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33 answers

big bang

2007-12-19 04:45:13 · answer #1 · answered by Brad R 5 · 2 1

The Big Bang did not crreate any thing it just happened according to the current beliefs of most of science. Science can only go back to 10-(35). Mathematics has no meaning below this point. This is called planck. What happened before this billionth of a second no one to date really knows. Science does agree that you can't get something from nothing so there had to be an event that caused the Big Bang to take place. The lattest idea concerns the String Theory. A few String Theory physicist believe that these strings interwound causing the Big Bang. Some take it so far as to believe that this interwinding caused another Universe to some way seep through and create what we thing of as the Big Bang. We do know that all matter is energy so if you choose to call this energy God I guess that would be OK.

2007-12-20 17:49:47 · answer #2 · answered by Joehalfadolla 2 · 0 0

We don't know.

Saying "God" is simply another way of saying "we don't know". (Except that too strong a belief in that answer may keep you from looking for the real answer).

The Big Bang theory is silent as to who or what created the universe or why. It only deals with when. The theory only helps to understand how the universe evolved after the beginning, based on the hypothesis that it began as pure energy equivalent to a boundless temperature (or density or... which are all equivalent at that level).

There is a time (called the Planck Time) a very short period after the start, before which our understanding of physics does not apply.
Worst, Heisenberg (of the Uncertainty Principle) has already explained why we could never know how things work prior to that time. Therefore, it is possible that we could never be able to understand what when on when the "clock struck zero".

2007-12-19 05:22:39 · answer #3 · answered by Raymond 7 · 2 0

There is nothing to suggest a "who".while science truthfully cannot answer "first cause" any more than religion can,there is nothing,nothing at all that substantiates the claim that the "first cause"is a "god"in the generally accepted usage.We can see nothing that indicates the "first cause"is "alive" "intelligent" or even "self aware"

We can see that this "first cause" appears to never interfere with the natural laws of the universe.There is no evidence that this "first cause"is interested,or even aware of human affairs.

That is probably the one permanently unanswerable question,"first cause".On the religious side,you have "who made god?"On the scientific side,M-theory,branes,you run into the same problem,though many won't admit it.What made the branes intersect?

This problem is called "infinite regression"and is shared by both science and religion.There must indeed be an "uncaused first cause",nothing suggests this be anything other than something natural,something ELEMENTAL.Evidence strongly suggests the man invented versions of god are not true to reality,as ever since the BB,all has gone EXACTLY as it would have had there been no "intelligence"behind it.

The only statement that can be said with certainty is the first cause started the universe.No evidence to suggest first cause is basically a version of a pissed off Jew with superman powers,no evidence of that at all

2007-12-19 05:01:13 · answer #4 · answered by reporters should die 5 · 2 0

No one. "Who" is the wrong question here, because if it had some kind of answer such as "god" or "God" or Bob Smith, the obvious question would be, "Well, who created him?" (or her or it).

There is no possible useful answer to this question, and there never will be. Even the phrase "before the Big Bang" has no meaning since time did not exist before the creation of the universe. The event was a one-time singularity. It is also possible that this is not the only universe, but we will never know.

2007-12-19 04:56:32 · answer #5 · answered by MVB 6 · 3 0

There is not a "Who" as in a person, or a person's name. All of that is a myth developed to bridge the gap between early beliefs in Gods living on Planets such as Mars, Venus, and Mercury and other (later) religions, beliefs and concepts. No one, supernatural or otherwise is capable of dealing with objects the size of the Sun (a star) and all of the other stars with their orbiting planets and moons. The idea of a "creator" is a nice story to answer the unanswerable.

2007-12-19 05:37:09 · answer #6 · answered by zahbudar 6 · 0 0

In a way - God. I don't think that a detached god created the Universe and is sitting back somewhere watching, but rather that the Universe is god and that everything within it is an extension of "god."

I truly believe that once we actually understand the Universe and how it works, then we will know God.

2007-12-19 04:53:07 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Most of the above answers are predictable. I will join the "nobody knows" crowd. But there is one thing that troubles me. It's the idea that because we don't really see any hope of answering this question in some sort of detailed fashion, we should not even bother to ask it.

I don't agree with that at all. The origin of everything there is is a wonderful thing to ponder. I desperately want to know how it all began. We shouldn't dodge questions like this (and I think "nobody knows" and "God did it" are both dodges) because they are what motivates our continuing inquiries.

2007-12-19 09:00:10 · answer #8 · answered by Steve H 5 · 0 1

1) possability is that the universe came into existance due to the expansion of infinity. ("The Theory of Everything", by Stephen Hawking)
2) possability is that the universe came into existance due too the expansion brought on by repulsive gravity.( "Fabric of the Cosmos: space, time and the texture of reality", by Brian Greene.
3) possability is that an ever present entity spawn a universe to his liking.("the bible")

2007-12-19 04:53:08 · answer #9 · answered by Andrew 3 · 0 0

the universe was created by science, it was the atoms that started gatering and having effects on each other that created all the universe but it wasn't built in a min. it might have taken million and millons of years

2007-12-19 04:48:54 · answer #10 · answered by Karla T 1 · 0 0

Your question, by the use of "WHO" presumes an answer. That is not a very good question. If you phrase the question somewhat more fairly, such as "How was the universe created" then you have a fair question and the answer is NO ONE HAS A CLUE.

2007-12-19 04:53:37 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

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