No human was alive at the moment the Universe came into existance.
Just to play devil's advocate: it is possible that an organism that fits all requirements to be human, existed prior to our universe existing.
Now you can choose to believe one of two mutually exclusive explanations:
1) It came into existance all by itelf, creating itself from an absolute void containing nothing at all.
2) God, who exists outside space-time as we know it ( this is obvious seeing as He would have to, by default, existed PRIOR to the creation of the Universe and is therefore outside of it) created it.
Why are these mutually exclusive?
The options I would give are:
- The spacetime continuum began expanding from a singularity ex nihilo
- The spacetime continuum began expanding from a singularity ex deus
- The spacetime continuum never began expanding; instead, the temporal dimension is cyclical, with the Big Crunch causing it's own Big Bang.
- The spacetime continuum does not exist. Our sensory input is fabricated, our reality an illusion.
I could go on.
Both require faith, even the "scientifically accepted" notions must admit that they have no idea what happened in the very first billionths of a second the Universe existed.
This does not constitute faith. Faith is believing in something for no rational reason. Scientific assumption is not make-believing something in the place of the unknown (i.e., Science does not put a deity in wherever it lacks understand; it simply says 'we don't know', and moves on). This is different to faith.
Add to this the fact that evidences offered by each side are not accepted by the other as being valid, and you have a recipe for a dispute that only the deaths of those involved will settle once and for all, because then they will find out for certain whether or not God exists.
Arguable. If you go to the traditional Christian interpritation of hell, then you would never, by definition, experiance the only god, and thus would not know.
Besides, Creationism has offered no evidence that has stood up to falsification. Without evidence, Creationism is nothing more than a fanciful idea.
But for me, Option #2 above makes the most sense. Just as a huse cannot build itself, neither can the Universe bring itself into being from nothingness.
Actually, a house already exists before it is built. Likewise, the universe may, in fact, come from a previous Big Crunch.
Also, creation
ex nihilo has been observed in things such as the Casmir effect, Hawking radiation, and Quantum Foam.
You don't have to agree with me, but remember that puts the onus on you to prove my position wrong, and I really do not believe that can be done.
On the contrary, you merely say that 'Creation
ex deus makes more sense to me' without justifying this blatent violation of Occam's Razor. Since there is no evidence that a creator god was involved, there is no reason to invoke one into your belief system, nor into the scientific mainstream.