A Proof Of God Using Quantum Physics

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Everything in any physics text book is dependant on definitions. Otherwise you couldn’t quantify anything before you can apply mathmatical criteria to it. All of those definitions are contingent upon other definitions that eventually boil down to three basic undefignable terms. Those terms are: Space, Time and Matter. You cannot give me a valid definition of those terms in spite of the obvious observation that we could use any of those terms any time in any sentance and anyone would know exactly what was being said…! It’s kind of like a fact that any artist knows… there are three basic colors, red, blue and yellow and you cannot create by mixing other colors.

Another kind of trinity…

So… taking that into consideration, let’s observe what the first line in the Bible says:

In the Beginning, ( time ) God created the heavens ( space ) and the universe. ( matter )

With appologies to my athiestic friends who might mean well… I’d say that trumps it. I mean… how can you argue with that…??? I just don’t know.

I hope Dr. Stephen Barr reads this and posts a comment.
As a tangent, the difference between Newtonian, quantum, and relativistic science is what basic or “undefinable” terms you start with. This is why I think that we can say that QM is tautological, even when later on we come up with a deeper physics underlying it.
 
Please, lets not confuse scientific theories with metaphysical certainties. They employ different modes of investigation.
If they are so certain, why do all philosophers disagree with each other?

Science has brought unanimity, philosophy hasn’t.
 
You are confusing emptiness with nothingness. The mind is something not nothing. Do not presume that the absence of physical reality equals nothing.
That was intended to be a quote from our Hermetic friend; the quotes didn’t work, or I deleted something accidentaly.
 
If they are so certain, why do all philosophers disagree with each other?

Science has brought unanimity, philosophy hasn’t.
Show of hands is only relevant in science. I don’t need everyone to agree with me when I say that a thing cannot both not exist and exist at the same time in the same manner.
 
Non-physicists can stretch quantum theory inelastically. Quantum physics is based on observations of Bohr that atoms have discrete energy spectra (light wavelengths) and deBroglie showed elementary particles have both particle and wavelike behavior depending upon conditions. Heissenberg showed that one cannot simultaneously observe the precise location and velocity simultaneously. That is, objects, whose size is about 10^-8 meters or less exhibit, a dual nature of waves and particles. Whereas classical Newtonian mechanics can predict the position and velocity of planets, and spacecraft very accurately, in quantum physics, the square of the wavefunction is a probability distribution, can only yield probabilistic predictions can be made. Since the time of Schroedinger, quantum physics, albeit an incomplete theory similar to Newton’s theory, has been verified with great precision in millions of calculations and experiments.
Dual natures are found in Catholic tradition such as Jesus is both God and man, humans have mortal bodies and immortal souls or minds, etc. One interesting interpretation of quantum physics is that the wavefunction can propagate both backwards and forwards in time. So the question why a photon or an electron passing through one slit or the other slit could be due to the wavefunction propagating back in time, and collapsing, is due to a measurement made in the future.
The term, “proof of God’s existence”, does not guarantee absolute certainty, such as a mathematical theorem. Quantum physics can only provide additional circumstantial evidence. One should remember, a jury can render a verdict upon a large body of circumstantial evidence, yet not have absolute certainty.
 
Show of hands is only relevant in science. I don’t need everyone to agree with me when I say that a thing cannot both not exist and exist at the same time in the same manner.
You are also incredibly arrogant if you think that you are infallibly certain in your Aristotelian framework of matter and forms and esses and accidents and natures and prime matters and categories even when hundreds and thousands of professional philosophers who are just as reasonable and intelligent as you are disagree with you.
 
So you would agree that something is not identical with nothing?.
Provided the terms are clear, of course.

It depends on what you consider “nothing” and what you consider “something”. Language is pretty useless if we don’t get that straightened out. I don’t care which mental box you choose to put the vacuum in.
 
You are also incredibly arrogant if you think that you are infallibly certain in your Aristotelian framework of matter and forms and esses and accidents and natures and prime matters and categories even when hundreds and thousands of professional philosophers who are just as reasonable and intelligent as you are disagree with you.
Its either incredible arrogance, or incredible intelligence and honesty. Like I said show of hands is meaningless in this context.
 
Provided the terms are clear, of course.

It depends on what you consider “nothing” and what you consider “something”. Language is pretty useless if we don’t get that straightened out. I don’t care which mental box you choose to put the vacuum in.
Something; is that which has being. Nothing, is that which has no being. Its quite simple. The two are not identical in actual reality.
 
As a tangent, the difference between Newtonian, quantum, and relativistic science is what basic or “undefinable” terms you start with. This is why I think that we can say that QM is tautological, even when later on we come up with a deeper physics underlying it.
why do you say that QM is tautological? It seems that you are saying that Qm is mathematically and internally consistent, but that we cannot know that it is true of objectively reality. How does it validate itself as a scientific theory if none of its foundational concepts are objectively evident?
 
