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New Theories / Can we solve the Big Bang Mystery with PREREQUISITES?
« on: 21/03/2018 12:25:50 »
Anything that we observe in the Cosmos had a Prerequisite. Stars, galaxies, black holes, and planets require something to exist before they could exist. Even the Big Bang required a singularity of immense energy to allow it to bang. So let's start there - what would be needed to allow a singularty of immense energy and density to exist? This can also answer the question, "What was before the Big Bang?" We will use a few abstract ideas to answer, and the first step is to define "NOTHING". Nothing means no laws, no mathmatics, no potential, no future and no past. NOTHING. If there was truly ever NOTHING, there would never be anything. So what do we KNOW would be needed to make a Big Bang? The answers we come up with will likely be one or more things that have Prerequisites of their own, or HAVE ALWAYS EXISTED. First, there was the potential for a Big Bang to occur. Second, we know that the cosmos had a FUTURE prior to the Big Bang. After these two things, we come to a few "either/or" elements that can help us to understand this future and potential. The potential for a Big Bang requires that mathmatics either always existed, or came into existence at the time of the Big Bang. It makes much more sense to think mathmatics, as well as the laws and rules that govern string theory, quantum physics, and chemistry were prerequisites of the Big Bang. When you find something that does not have a clear prerequisite, then it can be assumed that it always existed in some form or another. So before the Big Bang, there existed all that was required for a Big Bang to occur that would result in this universe existing, and possibly all the other universes in the multiverse. To go back farther, we would need to think of prerequisites for string theory, quantum physics, and mathmatics. The simple explaination is usually the right one. Some magical super being that makes universes as a hobby? Or a small group of things that always existed, and allow for what we see now to have come into existence - now, and perhaps countless times before.