Proof of the Big Bang Theory
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Cosmic Microwave Background
In 1927, the Hubble telescope proved that the universe was expanding. In 1965, the discovery of cosmic microwave background radiation (now thought to be the afterglow of the Big Bang) was the first direct proof of the Big Bang. Another proof of the Big Bang is that quantum physics says particles can come out of nothing and return to nothing; scientists have made it happen in labs. A final proof of the Big Bang is that Stephen Hawking found evidence for possible Big Bang models that don’t require a creator (some models do), and that physics may say that no creator was necessary.
Disproof for the Big Bang Theory
There are many loopholes in the Big Bang theory. First of all, there are rational, thinking non-Christians who don’t believe in the Big Bang. Second, it is and always will be impossible to measure a singularity; singularities are a billion times smaller than a proton, which is extremely tiny in itself. Next, science says that the smaller the time interval, the smaller chance of a quantum event, so if the universe’s time interval is zero (this can be assumed because time supposedly started with the Big Bang) the chance of its creation through a quantum event must be zero as well. The final disproof for the Big Bang theory is a logical statement:
"If nothing is something, it would seem to logically follow that there is no nothing, there is only something…the reason that we can’t get something from nothing is because there was never a nothing there has been only something."