Harun YahyaAl Attique Publishers Inc.ScienceEnglishAdults(6" x 9")1/1/2000189426438X192Paperback1.06997818942643895
Description:
In its standard form, the big bang theory assumes that all parts of the universe began expanding simultaneously. But how could all the different parts of the universe synchronize the beginning of their expansion? Who gave the command?
Andre Linde, Professor of Cosmology A century ago, the creation of the universe was a concept that astronomers as a rule ignored. The reason was the general acceptance of the idea that the universe existed in infinite time. Examining the universe, scientists supposed that it was just a conglomeration of matter and imagined that it had no beginning. There was no moment of "creation"-a moment when the universe and everything in it came into being. This idea of "eternal existence" fit in well with European notions stemming from the philosophy of materialism.