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<blockquote data-quote="jmanpc" data-source="post: 5829762" data-attributes="member: 565915"><p>Ok, here's just one small reason I don't believe in the big bang.</p><p></p><p>Imagine you have a merry-go-round with several kids on it. Now, imagine that you wrapped a chain around the base and hooked it to a truck, and it drove off quickly. That merry-go-round would spin very quickly and fling the children off the merry-go-round. When the kids go flying off, they will be spinning in the same direction as the merry-go-round. In physics, this is known as the conservation of angular momentum.</p><p></p><p>Now, imagine you have an infinitely small, infinitely dense ball of matter that contains all the matter in the universe. According to the big bang theory, this ball of matter was spinning, and heated up and exploded. Just like the kids flying off the merry-go-round, the matter that is moving away from the site of the explosion should be spinning in the same direction as the ball of matter. However, there are planets and even galaxies that are spinning in the opposite direction of others.</p><p></p><p>So, either the big bang defied the law of physics, or there is some more research to be done on the big bang.</p><p></p><p>One of many examples.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jmanpc, post: 5829762, member: 565915"] Ok, here's just one small reason I don't believe in the big bang. Imagine you have a merry-go-round with several kids on it. Now, imagine that you wrapped a chain around the base and hooked it to a truck, and it drove off quickly. That merry-go-round would spin very quickly and fling the children off the merry-go-round. When the kids go flying off, they will be spinning in the same direction as the merry-go-round. In physics, this is known as the conservation of angular momentum. Now, imagine you have an infinitely small, infinitely dense ball of matter that contains all the matter in the universe. According to the big bang theory, this ball of matter was spinning, and heated up and exploded. Just like the kids flying off the merry-go-round, the matter that is moving away from the site of the explosion should be spinning in the same direction as the ball of matter. However, there are planets and even galaxies that are spinning in the opposite direction of others. So, either the big bang defied the law of physics, or there is some more research to be done on the big bang. One of many examples. [/QUOTE]
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