The birth of universe.
November 28, 2011 8:42am CST
frnds,i have just read an article of a science magzine.In which a respected scientist has stated that"something can be created from nothing".
frnds i want to know your views about thingh statement!
12 responses
@raven66 (335)
• Canada
3 Mar 12
Well.. "Nothing" really never existed and never will...cause even nothing is something... Even if we call it "nothing".. the fact that it exists is proof that its there and it does exist!...I think there was always "something" . Even if we want to call it the source of nothing... its still a source, so it does have an effect on it. For example.. when we expire (die) our brain stops recieving information from the "source" which we call MIND... or "conciousness"
yet that MIND or source is still there, it continues to BE.. for others those that are "Alive" they continue to recieve waves from "Mind".. through their "brains".. Do YOU GET IT!?..
@BeetleBam (171)
• United States
30 Nov 11
That statement makes little sense to me (of course I'm not a theoretical physicist lol). I believe whatever "started" the universe had to have always been there. Something must come from something: most likely in an endless cycle of expansion and contraction.
@moneylots87 (521)
• Indonesia
6 Jan 12
What weirder than thas is, now days scientist discovered that universed goin accross for more than 150 billion light years away, while the age of universe is just only about 10 to 13 billion years old! Weird right?
@NIECIE21 (365)
• United States
28 Nov 11
I am suprised to see that you found a scientist who said that something can be created from nothing, seeing as most scientist do not believe this. I, however, do belive that the universe was created from nothing. I belive the Bible where it states that God created everything w/His hands. There is so much that can only be explianed this way (IE: if Earth was just a few degrees close to the sun than we are then it would be too hot or too cold (depending on the direction) for us to survive. I honestly can not believe that something just happened to be right where it was suppose to be for us to survive.
@petersum (4522)
• United States
28 Nov 11
It might just be correct. There are a large number of scientists, too many to be called cranks, that believe the vacuum of space isn't empty. Rather it is full of something yet undiscovered. Perhaps another form of atoms which have no electrical charges and are invisible to us that are made of charged atomic particles. This idea is based on the passage of light and radio waves through the apparent nothingness.