SteveB
Well-known member
It's quite amusing how desperate you are to win an argument.As opposed to what you tell me, which is based on some fundamental misunderstandings of science?
I will stick with believing what the real scientists say, not the internet blowhard who thinks positrons bounce off electrons.
Why do you say that? I invited you to find an article that supports your position. If you could do that, I would learn you were right.
The problem is that there is no such article. No real scientists thinks there were atoms around at the Big Bang. It is just ignorant nonsense.
This seems far more applicable to your own situation. You are still insisting you are right despite the fact that your position contradicts known physics and is not supported by any real scientist. I have supplied three links to real scientists proving you wrong, but rather than learn something, you continue to insist that you are right.
It is clear that you do not want to learn anything, preferring to wallow in your own ignorance. And I think the big problem here is your pride. You are simply unable to admit you are wrong to an atheist.
I posted an article that I found curious, in light of views and beliefs about the origins of the cosmos.
The article clearly states that there's an expansion before the big bang.
The question still remains about what caused the expansion.
There's some form of energy required to result in whatever happened then.
Atoms, strings, branes, singularities, whatever....
They came from something that caused them.
In my book, it's pretty simple.
In the beginning, God.....!
God spoke, and it stood!
Jesus sustains it by the word of his power!
Our approval, your approval, the approval of the scientific community, etc.... are not a requirement for what took place, to have taken place.
Scientists weren't around to observe what happened.
They're making observations and then speculating, and using mathematical approximations to better understand it.
They're still untold numbers of years away from the event.
You are treating science as a religion.
It's embarrassing to see you falling all over yourself to win.