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WessleWoggle said:
cool48 said:
WessleWoggle said:
cool48 said:
WessleWoggle said:
cool48 said:
WessleWoggle said:
cool48 said:
You bet, there are just too many things that point towards the fact that a superior being exists to not believe. (To me anyways)

 

People always say this but rarely do I see any of them offer any argument that supports their claim logically.

 

How does something start from nothing?

 

There's always been something.

 

And what is that something?

 

Everything. The fact that everything is here is fact that it was somewhere sometime in the past. It didn't come out of a giant billy goats ass.

If everything has always been here then how does the Big Bang make any sense since The Big Bang theory clearly shows that before the Big Bang there was nothing?

Hmm, and I thought that the big bang theory was that everything was once got in such a superheated state that it was all one. It dispersed and that's how the layout of our universe was set.

"The Big Bang is the cosmological model of the universe that is best supported by all lines of scientific evidence and observation. As used by scientists, the term Big Bang generally refers to the idea that the universe has expanded from a primordial hot and dense initial condition at some finite time in the past, and continues to expand to this day"

(Wikipedia)

People often tie false claims with the big bang. Like first there was nothing, and then there was an explosion, and now there's everything. Simply not the case.

I don't fully believe the big bang happened though, as I don't fully believe in anything, even the actuality of reality. But, I brush aside my belief in nothing to enjoy live. I don't care how it came.

 

 

 

Big Bang Theory - Evidence for the Theory
What are the major evidences which support the Big Bang theory?

  • First of all, we are reasonably certain that the universe had a beginning.
  • Second, galaxies appear to be moving away from us at speeds proportional to their distance. This is called "Hubble's Law," named after Edwin Hubble (1889-1953) who discovered this phenomenon in 1929. This observation supports the expansion of the universe and suggests that the universe was once compacted.
  • Third, if the universe was initially very, very hot as the Big Bang suggests, we should be able to find some remnant of this heat. In 1965, Radioastronomers Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson discovered a 2.725 degree Kelvin (-454.765 degree Fahrenheit, -270.425 degree Celsius) Cosmic Microwave Background radiation (CMB) which pervades the observable universe. This is thought to be the remnant which scientists were looking for. Penzias and Wilson shared in the 1978 Nobel Prize for Physics for their discovery.
  • Finally, the abundance of the "light elements" Hydrogen and Helium found in the observable universe are thought to support the Big Bang model of origins.

 

 

The early hot, dense phase is itself referred to as "the Big Bang",[21] and is considered the "birth" of our universe.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_bang