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Our curiosity gives us the ability to look beyond the present moment. From it, we have evolved an urge to look for causes, it is an inseparable part of our biology. Because of this, we really can't help ourselves when we attempt to find a cause for creation, it is second nature for us to ask, 'What Caused the Big Bang?'
yes
Any answer to this problem must begin with a key realization: both time and space are contained within the universe and came into existence only AFTER the Big Bang occurred. The cause of the universe must not include them, they are not available to us. It must come from outside our experience.
you must check the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, nothingness in the quantum physics world is not what we would call nothing in the everyday sense, check
Observation of the Dynamical Casimir Effect in a Superconducting Circuit -- C.M. Wilson, G. Johansson, A. Pourkabirian, J.R. Johansson, T. Duty, F. Nori, P. Delsing
even a vacuum is something, so if nothing is something then what is nothing so the argument of an "outside experience" does not hold, yes weird, yes it defies common sense and logic but we must conform our common sense and logic to the evidence of reality, the idea being explored is that the universe came out of nothing
We must somehow come up with a solution that exists outside time and space.
GOD MADE IT HAPPEN
yes, we must come up with a solution but just accepting god made it because we do not have an answer yet is like giving up, so by that definition when you do not understand anything you would say "God did it", that is superstition and thus the death of scientific inquiry
also try avoiding making deductive arguments upon of the basis of "lack of evidence" but rather upon the basis of "existence of evidence" since it is not a legal question but rather a scientific one, so in science we work hard patiently until the evidence is found
and the evidence is challenging your perception and understanding of the concept of time and space, isn't it?
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