Taylor Swift
A.K.A----> LuLu
I want to hear some comments on the big bang theory. I was taught that it cant happen because something about it would have created a black hole or something but im not sure about that
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Blast those people trying to involve religion in controversial topics! Especially when they're in the Religious Debate forum!
Well, I believe in the Big Bang the most that my mind will allow me. Which is quite a bit, but not 100%. I'm never 100% certain of anything, especially something like the Big Bang, because there is always more evidence to be collected. But in terms of how much evidence there is for the Big Bang, I'd say that I am about 99.99% sure that that's what happened.
In terms of how this fits into my religious beliefs, considering that this is the religious debate forum, I am an atheist, thus I believe that the Big Bang was a completely natural occurence. And whoever told you that all of the matter in the universe would have collapsed into a singularity rather than explode outwards needs a lesson in physics. Because, the laws of physics hadn't been created until the Big Bang occured. That is, the laws of physics as we know them.
Obviously there were laws of physics before that, else all the matter in the universe would have no reason to mash itself into a ball smaller than the period at the end of this sentence. However, those laws may have been very different than the ones we know nowadays, because the Big Bang basically rewrote all of the laws of physics when it occured.
since the universe is so big it only makes sense that it is expanding, and if it is expanding then it makes sense that it started at one point! then again it could also always have been there, the thing that noone will ever be able to explain is wat was there before the big bang. If you define the universe as everything that exists then it couldnt have started from a big bang because there had to be something existing before it. I guess its incomprehensible to think of there being nothing at all. There is proof i guess but it isnt an indisputable fact, just the same as there being no god isnt an indisputable fact! personally i believe there is a god but he isnt watching down on us, why would god create the universe just to sit outside it, i believe god exists all around us in nature, and the big bang was god! again disputable but hey life sucks without a bit of dispute!
soz for rant but im done
It might be more important to ask how many of you actually do understand how the big bang works. Perhaps a lot of you don't believe in it (not that you should because it's a scientific theory) because you don't understand it.
Um... actually, when you're in the scientific community, theory holds a lot more weight than it does when you talk of a theory in layman's terms. The Theory of Evolution and the Big Bang Theory have just as much evidence as the Laws of Thermodynamics. I don't know why they changed the words around, but in the world of science today, Theory is the same as yesteryear's Law. Thus if something is a scientific theory (not a layman's theory, though), you'd do well to accept it, as it has more evidence for it than any one person can know.
In what ways were they scientific? Real science did not exist back then, so you cannot call them scientific theories. They can't show us any real calculations they had back then that might explain how the Earth was flat; they just assumed it was because a book told them it was.
Even so, science could admit errors if it made any. But it's usually not something like the world is flat; now it's not and we're wrong. It's more like we discover classical mechanics, then discover quantum mechanics later, but classical mechanics isn't absolutely wrong or disproven; just modified.
But people only accept things on the basis that they can understand it or they can imagine it happening. It doesn't have much to do with the big bang being a scientific theory; I agree that it is, and deserves more credit than a casually defined theory, but most people don't understand the implications of a scientific theory, nor do they understand enough about the big bang to accept it. Remember, just because a scientific theory may have lots of evidence for it doesn't mean you are required to believe in it. This is what separates science from religion (besides the self correcting part); you are not required to believe in science, but belief is required in religion.
That was what was considered science at the time. In 300 years from now, you may find that all of your current scientific theories were grossly inaccurate, just as inaccurate as saying the world was flat or the sun revolved around the earth. You may also find that what you call "real" science is in fact a subject of much ridicule and derision, the petty beliefs of a primitive society. Already quantum physics and general relativity both show flaws, in quantum physics the collapse of the so called state vector, and in general relativity, its inability to account for the movements and actions of smaller masses. And that brings us to the current "unified" theory, string theory.
String theory, a very scientific theory, can be proven mathematically. However, (and be sure to read the fine print) IT REQUIRES THE BELIEF IN 11 SPATIAL DIMENSIONS IN ORDER FOR IT TO WORK. It also gets into all kinds of shakey ground involving alternate universes, parallell galaxies, wormholes, and alien abductions.
Science is nothing more than the current glorified breed of religion. And it most certainly requires belief, moreso than religion even, because every theorem and proof eventually falls back on postulates that cannot be proven true or false, and either you believe the postulate to be true, and theorem holds, or you don't, and it doesn't.