Board Thread:Video Games/@comment-6025261-20151209013718/@comment-25238001-20151212215053

Hellcat123 wrote: KingOfKretaceous wrote:

Hellcat123 wrote:

KingOfKretaceous wrote: Wait, Arthropleura is in Arctic?

But it lived before the dinosaurs.. even Dimetrodon..

GOD DAMMIT LUDIA Sorry dude, but i can't agree to that, as i don't belive in evolution/timeperiods/big bang... That's your opinion, but in my beliefs, evolution/time periods/the Big Bang are/were things that actually happened. So, yeah, for me, Arthropleura existed in the Carboniferous period. Where did the big bang come from then? And how did it create life? I thought explosions destroyed things... Let's no try to start a creation debate, please.

Actaully, I feel compelled to answer this question though. The Big Bang wasn't so much an explosion as an unbelievably quick mass expansion. The mass of the entire universe would've been condensed in one infinitely small, incredibly dense particle.

No, I can not explain where this particle came from. This is because there are questions that science cannot answer.