Big Bang Theory

The Big Bang Theory is a theory introduced by Belgian Catholic priest Georges Lemaitre in 1927, that claims the universe came into existence 13, 8 billion years ago, out of nothingness, for no reason (similar to the idea of a Creator God creating the universe). It has become a dogma in the Science Church, closely associated and interwoven with the corrupt education system of the jesuits.

He studied under Arthur Eddington (Royal Society), who also promoted Albert Einstein's Theory of Relativity. Lemaitre (Catholic University Louvain, MIT) met with Einstein at a Solvay conference in 1932 and at Caltech in 1933 (expansion of the universe is linked to Einstein's Theory of Relativity).

The term Big Bang Theory was coined by Fred Hoyle (proponent of Panspermia theory) on BBC.

The Big Bang Theory states the universe popped into existence after an explosion, after which the universe started expanding faster than the speed of light and than cooled down (the 1st law of thermodynamics states matter can not be created or destroyed). The Big Bang Theory is linked to the belief equal amounts of matter and antimatter were created during the Big Bang and that the universe is made up of 96 % dark matter/dark energy (previously called Aether or Ether).

Galactic redshifts are seen as evidence for an expanding universe that started in one point of very high density in a place outside space and time. The discovery of cosmic microwave radiation in 1965 is seen as another evidence.

The concept of a Big Bang was popularized by Stephen Hawking in A Brief History of Time.

Scientists at CERN aim to open dimensional portals while claiming to investigate the smashing of atoms to understand the conditions before the Big Bang.

In 2011 the BBC produced What Happened Before the Big Bang with Michio Kaku, Andrei Linde, Neil Turok, Roger Penrose.

the Science Church

Albert Einstein

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