Nobody knows for sure, and nobody can ever claim to know. None of us were there at the time.
2007-11-30 15:34:16
·
answer #1
·
answered by Vivi 5
·
0⤊
1⤋
In the begining of the Universe's Time Our Creator made the Substance of the Heavens and from the same substance the Celestial bodies were Created into mass structures.
The Earth was the Great masterpiece in the Universe.When out of a Bang from the bottom of the river man Our Creator took the atoms and made man into a structure and then gave him life and man became self conscious as Time became relative to mankind.
The Creation of a woman was more difficult be cause the primo man had to go thru surgery. And out of the male came the female.
The Universal Time period became a constant in the order of 10^17 seconds. However from Eternity its just a few seconds more. A the Begining light traveled very fast but at time increased light Travel slowed down as the pressure of space reached a steady state.
The Sojourn on earth of makind of his biological life period is at most 32 billion seconds and that is just a drop in the ocean compared to Eternity.
2007-12-01 00:32:23
·
answer #2
·
answered by goring 6
·
0⤊
1⤋
I honestly don't think my limited homosapian brain could possibly comprehend the answer to your question.
Most of us have a hard time picturing other dimensions much less the time and space warp that occurs in black holes.
Most humans are actually arrogant enough to believe in an all powerful, omnipotent, all knowing, all seeing being and then have the nerve to think they can actually comprehend what it wants.
Your next question should be 'What will be the last thing to exist at the end of the universe?'
2007-12-01 00:25:56
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Have you ever heard of the 'Big Bang Theory'? That's what happened. All of space, time and existence, condensed into a single speck, smaller than an atom. When suddenly, Boom! The Birth of the Universe. Although there was no 'boom' because sound does not travel through space, from the lack of a medium. They still call it that anyway.
2007-11-30 23:35:19
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Yup, and what made that? And what made that? No matter if you say matter always existed, or the universe, or some unending chain of universes, or a God, something boggles the mind, and that's pretty freaking awesome to me.
As far as our universe is concerned, the first thing to ever exist was a tiny single point where existed everything in our current universe - just so hot that even subatomic partciles could not condense out of it yet - they were still 'vaporized' as well.
2007-11-30 23:26:45
·
answer #5
·
answered by ZeroByte 5
·
0⤊
1⤋
I'd recommend reading The First Three Minutes by Steven Wineberg. It's a great read, and a good summary of what we're pretty sure was going on at the beginning of the universe.
2007-11-30 23:24:42
·
answer #6
·
answered by eri 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
The beginning of life was without form according to the christian Holy Bible -the Kings James Version. In the science persective of it all is that life is a cell and that life is the smallest unit of life. When you find water on any planet- it is consider the form of life. The miracles of God and how our creator started it all can never be explained or questioned. The stars and the moon came second and then created the separation of night and day and then etc, etc.
2007-12-01 00:14:27
·
answer #7
·
answered by abbabmw 1
·
0⤊
1⤋
Homer Simpson
2007-12-01 03:43:05
·
answer #8
·
answered by Gareth T 1
·
1⤊
0⤋
the theory right now is that the first things to be created were energy and space-time, both created at the exact same time. energy later cooled into matter.
another possible theory that is slowly gaining ground is string theory, or more recently named, m-theory. in that theory the first thing to be created would be these 11 dimensional membranes. but they created time. so from our universe, since time started a finite time in the past, time and space would have to be the earliest things, because u cant have anything before time or space and they are the same and inseperable.
2007-11-30 23:43:56
·
answer #9
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
It depends on what defines 'beginning'. It too would need causes and conditions to bring it about, and those causes etc would need causes, etc etc.
So the 'beginning' is really what we define as beginning. Is beginning really a beginning, or the result of previous causes? If so, those previous causes were a result.
We are limited only by what we define as reality, not what reality truly is.
2007-11-30 23:36:31
·
answer #10
·
answered by Zheia 6
·
1⤊
0⤋
The first to be laid in the grave was the notion of the universe existing in infinite time. Since the 1920s, there has been mounting evidence this cannot be true. Scientists are now certain that the universe came into being from nothingness as the result of an unimaginably huge explosion, known as the "Big Bang". In other words, the universe came into being-or rather, it was created by Allah.
http://www.hyahya.org/create01.php
2007-11-30 23:26:15
·
answer #11
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
4⤋