(December 6, 2015 at 11:52 am)Quantum Wrote: The big bang theory as it is understood by cosmologists today, most emphatically, does not state that the universe began in a single point marking the beginning of time or any such thing.
It posits that the universe was very dense and hot, with a certain structure to its flictuations. That is sufficient to explain the creation of matter and subsequent evolution. Anything beyond that is speculation. A nontrivial mechanism such as inflation is required in the early phase in order to explain flatness homogeneity and the roughly scale invariant perturbation spectrum. What happens before inflation and how it gets started, is even more speculative.
After reading the salient points of the Wiki article, let me ask: Are you then saying that the universe did not begin from "nothing" but from a very hot, very dense "something"?