Re: Problems with the Big Bang theory
The major difference between a Law and a Theory is that a law describes terms (almost always mathematically). A Theory explains them. In terms of scientific power a theory is actually preferable. It doesn't have anything to do with how sound it is necessarily; for example, gravity is both a theory and a law depending on how you're addressing it. Laws are usually more substantially verified than theories, but theories don't magically become Laws once they've been 'proven'... they remain theories.
As such the Big Bang will never be a law...nor will evolution, as they explain how things happened. Things like Laws, for example, Newton's Law of gravitation, are mathematical descriptions. And ironically, they can be wrong (Newton's Law assumes gravity travels instantaneously and is wrong. His law also gave him no explanatory power whatsoever. We were in the dark until Einstein's 'Theory' of General Relativity, which not only did all of the explaining, but corrected his error).
And comparing it to religion is way off base. It's the opposite, actually. In science you make hypotheses, gather data, and then from there make conclusions. With religion you make conclusions without doing any research (and then ironically go looking for the facts after the fact)...
The major difference between a Law and a Theory is that a law describes terms (almost always mathematically). A Theory explains them. In terms of scientific power a theory is actually preferable. It doesn't have anything to do with how sound it is necessarily; for example, gravity is both a theory and a law depending on how you're addressing it. Laws are usually more substantially verified than theories, but theories don't magically become Laws once they've been 'proven'... they remain theories.
As such the Big Bang will never be a law...nor will evolution, as they explain how things happened. Things like Laws, for example, Newton's Law of gravitation, are mathematical descriptions. And ironically, they can be wrong (Newton's Law assumes gravity travels instantaneously and is wrong. His law also gave him no explanatory power whatsoever. We were in the dark until Einstein's 'Theory' of General Relativity, which not only did all of the explaining, but corrected his error).
And comparing it to religion is way off base. It's the opposite, actually. In science you make hypotheses, gather data, and then from there make conclusions. With religion you make conclusions without doing any research (and then ironically go looking for the facts after the fact)...


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