I don't believe in the big bang theory. Why?
- Locked due to inactivity on Oct 29, '22 3:54am
Thread Topic: I don't believe in the big bang theory. Why?
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It literally contradicts science, and there are other factors that can only be explained with, "Lucky Coincidence."
First off, something as dense as the particle that apparently made the universe would have imploded and became a black hole.
Supposedly it didn't collapse, which leads to my next point: The position of the Earth and Sun.
If the Earth was even SLIGHTLY closer or further from the sun, OR the sun was, the earth would be either a burning hell or near-frozen wasteland. You can't explain something like that with "Lucky coincidence."
Also, how did that explosion generate LIFE?
I'll add more to this later but yeah -
Actually Mars and Venus also sit in the Goldilocks zone if I'm remembering correctly? They lack the right atmosphere to be habitable but there are plans for mars.
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The bigbangtheory is a lie told so people won't believe the existence of a supreme being called God.
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I don't believe in the big bang theory, but I don't believe in the Christian God.
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ok.
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It doesn't contradict science, since it's literally the scientific consensus on the earliest forms of the universe that we can understand. That would be like me saying that the sky can't be blue because that contradicts the common knowledge that the sky is blue. That doesn't make any sense.
The big bang could not have been a particle at all, and the universe is still at such a density that if you calculate it out, the observable universe would be a black hole, but it is not, For one thing, space likely extends beyond what we can see, there has only been so much time since the beginning of the universe and light takes time to travel (even though to humans it seems instantaneous, it is not, it is just much faster than what we can perceive even in the best of conditions). As a result, there is a limit to how much universe we can see, but there is no reason to think it stops there. In fact, because of the accelerating expansion of the universe, every day many stars in distant galaxies slip entirely and permanently out of our view and will never be seen again, that does not mean they no longer exist, it just means we can no longer see them.
Also, because the universe is likely infinite in size (this is not known for sure but is suspected to be true for numerous reasons) its density does not matter when it comes to "it should collapse into a black hole", because everything pulls on everything else just as strongly, with no end, so no collapsing to a point is possible in that way. Collapse in general is possible if the overall geometry of the universe is correct for it, but based on observations that is not the case.
The Earth did not exist when the big bang happened, nor did the sun. It was roughly 9 billion years after the big bang that they formed. It appears life began not long after Earth formed, though, so that's still 9 billion years into the universe's existence. Because they didn't exist at the time of the big bang, the placement of the Earth and Sun have really nothing to do with the big bang. It's relevance to them is the fact that the material from which they were later made originally was formed in the big bang.
The big bang was not an explosion, of any kind. It was not matter spraying out from one place. It was every place getting farther from every other place, space itself getting larger.
Mars and Venus are slightly in the habitable zone, yes, depending on how you define it. But yes, they have the wrong atmospheric properties to actually be habitable. -
Feel free to ask me to elaborate on anything, I've been studying this stuff for over a decade, so I know it well.
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Isn't there a theory that Venus and or mars used to be habitable? I'm really out of my depth here but love discussing stuff like this..wanting to learn
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Christian or pagan, or athiest or any body, We're all sinners.
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@thecoolperson have you read the book of 1 Esdras, 2 Esdras, The Book of Tobit, The Book of Susanna, Additions to Esther, The Book of Judith, Wisdom of Solomon, Ecclesiasticus, Baruch, The Epistle of Jeremiah, The Prayer of Azariah, Bel and the Dragon, Prayer of Manasses, 1 Maccabees, 2 Maccabees, Book of Enoch, or the Book of Jubilee?
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Yeah, but not all of them mentioned... What were you getting at?
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Yeah, it is generally believed that the conditions on Mars and potentially Venus were much more moderate early in their histories, and from what we've seen of Mars there is a good bit of evidence. Venus is kinda hard to tell since it seems to have completely re-melted its own surface at some point, likely due to a buildup of internal heat.
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The whole basis on the big Bang theory is that it is a thelry
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Theory
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^ so is gravity
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