S
StAnastasia
Guest
Then gravity and plate tectonics and quantum mechanics are also myths.I have stated some of my philosophical reasons why it is indeed a myth. Myth is not a bad word.
StAnastasia
PS – his name is not “Hawkings”
Then gravity and plate tectonics and quantum mechanics are also myths.I have stated some of my philosophical reasons why it is indeed a myth. Myth is not a bad word.
St. Augustine believed that all was created instantly because a literal reading of Genesis 1 that entails a direct creation over a literal six days does not work exegetically.I am not alone.
I am in good company.
St. Augustine believed that the literal interpretation of Creation was that God created all things instantaneously. He believed that it was a possible interpretation.
He was not the only one that believed this to be a possible interpretation.
Constructs exist in the mind; we do not observe constructs in the external world.Some of those scientific constructs have not been observed, and that is a fact.
Hawking is an agnostic (or atheist). He has attempted to theoretically construct a universe in which there is no need for God.Also, Hawkings and Einstein taught that God is part of the equations.
I have no complaints.So, I am truly sorry if I hurt any person with the expression of an opinion.
The words from Genesis are directed to and apply to man who lives on the Earth. If there exists intelligent life on other planets, whether that is a few or numerous planets, then those beings will also have been created in God’s image. By “intelligent life” I mean creatures with intellect and free will. It is by reason of his intellect and free will that man is said to be created in the image and likeness of God. This fact will likewise apply to any extraterrestrials who have intellect and will.As far as we know. With ten to the twenty-second stars in three hundred billion galaxies, I think there is a fair chance we are not alone as the apple (or extraterrestrial fruit) of God’s eye. As one seventeenth-century theologian asked, “Do you think God made all the rest of the stars just to twinkle for us?” (That was before people knew anything about galaxies.)
Itinerant,I guess there is more than one issue that has been labeled as “the Copenhagen interpretation.” I wasn’t thinking of the MWI idea versus “the Copenhagen interpretation.”
Anyway, I never cared much for the multi-verse idea. However, I once met a guy who was grist for the MWI mill. He was a multiple-personality and could testify to the different universes that he (they) could experience.
He was involved in therapy sessions, but they were very expensive since being a multiple personality he would get charged at the group rate. He always worried that the therapist would charge him even more for each of his alters that had personality disorders.
I’m content with a uni-verse and have no need for alternate worlds.
Regarding the uncertainty principle, there is the common assumption that it was formulated in a strictly scientific manner and for strictly scientific reasons. This is far from the truth. We can note such ideological influences at the time as the Machist interpretation of science which threatens confidence in the reality of a causally interconnected universe (M. Planck).
Physicists (such as Pauli, etc.) exhibited a disregard for ontology and easily took (or rather, mistook) knowledge of a thing with the limited ability to measure it. Science was reduced to a sophistry in which there was a reduction of exact science to exact measurement.
Accordingly, by the summer of 1921 a number of physicists openly repudiated the principle of causality. The list includes Exner, Weyl, von Mises, Schottksy, Nerst, and so on.
For Heisenberg, this took the form of what cannot be measured exactly does not occur exactly. At bottom, this is a repudiation of causality and ontology.
Einstein (and certain other prominent physicists) deplored the “dangerous game” which the “Copenhagen people” were playing with reality.
The flaw in fundamental logic is apparent in the sophism which reduces exact existence to exact measurement (Jaki). However, the apparent indeterminacy of a quantum action is due to the limitations of our ability to measure, and in no way implies a true indeterminacy in nature.
Along with the flippant disposal of ontology goes a disposal of reality. The uncertainty principle, when its logical implications are followed, disposes of the validity of our knowledge of the external world as well as disposes of the world itself. Leave it to Niels Bohr to openly abolish the ontological reality of the universe: “There is no quantum world. There is only an abstract quantum physical description. It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about nature.”
The false philosophical ideologies, which generated the denial of causality, has led physicists into a world that is no less insane than is the world of the insane multiple-personality man I had met some time ago.
Trying to wrap my head around this, so just to make sure I understand:Regarding the uncertainty principle, there is the common assumption that it was formulated in a strictly scientific manner and for strictly scientific reasons. This is far from the truth. We can note such ideological influences at the time as the Machist interpretation of science which threatens confidence in the reality of a causally interconnected universe (M. Planck).
