Hard to say but there are many ways scientists thought it happened. . The general idea is that there was a large concentration of matter in an extremely small space. Eventually, the matter began to expand at a large rate, which has been observed (the expansion of the universe has been observed.). But what exactly caused the Big Bang is up for debate. All we know is that the universe was at one point small then started to grow exponentially. As we learn more about space and physics we'll uncover what caused the Big Bang. This, of course, is if we're able to comprehend it, like how we can't comprehend non-existence.
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I don't think it will ever be comprehensible until scientist eventually accept the possibility of supernatural happenings. Some things simply can't be proved. And that is what the basis of faith is built upon.
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So you're saying scientists should just give up and say "God did it" because the answer hasn't been presented to them?
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No because that would be silly of them as scientists. As scientists, they want to know why. They go to whatever lengths to find out why. But I don't think you can ever truly find the answer to every question. Once you answer one question, it creates another question. So what I'm say is that scientists will never truly have all the answers, therefore making it incomprehensible.
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Science likes finding the 'how' more than the 'why.'