang are not well-understood.
Incidentally, the Big Bang hypothesis does not in any way imply that God is or is not "responsible for us." Science cannot address the question of *whether* a supernatural entity exists or is active in the physical universe. Science only deals with how said physical universe works and what has happened in it. In plainer terms, science does not care WHO (if anyone) created the universe; science only cares HOW it was done. It is a perfectly valid position to believe that God caused the Big Bang, so long as you understand that there is no way to *prove* that God was (or was not) involved.
2007-08-13 06:41:45
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answer #2
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answered by nardhelain 5
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True, the world could have been created in many different ways that have not even been confirmed as possible by the human race though. Or maybe the Big Bang was how God created the universe. We can't really say for sure until we die and can figure out all that stuff, like where God came from himself.
2007-08-13 06:36:08
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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First of all I don't know much about the the big bang theory but I'm sure as hell you didn't disprove anything.
Second of all its called the big bang THEORY! It by no means 100% proven and scientists are constantly learning more about the origins of the universe.
2007-08-13 06:32:40
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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The big bang theory doesn't state that matter was created or destroyed.It says about 14.5 billion years ago,all the matter was in a singularity,and space time expanded and continues to expand.Were you trying to disprove THE BB theory?Or simply your misconception of the theory?
2007-08-13 06:33:17
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answer #5
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answered by nobodinoze 5
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You've got it completely wrong. The Big Bang was a singularity. It was all there in a very dense singularity. Imagine the force of all that energy in one iota.
2007-08-13 06:29:52
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answer #6
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answered by Shawn B 7
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THough I do not agree with the "big bang", the big bang was not about the creation or destruction of energy. it is about potential energy converted to kinetic energy converted to light energy converted to mass at rates FTL.
By converting energy to mass, you slow down mass to STL, whilst dark matter and other ghost energy (like gamma rads) float about at FTL.
2007-08-13 06:37:09
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answer #7
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answered by lundstroms2004 6
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Then where did God come from? Did he exist in a void until he decided to create a universe? If you say he has always been there then why isn't it possible that the universe was always there.
2007-08-13 06:29:37
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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How is believing in the big bang,or evolution, or science, synonymous with not believing in God. Many God loving people believe in all those things and believe intelligence and God go hand in hand
2007-08-13 06:29:24
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answer #9
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answered by ayertiam t 2
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Time has no beggining or end, the big bang is not the beggining of time or energy, just an explanation of the beggining of our piece of the universe. Time and energy will always exist and always have, no begging, no end.
2007-08-13 06:28:05
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answer #10
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answered by bryanccfshr 3
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