Physicists (such as Pauli, etc.) exhibited a disregard for ontology and easily took (or rather, mistook) knowledge of a thing with the limited ability to measure it. Science was reduced to a sophistry in which there was a reduction of exact science to exact measurement.
Accordingly, by the summer of 1921 a number of physicists openly repudiated the principle of causality. The list includes Exner, Weyl, von Mises, Schottksy, Nerst, and so on.
For Heisenberg, this took the form of what cannot be measured exactly does not occur exactly. At bottom, this is a repudiation of causality and ontology.
Einstein (and certain other prominent physicists) deplored the “dangerous game” which the “Copenhagen people” were playing with reality.
The flaw in fundamental logic is apparent in the sophism which reduces exact existence to exact measurement (Jaki). However, the apparent indeterminacy of a quantum action is due to the limitations of our ability to measure, and in no way implies a true indeterminacy in nature.
Along with the flippant disposal of ontology goes a disposal of reality. The uncertainty principle, when its logical implications are followed, disposes of the validity of our knowledge of the external world as well as disposes of the world itself. Leave it to Niels Bohr to openly abolish the ontological reality of the universe: “There is no quantum world. There is only an abstract quantum physical description. It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about nature.”
The false philosophical ideologies, which generated the denial of causality, has led physicists into a world that is no less insane than is the world of the insane multiple-personality man I had met some time ago.
Precisely. I reject the “gospel” of the scientific community. I understand their explanations, their postulates, their approximations, but to me all that is still up in the air and there’s were it will stay.It is a common mistake to take what scientists say as the “Gospel truth”, especially when it involves broad scientific theories. Scientific theories are provisional and subject to revision. Science is revolutionary in that an accepted theory can be completely swept away and replaced by a better theory. In that process … we get closer to the truth. Hopefully, in 200 years Big Bang theory will look very different…
Piltdown was a fraud, and it is amazing that it was not spotted right away. However, it was scientists who exposed the fraud. I believe that sooner or later frauds generally get exposed by honest scientists…
I have considered my sources, the advice is reciprocal.So, consider your sources. The other archaeological finds you mentioned were not frauds. It looks like your sources of information are what is fraudulent.
The popular media is the best allied of the scientific community.As far a “missing links” are concerned, I think you have some serious misunderstandings. The popular media likes to parade the question of the “missing link” with every archaeological find involving human ancestry … However, because of common descent and the incompleteness of the fossil record, every lineage actually has numerous missing links.
What for? To continue the character killing of those that offer other explanations? No, enough with mine.It doesn’t look like you are going to offer any links to good scientific arguments against Big Bang.
I’m not a YEC supporter.YEC arguments are not worth anyone’s time since YEC is not science at all. Also, YEC is bad religion, and YECs are incapable of presenting logical and truthful arguments to support their ideology. So, if you are concerned about human arrogance and fraud, there is plenty of that in the YEC cult.
This comment supports my original suspicion that your rejection of Big Bang is not based on sound scientific and logical reasons. That is, your comparison of Big Bang with Von Daniken reveals that you are not a good judge of either one.Both theories are logic, they make sense, there is evidence for both to support their enunciation. Would you accept Von Daniken’s theory as you have accepted the BBt? It is as much science as the BBt (by the way, I don’t).
According to the most commonly accepted interpretation of quantum mechanics, individual subatomic particles can behave in unpredictable ways and there are numerous random, uncaused events. (Morris, 1997)Trying to wrap my head around this, so just to make sure I understand:
If we know the measurement exactly, there is causality, but if it seems we can’t know the measurement exactly (until the moment we measure it) , the door for non-causality is left open, according to some.
Doesn’t quantum mechanics work because we can always predict outcomes with the use of it? If quantum particles are always predictable , it does seem more likely that we are just missing a piece of the puzzle,knowledge-wise, rather than concluding that there is a true chance of indeterminacy. Unless I have totally misunderstood.
I don’t know whether it’s true or false. Some religions believe that the universe evolved from a cosmic egg which is similar to the big bang which is half-believable. Jesus also says the kingdom of God will start off the size of a mustard seed so the entire universe may have also started small.I hold the OPINION that the Big Bang is a myth.
As I said, it is an opinion.
I hold that this myth is based on fallacies.
First, the personification of nature.
Second, the personification of natural physical laws.
Third, the personification of evolution.
One could even hold that these are gods to some philosophers and scientists.
The most fallacious, I believe, is the combination of evolution and physical laws.
At the time of the Big Bang Myth, the physcial laws did not exist.
