T
tonyrey
Guest
You have just offered a proof!But I think proofs are harmful, they necessarily reduce God in our thoughts to the status of a dead hypothesis…
You have just offered a proof!But I think proofs are harmful, they necessarily reduce God in our thoughts to the status of a dead hypothesis…
I didn’t realize numbers take up space, unlike universes that apparently do.The infinite set of odd numbers {1,3,5,7…} leaves a whole lot of room for other infinities, including for example, the even numbers (2,4,6,8…}
Oh I think you can work that out. When you say “you think you have walked all over us” (post #799), by “us” you either mean you and your glove puppet, or you mean some kind of group you think you’re a member of and I am not.Again, your opinions are not objective. I have said nothing that is not true. You have interpreted them to enhance your peculiar point of view. To describe them as " warped " is not " uncharitable. " It would be dangerous to review " past history, " since that would expose the " pot " as well. And what does the " Baptist " have to do with anything?
Thanks, yes it’s proof that trying to prove the existence of God reduces Him to the status of a dead hypothesis.You have just offered a proof!![]()
A biblical translation of a version of the Aramaic “Our Father” starts outSome modern physicists think the answer is yes. However there seems to be no evidence that this is so.For those who may be interested, there is no evidence for the assertion that there are experiments showing this universe creating something. This is pure hyperbolic speculation, it is not even known what ( if anything ) has been observed. If, indeed, some form of matter appeared where there had been none, it can only have come from some form of prior existing matter.
But besides this, is it possible that the universe could have created itself and that it sustains itself in existence?. There are lots of highly speculative theories to that effect Fr. Robert Spitzer of the Magis Center of Reason and Faith has some very interesting presentations about some of these theories. You can watch them here.
magisreasonfaith.org/spitzer_videos.html
Thomas Aquinas has demonstrated philosophically that only God can cause anything to exist, only he can create anything and sustain it in existence. He discusses this in the Summa Theologica, Part 1, Qs 44-45, and 103-109. You can read it for yourself.
Linus2nd
…It seems to me that Buddhism has been trying to say something very similar to string theory and Plato’s divided line.
All of these involve a very real and factual description of “what’s out there” in terms of conscious awareness and logical probability. String theory describes dimensions and goes through the dimensions we understand (the first 4 dimensions; 3 being our waking world and 4 being time). Also string theory describes dimensions far beyond what we understand.
Plato’s divided line also makes use of dimensions along a similar line of thought though they take a somewhat different form which is awareness. In this idea our waking life is really equated to looking at shadows on a wall compared to what else is “out there”. Eventually we work our way through the layers of math and logic and we are finally aware of something that isn’t readily tangible in our plane of existence.
Likewise Buddhism takes us to other levels of “reality”. Buddhism I don’t know much about (yet) but from what I understand it too can take one to higher levels of awareness.
In short I think that these three ideas (and I’m sure many more) all try to take us to the same place in a manner of speaking. That is I think that if Plato and the Buddha sat down and looked over some string theory they might find a lot of similarities. I ask this because I know that many theories are comparable with other ideas (such as applying mathematical theories to music). I kind of think these guys were all talking about the same thing…
TomI don’t see how why the Planck length is the minimum interval of length. I thought that the birefringe method applied to gamma ray bursts lets you see distances which are many orders of magnitude shorter than the Planck length?
arxiv.org/abs/1102.2784
And according to the following article (see 5.3): "We have already discussed that there are various possibilities for a minimal length scale to make
itself noticeable, and this does not necessarily mean that it appears as a lower bound on the spatial
resolution. We could instead merely have a bound on products of spatial and temporal extensions.
So in this sense there might not be a minimal length, just a minimal length scale.
arxiv.org/abs/1203.6191
Originally Posted by Tomdstone View Post
The infinite set of odd numbers {1,3,5,7…} leaves a whole lot of room for other infinities, including for example, the even numbers (2,4,6,8…}
Gentlemen,I didn’t realize numbers take up space, unlike universes that apparently do.
The continuum hypothesis has not been proven or disproven. In fact, if you assume the ZF axiomatic system, it can’t be proven or disproven within that system.All of space can be described with those two transfinite numbers, there are no “infinite sets” in between.
TomThe continuum hypothesis has not been proven or disproven. In fact, if you assume the ZF axiomatic system, it can’t be proven or disproven within that system.
Is it a logical proof? If so can you express it as a syllogism?Thanks, yes it’s proof that trying to prove the existence of God reduces Him to the status of a dead hypothesis.![]()
God is beyond definition.Is it a logical proof? If so can you express it as a syllogism?
If God is **totally **undefined the term “God” is meaningless.God is beyond definition.
What cannot be defined cannot be proved.
God cannot be proved.
