| IntroductionIn this  
presentation I will describe events that occurred in the first second of the  
life of the universe. There have been  
approximately four-hundred-thousand-million-million seconds since the beginning  
of the universe, so to concentrate on only one of them might seem the ultimate  
degree of overspecialization. But the  
very first second was really something special. In some sense cosmology is  
history; it is the science of history.  
If history of science is a  
well established field, I see no reason why there can't be something known as science of history. Indeed, my approach to cosmology is that  
of a historian, and certainly not that of an antiquarian. An antiquarian is interested in old things  
simply because they are old. To an  
antiquarian, a laundry list from 1215 is just as significant as the <!g>Magna Carta  
since it is equally old. A historian,  
on the other hand, is interested in the past because past events shape the  
present. Of course, not every past  
event is equally significant. It is the  
job of an historian to sort through the past to find the most important events,  
those that shape the future. Studying  
the past helps us understand the present. I am interested in the first  
second of the universe because events during that time are responsible for  
shaping the structure of the present universe.  
Just as in history, in cosmology the past shapes the present. We will never have a complete understanding  
of the present universe without at least a rudimentary understanding of the  
origin of the universe. Contributed by: Dr. <!g>Edward Kolb |