J
JDaniel
Guest
Neil:So are you saying that the laws are actually things that God created with the ability to move particles around? I assumed the ability was within the particles themselves. Either way, try to imagine how this would work. Does the law or particle calculate where it wants to be at the next instant, then ask God to move it to that location? Or does it move itself, and if it moves itself, by what mechanism does it do that? Also, how does it perform the calculation?
I think it would have to be moved by God to get there, because neither a “law” or a particle has any apparent way to perform calculations or move itself around.
You’re over-thinking this thing. Particles have their own electromagnetic characteristics and exhibit a force, called electromagnetic force, which exhibits when in the neighborhood of other charged particles. It is this force that causes particles to move apart or bind (move) together into molecules, for example. When God set all of this into motion, He established that particles would possess these electromagnetic forces so that they would bind together into objects of matter and spread apart into stuff like air.
If you want to call electromagnetic forces some kind of dictum, law or, command, that’s fine. Studying matter and energy, physicists have found that these things exist and because they exist with an extremely reliable regularity, they can be, and, are, called “laws”. To say that God created the laws is the same thing as saying that He put the order (commands, laws, or regularity) into nature such that these laws could be found and understood by the minds of men - and women.
I suppose so. Mankind really does not know how intertwined God’s Will and nature is. I rather think He does not take His finger and toy with particles like a person might flick a crumb off a table onto the floor. Instead, He wills the entire mechanism.I think this is an equivocation on “God’s will”. Sure, you might will that the ball keep rolling, but there is a difference between a will that results in action (setting the ball in motion) and a passive will to not interfere. When we say that God wills things into existence, its not the same as saying that God passively allows things to exist - its a direct will to cause something to happen.