However, even thinking of God as an hypothesis to be proved is to put God in our back pocket, to replace God Almighty in our thoughts with a little tribal spirit. Neither the CCC nor the Pope or his predecessor agree with doing this:-
CCC 42 God transcends all creatures. We must therefore continually purify our language of everything in it that is limited, image-bound or imperfect, if we are not to confuse our image of God–“the inexpressible, the incomprehensible, the invisible, the ungraspable”–with our human representations. Our human words always fall short of the mystery of God.- vatican.va/archive/ccc_css/archive/catechism/p1s1c1.htm
What Ratzinger suggests is that the revelation by God that his name is YWHW is really a “rebuff” or a “refusal to give a name than the announcement of a name.” God’s name may be that he is nameless because His real essence, as God, is unknowable. As Meister Eckhart puts it “God is nameless, for no man can know or say anything of Him.” - catholic.org/hf/faith/story.php?id=49807
NB “an area of uncertainty” does not entail **total **uncertainty - which amounts to agnosticism.The pope replies: “Yes, in this quest to seek and find God in all things there is still an area of uncertainty. There must be. If a person says that he met God with total certainty and is not touched by a margin of uncertainty, then this is not good. For me, this is an important key. If one has the answers to all the questions—that is the proof that God is not with him. It means that he is a false prophet using religion for himself. The great leaders of the people of God, like Moses, have always left room for doubt. You must leave room for the Lord, not for our certainties; we must be humble. Uncertainty is in every true discernment that is open to finding confirmation in spiritual consolation. - americamagazine.org/pope-interview
I hate to say it but your opinions and interpretations of what the Pope said are just opinions. I can’t see any point in arguing against private opinions. Of course I interpret his message differentlyOh I think you can work that out. When you say “you think you have walked all over us” (post #799), by “us” you either mean you and your glove puppet, or you mean some kind of group you think you’re a member of and I am not.
Your continued silence on what the Pope actually said speaks volumes.![]()
I will take your word on the translation. I like the translation I am used to much better. As far as the effect of " String Theory " on the philosophy of Thomism, I would agree. It has no effect on it at all. Nothing genuine and true in science has any adverse effect on anything St. Thomas taught. By the way " String Theory " is a media phenomenon. It has absolutely no substance at all, it depends on endless constants which have no meaning in reality, phantoms used to save the appeariences.A biblical translation of a version of the Aramaic “Our Father” starts out
Têtê malkuthach.
Your Heavenly Domain approaches.
Nehwê tzevjânach aikâna d’bwaschmâja af b’arha.
Let Your will come true - in the universe (all that vibrates)
just as on earth (that is material and dense).
The term vibration is strikingly similar to string theory as is it is to some Buddhist beliefs and Plato’s divide line. I don’t believe string theory diminishes the belief or fact that God is prime mover of the universe and everything that may exist.
Yes, the questions begin with Newton’s constant " G. " Things got along pretty well up to the 1930’s or so. But now they are well out of hand. As one observer commented, " we are not much better off now than were the " scientists " of the Middle Ages with their epicycles. They were saving the " appearances " of geocentrism by the device of adding epicycles. Today physics is " saving the appearances " by endless addition of constants ( most of which do not seem related to any reality ) and " parameters. " There are many good books on the subject. I am reading Bankrupting Physics by Alexander Unzicker and Sheilla Jones. An easy read with lots of enlightening quotes from numerous physicists and reading suggestions.No. God created it. Science has led us down a primrose path, but science is proving itself wrong. Recent observations (signal in WMAP and Planck at farthest reaches of space pointing back to us) have led some of our recent cosmologists to say (see the posted link for a movie trailer where you can hear this yourself):
“There is a crisis in cosmology…”
Michio Kaku
“It’s an exciting time in cosmology, because everything has changed…”
Lawrence Krauss
“Life is extremely rare, …, we are in fact the only life in our entire universe and I actually think we are very significant…”
Max Tegmark
facebook.com/theprinciplemovie
youtu.be/p8cBvMCucTg
I keep trying to post this, but it keeps getting deleted. In the past (have not been here for a while), mods would tell you if there was an issue.
Yes, the questions begin with Newton’s constant " G. " Things got along pretty well up to the 1930’s or so. But now they are well out of hand. As one observer commented, " we are not much better off now than were the " scientists " of the Middle Ages with their epicycles. They were saving the " appearances " of geocentrism by the device of adding epicycles. Today physics is " saving the appearances " by endless addition of constants ( most of which do not seem related to any reality ) and " parameters. " There are many good books on the subject. I am reading Bankrupting Physics by AlexanderNo. God created it. Science has led us down a primrose path, but science is proving itself wrong. Recent observations (signal in WMAP and Planck at farthest reaches of space pointing back to us) have led some of our recent cosmologists to say (see the posted link for a movie trailer where you can hear this yourself):
“There is a crisis in cosmology…”
Michio Kaku
“It’s an exciting time in cosmology, because everything has changed…”
Lawrence Krauss
“Life is extremely rare, …, we are in fact the only life in our entire universe and I actually think we are very significant…”
Max Tegmark
facebook.com/theprinciplemovie
youtu.be/p8cBvMCucTg
I keep trying to post this, but it keeps getting deleted. In the past (have not been here for a while), mods would tell you if there was an issue.
There is absolutely no evidence for string theory.A biblical translation of a version of the Aramaic “Our Father” starts out
Têtê malkuthach.
Your Heavenly Domain approaches.
Nehwê tzevjânach aikâna d’bwaschmâja af b’arha.
Let Your will come true - in the universe (all that vibrates)
just as on earth (that is material and dense).
The term vibration is strikingly similar to string theory as is it is to some Buddhist beliefs and Plato’s divide line. I don’t believe string theory diminishes the belief or fact that God is prime mover of the universe and everything that may exist.
Unjustified dogmatism.“Life is extremely rare, …, we are in fact the only life in our entire universe and I actually think we are very significant…”
Max Tegmark
facebook.com/theprinciplemovie
youtu.be/p8cBvMCucTg