This paper offers a phenomenological examination of the terms “God” and “Big Bang,” arguing that both function as horizon-concepts rather than ultimate metaphysical truths. Instead of treating them as final explanations of existence, the study analyzes how they emerge within human consciousness as responses to the fundamental mystery of origin. Drawing on classical phenomenology, the article reframes theological and cosmological language as interpretative structures that stabilize existential uncertainty while remaining open-ended. The work contributes to dialogue between philosophy of religion and philosophy of science by emphasizing epistemic humility and the limits of conceptual closure.
Mayank Singh (Thu,) studied this question.