Also, a little known fun fact, the big bang only produced energy and hydrogen! The hydrogen clumped together to make stars, the energy made it fuse, helium and other base elements came out!
If I remember Weiner's "The first three minutes" correctly, the current model of early universe shows that there was only energy at the onset of the expansion, and the elementary particles were a product of creation(in the physical sense), so that's even a step further than what you said.
As for your theory: does it make any sense to ponder what "happened" to cause the Big Bang, if there was no time before Big Bang? It's like asking where's the begining of a circle.
But yeah, we weren't supposed to repeat the arguments twice in this thread.
I'm sorry, but I don't agree with the statement that humans are not logical. Everything we do always has a good reason(even if, often, base). The subset of mankind which does not follow logic is called "lunatics".
Recent neurological research shows that more often than not we make up the reason why we did something after we actually did it, so that fails. And "having a reason" does not make one logical. If it is, then the universe-according-to-atheism, having no reason to exist, must be illogical (see? I can do petty strawmen as well)
There is always a reason following logical analysis: e.g. "I will not do this because I'm lazy" or "I will do this because I like it" are logical reasons, stemming from one's set of percieved values and logical predictions of the outcomes of one's actions. Even if at the time of making a decision a person does not choose consciously, their decision is determined by the pre-existing connections in their brains.
As for you strawman, "reason" is an attribute of a being with a mind. It should not be applied to mindless entities, as it makes no sense.
Also, while having a reason(and being reasonable) implies being logical, being logical does not necessarily imply having a reason(p=>q, not p<=>q)
Well, sure, one can always ask a silly question that has no answer. It's not the fault of whatever tool you're going to use, that you can't find an answer. You've just asked a silly question.
And they call me evasive
Still, it's a question I want answered. It just can't be answered with the tool called logic, so I need to find my answers elsewhere. I'm not saying logic sucks, it's just that it's hard to screw with a hammer.
Of course you will look for your answer somewhere else, as indeed, the question is unaswerable with logic. My point is, there's no point in asking such a question in the first place. It's silly, and it should be recognized as such. If you'll abandon logic, you will find only silly answers. You can then start asking questions with no relevance to the reality, and inventing some random, and meaningless solution to the non-existing problems of yours.