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Quotes about Cosmology

As Julie Andrews once sang, "Nothing came from nothing. Nothing ever could.
- Ravi Zacharias
since time, space, and matter did not exist prior to the beginning of the universe, then the "cause" of the universe had to be timeless, spaceless, and immaterial. Further
- Josh McDowell
1. Whatever begins to exist has a cause. 2. The universe began to exist. 3. Therefore the universe has a cause.
- Josh McDowell
G. W. Leibniz, codiscoverer of calculus and a towering intellect of eighteenth-century Europe, wrote: "The first question which should rightly be asked is: Why is there something rather than nothing?"[1] In other words, why does anything at all exist? This, for Leibniz, is the most basic question that anyone can ask. Like me, Leibniz came to the conclusion that the answer is to be found, not in the universe of created things, but in God. God
- William Lane Craig
The first question which should rightly be asked is: Why is there something rather than nothing?
- William Lane Craig
Whatever begins to exist has a cause; the universe began to exist; therefore, the universe has a cause"). Second
- William Lane Craig
Multiverse Some cosmologists speculate that our observable universe is just an expanding bubble in a much wider sea of energy, which is also expanding. Since this wider universe contains many other bubbles in addition to ours, it is often called a multiverse. The Borde-Guth-Vilenkin theorem also applies to the multiverse as a whole, not just to the individual bubbles within it. Thus, even if there is a multiverse, it cannot be eternal in the past but must have had a beginning.
- William Lane Craig
Ghazali frames his argument simply: "Every being which begins has a cause for its beginning; now the world is a being which begins; therefore, it possesses a cause for its beginning.
- William Lane Craig
Adopting the multiverse hypothesis to explain our ordered observations would thus result once more in a strange sort of illusionism.
- William Lane Craig
Even though we may not like it, concludes Davies, we must say on the basis of the thermodynamic properties of the universe that the universe's energy was somehow simply "put in" at the creation as an initial condition.118 Prior to the creation, says Davies, the universe simply did not exist.
- William Lane Craig
Why didn't God make the world sooner? In the early fifth century AD, Augustine of Hippo answered that God did not make the universe at a point in time, but "simultaneously with time." That is, he believed God had created space and time together. Modern cosmologists have come to agree that he was right about space and time, and therefore it is meaningless to ask why the big bang didn't happen earlier than it did.
- William Lane Craig
Conclusion On the basis, therefore, of both philosophical and scientific evidence, we have good grounds for believing that the universe began to exist. Since whatever begins to exist has a cause of its beginning, it follows that the universe has a cause of its beginning.
- William Lane Craig