The term, “proof of God’s existence”, does not guarantee absolute certainty, such as a mathematical theorem. Quantum physics can only provide additional circumstantial evidence. One should remember, a jury can render a verdict upon a large body of circumstantial evidence, yet not have absolute certainty.
I disagree. It think that as soon as you accept logic as that which is grounded in objective reality, you cannot fail to know Gods existence as defined by his attributes; minus the trinity and historical details such as the resurrection.
 
Its either incredible arrogance, or incredible intelligence and honesty. Like I said show of hands is meaningless in this context.
It’s incredible intelligence and honesty to say that you know more than all the physicists and philosophers of the world?

Give me a break. The fact that there is nothing close to unanimity within philosophy shows that philosophy is just speculation, and I mean speculation in the English and not the Latin sense. You may be right in your philosophy, but you’re not infallible, especially when you are completely ignorant of science and yet presume to philosophize about the natural world. I can’t reconcile Aristotle with physics, so bye-bye Aristotle. I don’t care how certain you think you are.

Thank God that such presumption never found its way into the Eastern Church.
 
why do you say that QM is tautological? It seems that you are saying that Qm is mathematically and internally consistent, but that we cannot know that it is true of objectively reality. How does it validate itself as a scientific theory if none of its foundational concepts are objectively evident?
They are to me.
 
Something; is that which has being. Nothing, is that which has no being. Its quite simple. The two are not identical in actual reality.
Well, the vacuum is nothing, but it has a measurable energy, and particles are constantly popping in and out of existence due to the quantum uncertainty in their existence. Your mental construct may be simple, but it’s not necessarily useful for describing the real world.
 
I disagree. It think that as soon as you accept logic as that which is grounded in objective reality, you cannot fail to know Gods existence as defined by his attributes; minus the trinity and historical details such as the resurrection.
I accept logic as grounded in objective reality, but all I can tell using logic about God is that something or someone caused the Big Bang - nothing else. And it isn’t because I haven’t spent years studying Aquinas’ proofs. Unfortunately Aquinas’ physics was bunk.
 
I accept logic as grounded in objective reality, but all I can tell using logic about God is that something or someone caused the Big Bang - nothing else. And it isn’t because I haven’t spent years studying Aquinas’ proofs. Unfortunately Aquinas’ physics was bunk.
I do not accept Aquinas or Aristotle’s physics. Like I said, don’t confuse physics with metaphysics. A lot of people unfortunately do this and then assume out of hand that metaphysics must be false because their physics was wrong. But this only shows their ignorance of what metaphysics actually is, and the principles that are employed in the service of metaphysics.

Edaward Fessers got a good book on the subject. edwardfeser.blogspot.com/
 
I do not accept Aquinas or Aristotle’s physics. Like I said, don’t confuse physics with metaphysics. A lot of people unfortunately do this and then assume out of hand that metaphysics must be false because their physics was wrong. But this only shows their ignorance of what metaphysics actually is, and the principles that are employed in the service of metaphysics.

Edaward Fessers got a good book on the subject. edwardfeser.blogspot.com/
But their metaphysics is grounded in their physics - the argument for God as “First Mover”, for example, which doesn’t work if you grant the principle of inertia. (Motion is relative - talking about Galilean relativity here, without even getting into Einstein - and there’s no reason why two particles couldn’t colllide after having been moving along straight trajectories since the beginning of time, and hence no proof that God exists. You don’t need to get put into motion in order to be moving, because whether you’re moving or not depends on which frame of reference you’re measuring the motion from.)
 
Well, the vacuum is nothing
.
You are evidently talking about something, for instance the “vacuum”. To call the vacuum nothing while in first place describing it as something in which things occur, is contradictory and meaningless.

Unless, however, you are employing the word metaphorically, like somebody might say that a room has nothing in it. They are saying that which we would expect or would think to be present in the room, or is present in other rooms, is not present in this particular room. But they are not saying that “nothing” is ontologically present in the room; since there is no ontology or reality in nothing.
 
You are evidently talking about something, for instance the “vacuum”. To call the vacuum nothing while in first place describing it as something in which things occur, is contradictory and meaningless.

Unless, however, you are employing the word metaphorically, like somebody might say that a room has nothing in it. They are saying that which we would expect or would think to be present in the room, or is present in other rooms, is not present in this particular room. But they are not saying that “nothing” is ontologically present in the room; since there is no ontology or reality in nothing.
“Nothing” has two different meanings. It (a) can be reified and spoken about as the subject of a sentence, as something with properties, as we do when we speak of the vacuum, or when a philosopher like Fridugise of Tours or Martin Heidegger speaks of “nothing”. Or (b) it can have a purely grammatical function, to indicate that we are not talking about anything (as when I say “there is nothing in the room”).
 
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