Ginkgo wrote:
Science is very good at explaining what happened less than a trillionth of a second after the Big Bang. The assumption is that the universe was in a highly organized state prior to the Big Bang. Science cannot explain what the universe was like before or at the time of the Big Bang. The reason is the initial singularity problem. The singularity is the product of general relativity breaking down at tiny distances.
Ginkgo,
The last place I found such irrelevant, religious interpretations of "science" was on the Catholic Answers Forum.
If by "Science is very good at explaining..." you mean, cosmologists with their heads so far up their fat asses that a lucite navel won't help them see any better, have made up so much obfuscating bullshit that no one without a Ph.D can deal with it, and those with genuine science Ph.D's won't bother, you're right.
To explain what went on during the first picosecond after the Big Bang, a handful of nitwits with degrees in astrophysics who would be better employed as burger chefs, declared that matter started moving faster than the speed of light. They don't say what speed, though. Nor do they describe the source of infinite energy required to produce that sudden acceleration. Great "
science!"
Nor do these pinheads explain why, with all newly-created matter moving faster than light speed, such matter would continue to move.
Suppose we suddenly accelerate a single neutrino, the smallest known stable particle, to light speed. Upon reaching that speed it will, according to the
scientifically verified principles of Special Relativity, acquire infinite mass.
That infinite mass will exceed the mass of our entire universe, and produce an infinitely compressed gravitational force that will attract all matter in the universe, instantly.
The infinite mass of one neutrino, upon reaching light speed, will make all the supermassive black holes in the universe less powerful, comparatively, than you sucking on a soda straw.
How does anyone with a modicum of physics knowledge and a three-digit IQ figure that a universe trying to emerge from its singular womb would not immediately return there when
every one of its newly created components, at least 10 exp80 of them, acquired infinite mass?
Greylorn