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Where Was the Big Bang?

Tony Isaac, February 21, 2006

Evolutionists say that the Universe began with a Big Bang.  It started as a single point, and the explosion has continued ever since.  The Universe, they say, is continually expanding.

But exactly where was the Big Bang?

Based on our knowledge of how physical objects interact with each other in space, astronomers were able to locate where Pluto should be long before they could actually find it with their telescopes.  It is possible to predict with great accuracy where a celestial body will go, based on its interactions with other objects.

Based on these same laws of physics, we should be able to tell where the Big Bang was located.  After all, if everything is rapidly flying away from everything else, starting froma single point, we should be able to calculate from the speed and direction of moving bodies where that point in space was.

But when astronomers peer through their telescopes, no matter how far back in time they look, what they see is uniformly scattered stars.  In fact, astronomers believe that the oldest stars are also the farthest away, in every direction!  If the Big Bang explains the Universe, the oldest stars ought to be somewhere near the center of the Universe, grouped closely together.

Astronomers do not understand this discrepency, but they continue to accept the Big Bang as an article of faith.

Copyright © 2006 by Tony Isaac

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