In its standard
form, the big bang theory assumes that all parts of the
universe began expanding simultaneously. But how could
all the different parts of the universe synchronize the
beginning of their expansion? Who gave the
command?
Andre Linde, Professor
of Cosmology 1
A century ago, the
creation of the universe was a concept that astronomers
as a rule ignored. The reason was the general acceptance
of the idea that the universe existed in infinite time.
Examining the universe, scientists supposed that it was
just a conglomeration of matter and imagined that it had
no beginning. There was no moment of "creation"–a moment
when the universe and everything in it came into being.
This idea of "eternal
existence" fit in well with European notions stemming
from the philosophy of materialism. This philosophy,
originally advanced in the world of the ancient Greeks,
held that matter was the only thing that existed in the
universe and the universe existed in infinite time and
will exist endlessly. This philosophy survived in
different forms during Roman times but in the Late Roman
Empire and Middle Ages, materialism went into decline as
a result of the influence of the Catholic church and
Christian philosophy. It was after Renaissance that
materialism began to gain broad acceptance among
European scholars and scientists, largely because of
their devotion to ancient Greek philosophy.
It was Immanuel Kant who,
during the European Enlightenment, reasserted and
defended materialism. Kant declared that the universe
exists for all time and that every probability, however
unlikely, should be regarded as possible. Kant's
followers continued to defend his idea of an infinite
universe along with materialism. By the beginning of
19th century, the idea that the universe had no
beginning–that there was never any moment at which it
was created–became widely accepted. It was carried into
the 20th century through the works of dialectical
materialists such as Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.
 The German philosopher Immanuel Kant
was the first person to advance the assertion of
"the infinite universe" in the New Age. Scientific
discoveries, however, invalidated Kant's
assertion. |
This notion of an infinite universe fit in
very well with atheism. It is not hard to see why. To
hold that the universe had a beginning could imply that
it was created and that, of course requires a
creator–that is, Allah. It was much more convenient and
safer to circumvent the issue by putting forward the
idea that "the universe exists for eternity", even
though there was not the slightest scientific basis for
making such a claim. Georges Politzer, who espoused and
defended this idea in his books published in the early
20th century, was an ardent champion of both Marxism and
materialism.
Putting his trust in the
validity of the "infinite universe" model, Politzer
opposed the idea of creation in his book Principes
Fondamentaux de Philosophie when he wrote:
The universe
was not a created object, if it were, then it would
have to be created instantaneously by God and brought
into existence from nothing. To admit creation, one
has to admit, in the first place, the existence of a
moment when the universe did not exist, and that
something came out of nothingness. This is something
to which science can not accede. 2
Politzer supposed that science was on
his side in his defense of the idea of an infinite
universe. In fact, science was to prove that the
universe indeed had a beginning. And just as Politzer
himself declared, if there is creation then there must
also be a creator.
The
Expansion of Universe and the Discovery of the Big
Bang
The 1920s were important years in the
development of modern astronomy. In 1922, the Russian
physicist Alexandra Friedman produced computations
showing that the structure of the universe was not
static and that even a tiny impulse might be sufficient
to cause the whole structure to expand or contract
according to Einstein's Theory of Relativity. George
Lemaitre was the first to recognize what Friedman's work
meant. Based on these computations, the Belgian
astronomer Lemaitre declared that the universe had a
beginning and that it was expanding as a result of
something that had triggered it. He also stated that the
rate of radiation could be used as a measure of the
aftermath of that "something".
The theoretical musings
of these two scientists did not attract much attention
and probably would have been ignored except for new
observational evidence that rocked the scientific world
in 1929. That year the American astronomer Edwin Hubble,
working at the California Mount Wilson observatory, made
one of the most important discoveries in the history of
astronomy. Observing a number of stars through his huge
telescope, he discovered that their light was shifted
towards the red end of the spectrum and, crucially, that
this shift was directly related to the distance of the
stars from Earth. This discovery shook the very basis of
the universe model held until then.
According to the
recognized rules of physics, the spectra of light beams
travelling towards the point of observation tend towards
violet while the spectra of light beams moving away from
the point of observation tend towards red. (Just like
the fading of a train's whistle as it moves away from
the observer) Hubble's observation showed that according
to this law, the heavenly bodies were moving away from
us. Before long, Hubble made another important
discovery; The stars weren't just racing away from
Earth; they were racing away from each other as well.
The only conclusion that could be derived from a
universe where everything moves away from everything
else is that the universe constantly "expands".
 Edwin Hubble discovered that the
universe was expanding. Eventually he found
evidence of the "the Big Bang", a cataclysmic
event whose discovery forced scientists to abandon
the notion of an infinite and eternal
universe. |
Hubble had found observational evidence
for something that George Lemaitre had "prophesized" a
short while ago and one of the greatest minds of our age
had recognized almost fifteen years earlier. In 1915,
Albert Einstein had concluded that the
universe could not be static because of calculations
based on his recently-discovered theory of relativity
(thus anticipating the conclusions of Friedman and
Lemaitre).
Shocked by his findings,
Einstein added a "cosmological constant" to his
equations in order to "make the answer come out right"
because astronomers assured him that the universe was
static and there was no other way to make his equations
match such a model. Years later, Einstein was to admit
that his cosmological constant was the biggest mistake
of his career.
Hubble's discovery that
the universe was expanding led to the emergence of
another model that needed no fiddling around with to
make the equations work right. If the universe was
getting bigger as time advanced, going back in time
meant that it was getting smaller; and if one went back
far enough, everything would shrink and converge at a
single point. The conclusion to be derived from this
model was that at some time, all the matter in the
universe was compacted in a single point-mass that had
"zero volume" because of its immense
gravitational force. Our universe came into being as the
result of the explosion of this point-mass that had zero
volume. This explosion has come to be called the
"the Big Bang" and its existence has
repeatedly been confirmed by observational evidence.
There was another truth
that the Big Bang pointed to. To say that something has
zero volume is tantamount to saying that it is
"nothing". The whole universe was created from
this "nothing". And furthermore this universe
had a beginning, contrary to the view of materialism,
which holds that "the universe has existed for
eternity".
The "Steady-state" Hypothesis
The Big Bang
theory quickly gained wide acceptance in the scientific
world due to the clear-cut evidence for it. Nevertheless
astronomers who favored materialism and adhered to the
idea of an infinite universe that materialism seemingly
demanded held out against the Big Bang in their struggle
to uphold a fundamental tenet of their ideology. The
reason was made clear by the English astronomer Arthur
Eddington, who said "Philosophically, the notion of an
abrupt beginning to the present order of Nature is
repugnant to me".3
Another astronomer who opposed the Big
Bang theory was Fred Hoyle. Around the middle of the
20th century he came up with a new model, which he
called "steady-state", that was an extension of the 19th
century's idea of an infinite universe. Accepting the
incontrovertible evidence that the universe was
expanding, he proposed that the universe was infinite in
both dimension and time. According to this model, as the
universe expanded new matter was continuously coming
into existence by itself in just the right amount to
keep the universe in a "steady state". With the sole
visible aim of supporting the dogma of "matter existed
in infinite time", which is the basis of the materialist
philosophy, this theory was totally at variance with the
"Big Bang theory", which defends that the universe had a
beginning. Supporters of Hoyle's steady state theory
remained adamantly opposed to the Big Bang for years.
Science, however, was working against them.