Yahoo and wikipedia are, if not perfect, acceptable citations for seconday sources. Unfortunately, one must read and understand those and their footnotes.
For instance in her posting #24 on "Greek mythology vs. Adam and Eve" she cites
Can Something Come From Nothing? » LiberatedMind as if the author (claimed to be an astrophysicist) supports ID. First let me quote in detail:
"We’ve all heard it before. The classic argument from a theist’s perspective on why a god must have created our universe. I can’t tell you how many times religious people have said to me: “well, can
you think of one example where something comes from nothing in the universe?”
They are correct in noting that “something cannot be created from nothing” within our known universe, as far as we have been able to demonstrate through scientific inquiry. However, when considering the big bang and the origins of our known universe, we cannot apply the laws of physics WITHIN the known universe to that which act OUTSIDE the known universe. Before the start of our universe, it is plausible that other laws of “physics” governed and dictated how our universe singularity began and where the energy and material originated from.
Additionally, when a theist states that “something cannot come from nothing” and then states that a god created the known universe, he still hasn’t solved his own question. Is god “something”? Why, yes, god is something. Then where did he come from? Theists usually state that god is eternal, and always existed and was never created. This statement violates the first assumption they make that “something cannot come from nothing”. God is a “something” and they are supposing he came from “nothing”. All this supposing gets us nowhere, which is why we turn to evidence and the scientific method of inquiry to find answers. When we do not know the answer, we continue searching, testing and finding evidence for what is actually real, while admitting that we do not know the answer until we have evidence."
If you missed it the author states that "something from nothing" is the rule for expalining the universe, whether theologically or according to physical cosmology. The exact opposite of what donnann's thesis was.
Second, the author is anonymous (not as astrophysicist, as claimed).
Third, the only astrophysicist cited is
Lawrence M. Krauss, who is pretty well known for his very hard core belief in the Big Bang theory--creatio ex nihilio, the exact thing donnann is ranting against (see the paragraph noted Scientific Work on the linked page).
I have read his
A Universe from Nothing and can attest that he is a huge (one of the biggest and most influential) believers in the "creation from nothing" donnaann obsesses against (with not one valid reference yet).
Like everyone here has said, it is just scientific fact.