A few days ago I thought :
Scientists sometimes refer to "Chance" or "randomness". Or "luck".
Or "Zufall", as we call it here in Germany.
They say that some things have randomness in them. Events always have a randomness factor. Like in "God doesn't throw dice" or how that saying of Einstein went like … "yes, God does !" is the usual reply of scientists.
And so, i thought : If there is "real randomness" out there - then it must have been there from the big bang on.
And therefore ot must be a cosmic constant. Just give it a letter, and include it into calculations just to show that it is there, this "randomness".
Maybe this cosmic constant was there defining whther matter and anti-matter would be there in equal numbers or not ?
The only other logic I can think of is that of a "developing universe" or "universe evolution", in which not everything is set in stone since the big bang. In this case, early laws of physics must have been different than they are now. And if this i true - who says that this development has stopped now ?
A side-question just popped up : What happens if anti-matter goes into a Black Hole ? Does it evoke a Big Bang ?