Who can say?
But just because we don't know the answer yet, that's no reason to deify our ignorance and prostrate ourselves, screaming "GodDidIt!"
2007-09-05 05:05:27
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The materials cam from some sort of implosion of energy that had hit eachother essentially like two cars in a head on collision at exceedingly high speeds causing a mass emersion of matter. Emmersion being if I remember correctly the opposite of entropy.
-JayStander
2007-09-05 05:05:16
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Matter + antimatter = nothing, so it follows that from nothing we can get matter and antimatter. The energy used to divide the nothing into matter and antimatter comes from nothing too.
It's all energy and down to potential difference. It started with zero energy and still has zero energy. E.g. -10 + 10 = zero, which is a difference in energy of 20.
As difficult as this may be to understand as you sit in your very real chair looking at a very real monitor, the total of energy and matter in the universe is zero.
A better question would be what caused the nothing to split into a potential difference.
Just for kicks, throw around in your head that idea that 'god' and 'satan' are the potential difference of good and evil.
2007-09-05 05:03:43
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answer #3
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answered by Dharma Nature 7
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no. what science is saying is more or less the creation of everything out of nothing all over again. but this is the wrong group for cosmology. nothing exploded, but an infinitely small point expanded within a tiny fraction of a second to form the early universe. very credibly if you ask me.
2007-09-05 05:19:15
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answer #4
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answered by adam_reith_1 3
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The singularity that began the big bang was the result of the previous collapse. This has been happening for eternity. There was no beginning and there will be no end. You question therefore has no meaning.
2007-09-05 05:06:17
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answer #5
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answered by Barkley Hound 7
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Where did god get it? You really don't answer a thing with sticking him in there with no evidence. And now I have additional questions; Where did god come from? What is he made of? How did that come into existence without a super-god to make it? All you do is muck things up with complexity with no evidence. (see Occam's Razor)
Now to your question: It was always here in some form. See how simple that is?
2007-09-05 05:06:11
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Brane collision
The materials always had been, but the 9-dimensional collision provided them with energy to basically reset.
Of course, a preceding big crunch is also possible.
2007-09-05 05:10:26
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answer #7
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answered by yelxeH 5
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Why do the religious think they win the argument if they bring this up? The answer is "I don't know". That doesn't mean god did it. I'm brave, and strong, enough to admit "I don't know" while realizing that just because I don't know now does not mean humanity will not know in the future, and not say that automatically defaults to a deity, are you?
2007-09-05 05:13:23
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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There were no 'materials' per se. Unless you study highly advanced particle physics/quantum mechanics, it is doubtful you can either begin to explain and certainly you will not understand, the math involved in this.
2007-09-05 05:12:18
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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If there really is a god, where did he come from?
By the way, energy/matter can not be created nor destroyed. It has always existed and always will in one form or another.
2007-09-05 05:04:03
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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The materials already existed.
Matter cannot be created nor destroyed.
2007-09-05 05:11:46
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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