I said the Big Bang theory does not claim matter and energy actually came into being; I assumed coming into being means created.DBowling wrote: ↑Sun Sep 08, 2019 4:02 pmThat is not what your links say.Kenny wrote: ↑Sun Sep 08, 2019 12:50 pmHere is where you are wrong. I provided 2 links that shows the Big Bang theory does NOT claim energy/matter ever came into being. The Theory starts with energy and matter already in place in the form of the singularity. How or if the singularity ever came into being will be a different theory all together; one that has not been established yet.
The reason I didn't respond to your links and quotes is I didn't disagree with either the links you posted or the quotes you posted and I could find nothing in your links that conflicts with my assertion
"I claim that science tells us that (not how) the matter/energy of our universe came into being around 14 billion years ago."
Some quotes from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_BangYour own link uses the following descriptions of the Big BangSince Georges Lemaître first noted in 1927 that an expanding universe could be traced back in time to an originating single point, scientists have built on his idea of cosmic expansion.
In 1931 Lemaître went further and suggested that the evident expansion of the universe, if projected back in time, meant that the further in the past the smaller the universe was, until at some finite time in the past all the mass of the universe was concentrated into a single point, a "primeval atom" where and when the fabric of time and space came into existence.[55]
This primordial singularity is itself sometimes called "the Big Bang",[25] but the term can also refer to a more generic early hot, dense phase[26][notes 1] of the universe. In either case, "the Big Bang" as an event is also colloquially referred to as the "birth" of our universe since it represents the point in history where the universe can be verified to have entered into a regime where the laws of physics as we understand them (specifically general relativity and the standard model of particle physics) work.
English astronomer Fred Hoyle is credited with coining the term "Big Bang" during a 1949 BBC radio broadcast, saying: "These theories were based on the hypothesis that all the matter in the universe was created in one big bang at a particular time in the remote past."[45]
an original single point for an expanding universe
colloquially referred to as the "birth" of our universe
where and when the fabric of space and time came into existence
and all the matter in the universe was created (Highlighted by myself)
and where the laws of physics as we understand them work
Of all the points listed above, the only thing I can see that refutes what I said was “all the matter in the universe was created” which you seem to have gotten from the last paragraph
English astronomer Fred Hoyle is credited with coining the term "Big Bang" during a 1949 BBC radio broadcast, saying: "These theories were based on the hypothesis that all the matter in the universe was created in one big bang at a particular time in the remote past.”[45]
The very next paragraph stated that Fred Hoyle didn’t even believe in the Big Bang theory, he favored the “Steady State theory" and only said that as a pejorative. IOW he wasn’t serious when he said that.
So that portion of your argument failed; the rest of it does not refute anything I’ve said.