First of all, the Big Bang wasn't very big. Second of all, there was no bang. Third, Big Bang Theory doesn't tell you what banged, when it banged, how it banged. It just said it did bang. So the Big Bang theory in some sense is a total misnomer.
We can trace things back to the earlier stages of the Big Bang, but we still don't know what banged and why it banged. That's a challenge for 21st-century science.
time is happening all at once we travel down it seeing only the present the big bang was that big, its still banging
Planet Lucy Press? I incorporated myself to deal with publishing and was calling myself Big Bang Incorporated, which of course has to do with the Big Bang at the beginning of creation.
The poems are all wrong. It's a bang, a really big bang. Not a whimper. And sometimes gold can stay.
Big Bang is the biggest lie.
'The Big Bang Theory' has completely changed my life.
Time is the big bang, the original force of the universe.
Everything is a lie from the big bang to the black holes.
'Big Bang' is unbelievable; I'm blessed, but it's not the only thing in my life.
They say it all started out with a big bang. But, what I wonder is, was it a big bang or did it just seem big because there wasn't anything else drown it out at the time?
We were fortunate to be there a day or two before 'the big bang' and then we got the heck out of town.
The creation of the universe did not occur at the Big Bang, it occurs every moment.
Physicists are working on the Big Bang, and one day they may or may not solve it.
There are many ideas for creation of the universe, and big bang is just one of them.
Literally, there is a lot of talk about sparks in the Kabbalah. It talks about when God created the world initially, there was an explosion that happened like a Big Bang but based on vessels and light.
They've discovered that, where all the other galaxies are moving in one direction, ours is going in another. Now, the Big Bang theory says that we're all moving outward.
We can't really do any improv on 'The Big Bang' because we don't understand a lot of what the dialogue means to begin with, because of the physics jargon.
The term 'steampunk' itself, now a badge of honor, began as a putdown, a joke. But like 'Big Bang' in cosmology, the diss became the standard.
I'm not a chauvinist. I'm a universalist. I think that God imploded, like a spiritual big bang, to launch the eight civilizations that make up recorded history and the religions in those civilizations.
For example, if the big bang had been one-part-in-a billion more powerful, it would have rushed out too fast for the galaxies to form and for life to begin.