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    We can broaden the notion of 'event' by removing the requ... — Carmelics
    Home/Natural Theology
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    Supports→The Big Bang can be considered an event (or an initial state) about which one may inquire why it existed.

    We can broaden the notion of 'event' by removing the requirement that it must be relational, taking place in a space-time context.

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    Natural Theology

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    In the Big Bang the space-time universe commences and then continues to exist in...One might consider the Big Bang as either the event of the commencing of the uni...The Big Bang can be considered an event (or an initial state) about which one ma...

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    (Grünbaum 1994; Rundle 2004: 168, writes, “[T]here is no event—the beginning of the universe—to be explained, events being possible only in time”) One response to Grünbaum’s objection is to opt for broader notions of “event” and “cause”. We might broaden the notion of “event” by removing the requirement that it must be relational, taking place in a space-time context. In the Big Bang the space-time universe commences and then continues to exist in measurable time subsequent to the initiating singularity (Silk 2001: 456). Thus, one might consider the Big Bang as either the event of the commen...

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