I could add more, but family life calls me to other duties.
I gots no edumacation to speak of.Itinerant,
Looks like a nice post that I will need more time to digest. I have a big wedding weekend coming up and will be on call to transport guests arriving from hither and yon.
After first reading I think we might be on the same page regarding the nature of science. However, I was just a bit surprised when I read your comment about the uncertainty principle, especially since you seem to be defending the Big Bang in your discussion with Baur.
Are you educated in the physical sciences or have you acquired your knowledge through reading?
I will get back to you after the weekend.
Yppop
Itinerant1, Phil Plait’s *Death from the Skies *has some amazing explanations of astronomical issues, including the Big Bang. Right now I’m reading about the eventual probable fate of the universe trillions of years from now, when there is no more hydrogen from which to make stars. The universe will be a cold and dark place by then. although it won’t matter to us personally, presumably.I am 100% for the Big Bang theory, and will be until someone comes up with some compelling objections to that theory. I like the Big Smack theory of the moon’s origin, as well.
Constructs exist in the mind; we do not observe constructs in the external world.
Einstein was not always clear about his beliefs, but he was influenced by Spinoza’s pantheism. Einstein probably was a pantheist himself.
QUOTE]
Einstein believed in some sort of religion though your right it wasn’t always clear what. He was quoted for saying however,“Science with out Religion is blind, Religion without science is lame”
itinerant1;6414906:
I always liked that quote. Sure, Einstein talked about God and religion at times, and he had a personal and private belief in God, but I don’t see anywhere that it was a personal God he believed in. In one place, he seemed to deny personal immortality.Constructs exist in the mind; we do not observe constructs in the external world.
Einstein was not always clear about his beliefs, but he was influenced by Spinoza’s pantheism. Einstein probably was a pantheist himself.
QUOTE]
Einstein believed in some sort of religion though your right it wasn’t always clear what. He was quoted for saying however,“Science with out Religion is blind, Religion without science is lame”
Einstein once disagreed with those who used cosmology to prove the existence of God. Einstein said we can’t go beyond the universe. This was another indication that he had pantheistic leanings, which is not uncommon amongst cosmologists.
Some of the things Einstein has said about God have been interpreted as him believing in a personal God, at least at one point in his life, but such interpretations are not agreed on.
As the greatest scientific genius of the 20th century, Einstein had a good hold on physical reality, unlike many other physicists, then and now, but his personal life was not so orderly. Through two marriages he ruined the lives of two women and he took advantage of at least 60 women in his day. So, we have to careful about who we put on a pedestal. But all this may be beside the point. My best guess for now is that Einstein had pantheistic leanings.
Sounds interesting. I’ll look for the book as it seems there will be plenty of time to read it before something from outer space comes crashing into the Earth.Itinerant1, Phil Plait’s *Death from the Skies *has some amazing explanations of astronomical issues, including the Big Bang. Right now I’m reading about the eventual probable fate of the universe trillions of years from now, when there is no more hydrogen from which to make stars. The universe will be a cold and dark place by then. although it won’t matter to us personally, presumably.
What will matter to our descendants is the orange dwarf star that has been discovered to be heading straight for our solar system. It probably will not collide with the sun or earth, as its trajectory is toward the outer reaches of the solar system, the Oort Cloud of comets and asteroids. But it could seriously destabilize things by sending a bunch of comets our way, which could have life-ending implications. That’s slightly more than a million years in the future.
StAnastasia
Not necessasrily – there are thousands of bollides revolving around the sun in earth-intersecting orbits. We have identified and are watching a few thousand of them, but here are numerous others we haven’t yet discovered. We might have only three or four hours notice for the bigger, civilization-ending of those, and no notice at all for smaller ones.Sounds interesting. I’ll look for the book as it seems there will be plenty of time to read it before something from outer space comes crashing into the Earth.
Yup. We saw that watching the super bowl…Not necessasrily – there are thousands of bollides revolving around the sun in earth-intersecting orbits. We have identified and are watching a few thousand of them, but here are numerous others we haven’t yet discovered. We might have only three or four hours notice for the bigger, civilization-ending of those, and no notice at all for smaller ones.
Well, Bl. Pope Pius XII accepted the Big Bang theory as it comports with the Biblical account of God creating the universe at a single point in time – “Let there be light.”I hold the OPINION that the Big Bang is a myth.
As I said, it is an opinion.
I hold that this myth is based on fallacies.