I must admit, many of you appear to have missed what arigo was actually saying. He didn't say that there is a god, or even that it's possible, he simply said that there was no paradox if god exists outside of time and space. Many of you have come in and talked about how believing in something when there's no evidence is stupid, but he didn't say that there is a God, he simply said that there's no logical paradox. I would suggest that much of what's been said in reguards to Arigo is a form of me-tooing. None of you have explained why his argument is wrong, or why there is no paradox.
my questions are as follows (for anyone to pick up)
1. Evidence/Proof/Thinking behined time+space beginning at the big bang
2. Mechanism for the big bang producing time+space+ all other dimensions
I suppose if these two are answered adequately then the question of what came "before" the big bang becomes meaningless...
As for these questions, I may be very wrong. I'm a 16 year old kid, not a PHd in physics or anything of the sort.
The evidence we have for the big bang is typically remnants of the first couple of thousands of years of expansion, involving abundancy of hydrogen, duterium, and tritium, and also involving the background radiation of the universe. It all has something to do with the heats involved in our early universe, but I don't claim to understand it all. Before the expansion had begun, we know that all of the mass in the universe being condensed into one spot would be a singularity, as the gravity would be so strong that such a thing would be truly infinitely dense. It's radius would, effectively, be zero. Because of these density issues, space-time itself would be curved infintely tight around the singularity, so the effective radius of the universe would also be zero. If there is only one point to measure from, then you can't say there there's such thing as length, width, or deptht, as the distance from any one point in the universe to any other is zero. It's been shown (not by me, I still probably am wrong, or missing something) that space and time are effectively the same, so time as well would be curved until all points in time were one. This is the singularity at the beginning of the universe. I don't claim to understand how the expansion occured, or why, but I think it's an adequite reasoning of why before the expansion began, the universe was dimensionless.