As far as the B[ig]B[ang] is concerned - there is no possible way you can create the earth as perfect as it is from gases - if you could then we could create everything from gases nowadays. I could magic anything I wanted from a little ball of gas.
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<<< there is no possible way you can create the earth as perfect as it is from gases >>>
We can't, no. We lack the technology, the resources, and in general the ability to operate on a universal scale. This is where you make your critical mistake, though: you assume that if we can't do something, it can't happen on its own.
We can make a lot of things with gases, most microchip manufacturing has a vapor deposition phase somewhere in it.
Also many ceramic precursors are reacted in a vapor phase to form ceramic powders.
You can create a surprising amount of things from gasses. Oxygen is the most common element in the Earth's crust. Hydrogen and oxygen make up water- the infamous dihydrogen oxide. Halogens like chlorine and fluorine are in halides like fluorite, chlorite, and halite (aka salt.) You fail chemistry and minerology.
WTF?
Use magic - go to hell. It's the LAW.
Playing god(dess) now? I wanna watch this little ball of gas trick.
I can magic a small volume of malodorous gas from "nowhere".
What would a non-perfect world look like?
Why, I imagine a non-perfect world would be simply chaos! Earthquakes, bushfires, mudslides, volcanoes, plagues, parasites, famine, whole regions of temperature extremes so hot or cold as to be almost immediately lethal to anyone without special equipment and training - oh, wait...
There's this little thing called nucleosynthesis.
Nucleosynthesis is the process of creating new atomic nuclei from preexisting nucleons (protons and neutrons). The primordial nucleons themselves were formed from the quark-gluon plasma of the Big Bang as it cooled below ten million degrees. A few minutes afterward, starting with only protons and neutrons, nuclei up to lithium and beryllium (both with mass number 7) were formed but only in relatively small amounts. This first process of primordial nucleosynthesis may also be called nucleogenesis. The subsequent nucleosynthesis of the elements (including all carbon, all oxygen, etc.) occurs primarily in stars either by nuclear fusion or nuclear fission.
Just because you don't understand it (and I admit I don't understand the details, just the general overview) doesn't make it any less true.
Might I suggest a little research next time, before you let the remnants of your mind wander into fantasy realms?
You could, If you were a god
But natural forces do it through a lot of time and a lot of collected masses. Gravity is a bitch, but don't say it to her face or she'll crush you.
If God did indeed create the Earth then I hope that it was just an early practice run, because it is a very very long way from being perfect by any normal standard.
And I wish we could use normal gases to create brains for fundies. Then we wouldn't be stuck with people who write horseshit like this.
Little balls of gas - no it takes really big , think huge and them make it 1,000 times buigger , then even bigger than that.
the big bang made basically a lot of hydrogen.
basic hydrogen star - fusion makes helium and everything up to iron. then supernova to toss that matter into space where it gets pulled into another cloud and collapsed to make another star and planets.
Confused?
So were we! You can find all of this, and more, on Fundies Say the Darndest Things!
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