What happened before the Big Bang?
What happened before the Big Bang?
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No.
It was the first happening.
I hate the notion that something was always there, but no matter how you look at it, it was.
Even if there is a deity, who created the deity? And so on.
The universe implies something existed without a cause.
any proofs?
you already know the answer
You are talking to the retards who started a war on birds who couldn't fly and lost.
So no. The simple concept of proofs eludes them.
God was jerking off. The big bang was him cumming.
Unity
Long ago, in a universe that no longer exists, there was an alien race of extremely intelligent sentient beings. They had answered many of life's mysteries, with the exception of one: where did all come from?
One of them wanted to answer this very question. His peers tried in vain to stop him. He devised a "time" machine, one which could theoretically allow him to travel back in time and discover the beginning of creation itself.
There was a problem, though: time travel to the past is impossible, as it goes against the very foundation of the universe. His device was a time machine, but not the one he intended to create.
As the Primagen traveled through the Netherscape, bits and pieces of different worlds were dragged along with his Lightship, like a magnet, until he reached what he thought was the beginning of time. When the Lightship came to a stop, matter all around him began collapsing and compressing, and he realized this was his chance to witness what no mortal eyes had ever seen: the birth of the universe, the beginning of time.
As the universe reached its final moments, the hole left by the Lightship in the Netherscape had yet to be closed, and matter dragged by many of the Lightship's power cores began bombarding it. The bombardment de-stabilized the Lightship, sending it towards the One Point, triggering what is known as the Big Bang.
Big Crunch is an interesting notion, and endless expansion/contraction cycle, but doesn't really answer the question of what caused it. Perhaps the very idea of causation doesn't apply here though?