//True scientists don't 'assume' from nothing , they only propose a hypothesis when there is some limited evidence as a starting point.
Therefore there has to be something to start with //
No this is a false conclusion
We have evidence that things come from nothing - virtual particles
There is quite a bit of evidence for these
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_particle#Manifestations
I think despite it all you are stuck in a 19th century view of science with a big bang as en explosion into an infinite Universe that has always existed and where time is nice and linear, where things don't pop in and out of existence and where electrons are little billiard balls orbiting round and around solid nuclei?
You have that 'clockwork' deterministic view and you're not moving on from it?
Am I close?
It's what we teach kids up to 16 or so and its what people thought up to about 1900 or so and it works pretty well for bowling balls and rockets and apples etc.
But when you try and apply it to atoms and neutron stars and the big bang it just falls apart
You can't try to apply the physics of the kitchen and the road to things that big and that energetic
You need to get your head around quantum mechanics and relativity - I know the concepts sound crazy - everybody thinks that when they first meet with it - I think I hated my physics teacher for a month - I thought I had a great view of how the Universe worked and I had to start again and take on crazy ideas like time slowing and electrons tunneling through barriers.
I often think it's a bit like a fish that's spent its life learning about weeds and frogs and what makes sense and another fish talking about a universe where there is no water and things are very heavy and things that fly though it..
Intuition fails when that intuition is developed in limited circumstances and you try to apply it to extreme conditions.