umm not dachamp, on 2 May 2009, 20:30, said:
well i was exaggerating a bit about the big bang, i know of course that it didnt create the whole universe, but where did the giant ball of matter come from? why did it explode? how did an explosion form whole planets comprised of different materials with different atmosphere conditions?
Well I believe that some of these are what science is trying to prove now. (LHC, anyone?) But the last question IS explained in the big bang theory. IIRC, when the big bang occurred, it created the universe, but it was basically just a monstrous cloud of hydrogen. But some of this hydrogen gravitated into a single point, sucking in more and more and becoming denser. This is the formation of the universe's earliest stars. Through fusion, stars create heavier elements and release energy. So the (abridged) version of the formation of the universe is something like this: when two hydrogen atoms join together through fusion, you get helium, so on and so forth till you have all the elements. When a star dies, these elements are released, and the process starts all over again. Some new stars are born out of the ashes of the old, and some of the newly created matter also gravitates together to create planets. Obviously this is quite a dumbed-down version of it, but you get the point. (I hope my science is correct on this, but maybe someone can explain it better.)
Anyway, at the topic, I was raised Lutheran but now that I'm on my own I've become agnostic. I actually don't care either way if we were all created by a God or random chance, as long as people don't try to push their religion onto me.
Edited by Sicarius, 03 May 2009 - 03:39.