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Why was the universe not lifeless?

Updated: 4/28/2022
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Hobbitsmith1

Lvl 1
15y ago

Best Answer

For three reasons.

One, when the universe was born, it had so much energy at the "big bang" that its levels reached near-infinite, and therefore somehow spontaneously created matter. It then went from infinite to five trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion degrees. This cooling allowed matter to exist instead of being incinerated immediately.

Two, something called "cosmic inflation" happened. This is something that science has not yet fully come to grasp with, and probably never will, but the universe increased in size 20 trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion times.

Three, we won the first war ever. There was a war between matter (us) and antimatter (them) and we won. This is not logical, because for every matter particle there is antimatter, but the universe was in such chaos such simple rules had not been developed.

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15y ago
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Q: Why was the universe not lifeless?
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