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etc. colliding into each other? Maybe I have the starting point a little mixed up but isn't that about the way it went? Question: If that is about the way things started, why isn't it continuing that way? All kinds of matter, energy, molecules, and more come into contact with each other all the time, so why don't we have explosions going off around us all the time? Wouldn't the world be a continuing atomic bomb? Yeah, maybe this question is better suited in a science type category, but I'm asking those that hold to the big bang theory and not creation-intelligent design

2007-12-07 18:58:23 · 11 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

11 answers

I'm a creationist myself.....but your big bang understanding is sooo far off. I could myself try to help you understand it....but your best bet is taking about 2 years of physics and chem courses in college.

I'm not trying to be an @ S $.....but your questions is just not right.

2007-12-07 19:16:08 · answer #1 · answered by My name is not bruce 7 · 0 0

Intelligent design has been completely debunked - it was a made up phrase DELIBERATELY used to try and replace "Creationism" in words in textbooks, and a document was discovered that PROVED this during the Dover, Pennsylvania trials of the school board for trying to FORCE it into the schools. It is BOGUS.

As to the beginning of the universe, the very beginning was too small for even molecules to exist - all the known matter was in a space smaller than the period at the end of this sentence. Scientists have figured out what happened to the universe AFTER the first quadrillionth of a second or so, but they still do not know what happened at the very beginning of our universe. A mathematical proof has shown that (mathematically at least) a parallel universe is possible, but math isn't the "real world", so as to whether or not this is possible might be centuries before this is understood.

Please read the book "The First Three Minutes" to get a really good understanding of the beginning of our universe. The author won the Nobel Prize.

Also, stars ARE "atomic bombs" - they are fusion furnaces - its where the energy of the sun comes from.

2007-12-07 19:16:08 · answer #2 · answered by Paul Hxyz 7 · 0 0

You have to keep in mind that the development of the universe has taken a very very VERY long time. All those things are still happening - perhaps slower, since there is less energy blasting the atoms outward as would've been in the original bang, but it just takes an incredible amount of time. Another thing to keep in mind is that this does not refute intelligent design. I'm a Christian, but I don't deny science either. The way I look at it is that God made it all the science happen the way it did/does.

2007-12-07 19:04:05 · answer #3 · answered by Zac 4 · 0 0

If you are talking about the formation of the Earth, then yes. And it still happens, just much more slowly. They are called meteorites.


If you are talking about the big bang, then you are wrong.

The big bang is kind of a misnomer. It was not an explosion of matter in space that already existed. It was (and still is) an expansion of space that contains matter/energy.

Think about a pile of sand on the surface of a big balloon. You are thinking of the big bang as something that blows that sand all over the surface of the balloon. But that is wrong. What is happening is that the balloon is being blown up and the surface is expanding. As it does so it takes the grains of sand with it, spreading them out. That is more like the big bang, but the big bang is in three dimensions rather than two.

2007-12-07 19:12:54 · answer #4 · answered by Simon T 7 · 0 0

things are reacting with each other every second hydrogen bonds with oxygen to form water its happening all the time.. the big bang is something thatsays there was a reaction and out of that the universe was created from something infinently small.. so even today the universe is expanding and growing, perhaps there are "big bangs" that are happening all the time but the universe is infinently big.. earth is just a grain of sand in the ocean, The odds of something like that to happen are slim

2007-12-07 19:08:16 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it is a continuing atom bomb, so to speak, just in microscopic proportions in large numbers. The process of evolution is alive and well. Take a gander and the blue planet series on the discovery channel, it starts w/ micro organisms and works up to mammals. Same w/ plants, people, etc.

2007-12-07 19:03:34 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the big bang theory developed because someone noticed that the universe is EXPANDING. This is an "effect" in the "cause and effect" part of science. It is an immutable law.

2007-12-07 19:04:54 · answer #7 · answered by Shinigami 7 · 1 0

Does still happen all the time it's just that some areas have stablized. Oh are you wondering where it happens all the time? Wait untill morning then look up.

2007-12-07 19:01:21 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

energy.
all of this world.. the universe.. our body.. molecules..
all if we see it in microscopic view.. all are made in same particle that is atom..
and then if you see inside atom.. it's nothing but energy..

2007-12-07 19:22:55 · answer #9 · answered by Lólindir Isilrá 2 · 0 0

I agree with Bruce... I was going to explain, but you're just so far off I have no idea where to start...

2007-12-07 19:20:55 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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