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But if we accept Big Bang then that adds a "beginning" to the equation.
Non sequitur.
Saying that the laws of nature were what they were before the Big Bang is legal. See, for example, Membrane theory (M-theory or 'brane theory), which postulates that the Big Bang was really just "the Big Bump" - a collision between two parallel universes. In M-theory, the laws of the universe were there before the bump. The bump just disrupted our ability to see before that event.
Even if you don't buy M-theory, there is this other idea: The BB was merely the disruption of a supergiant, unstable black hole. (This is the "cyclic universe" theory.) If you decide that the subject black hole was formed by the universe at the end of a "collapse" cycle, you again can postulate that the laws of nature were there before the BB. Prof. Stephen Hawking has described three types of black hole, and the unstable kind could well have formed the basis of the BB.
Mike, in the final analysis, this will always be a matter of proof vs. faith. I'm on the side that needs proof. I'm not really worried about an afterlife that I don't believe in, based on the scanty (read: non-existant) evidence on that subject. I do not wish to dispute anyone else's right to believe as they wish, though when I hear/see an argument that is logically unsound, I reserve the right to point out that shaky foundation.