Hi Yp,
Re your statement: “
The multi-verse theories: Magueijo’s successive BB’s; Linde’s Bubble universes; and the Big Crunch are all designed to eliminate the need for a single universe with a beginning, creatio ex nihilo.” Emphasis mine.
It is a poor scientist who goes about observing phenomena with the intent in mind to defeat a particualr doctrin of a particular church. I suggest that the theories are just that, extrapolations of observed data worthy of attention and research on their own merit. I think that it’s certainly clear, as you stated seemingly pejoratively later in that same tract, that science
is specualtive. Isn’t that, indeed, what you are doing with your own proposed theories? What’s wrong with that? What you accuse science of doing in regard to the named theories is in fact what the Church and the pious do with data: bend them to fit theology, regardless of the observations.
This is not, before anyone gets pouty, a strictly Catholic phenomenon by any means. It is a phenomenon of any belief system, from infantile tooth fairy mythology to the ignoring of E=MCC by the physicists who went to their graves rejecting the math because they didn’t like it. There is a universe of ignorance of self-observation associated with religious thought best summed up by Albert E. himself~ " I know two things to be infinite: the universe and man’s stupidity. And I am not sure about the universe." BTW, strictly speaking, a multi-verse is still in the quale of one creation. You might be interested in
www.tenthdimension.com
That is not meant to be, in this case, an epthetical application. It is a nostrum designed to facilitate clear and correct thinking. If we know that as a race we are stupid, ignorant, and greatly lacking in observational prowess, we might be more careful in accepting belief systems once we have reached the alleged age of reason. OOPS! Too late…By then the emotonal patterns of belief are chemically engrained as addictions in our awareness, necessitating a shock of some kind to derail thinking back into the empirical experience mode.
In the religious arena, eliminationg the very numerous other areas where the same thing happens, we can readily observe from news media the astonishing amount of hatred lavished by Christians on each other in particular, since that is close to home, or the equally large data base of other religionists currently and in the past slaughtering each other in the name of God’'s Love. Well, He did it too, in the Bible, so who can blame anyone, eh, for being good followers? After all, He has sponsored so many One True faiths. Ask all the people who are ready to kill for theirs.
That is not speculation, and the “but religion itself is good, especially mine, because it has tradition and the Holy Spirit guiding it” defense is useless. There is as much mayhem, physical and psychological, commited by religionists as any other group, defusing the theory that religion makes people better. Goodness is goodness, irrelevant of faith. It exists in another axis of experience. Goodness is of the Spirit, religion is of the mind, despite its “good” and necessary intentions.
But I digress. But maybe not, because there is that “ex nihilo” thing. I happen to agree with that. However, my basis for such agreement is on a radically different footing than the magical thinking of christianists. Again, we are dealing here with a mental construct as distinct from an experiential observation.
“Ex nihilo” in churchianity is the magical concept of everything being made from “nothing” over a period of six “days.” Since the human mind works on the principle of stories to explain itself and the world it is part of, that so far is well and good. It is well and good as an ad hoc, anyway, until something better comes along. This is where religon and science part ways. Science tends to be childlike and never stops exploring. Religon tends
to canonize a system by emotional sanctions and discouraging inquiry. Witness the astonishingly large bodies of knowledge burned to ashes as early Catholics ravaged libraries in the name of the faith. The Church has not been a friend of thinking, has it?
Unless of course that thinking is the rationlization surrounding the contortions of dogma.
That thinking is nothing short of brilliant! Kudos for form, failed for content. But that failed content is the stuff of peoples unexamined lives!!!
In the case of ex nihilo, the error is one of proceedure. Unfortunately, about one in a million gets the proceedure correct and reaches the inescapable conclusion. But that conclusion has been accessible to all, save for the prophylactic efforts of religionists and financeers who thrive on the ignoranceof the population. Wasn’t it Hitler who said “It’s great luck for leaders that men don’t think?”
Unfortunately, especially in the case of proofs of God or His alleged ways, the proof is not in thinking or in rationalizations. It is smack where St. Thomas Aquinas found it. He stopped writing his proofs because upon his own realization he saw that they were “all as straw.” This is a recognizable pattern throughout the ages. It is the result of the exhastuion of the reasoning mind by effort or trauma and the surrender to Being. The result, to thinking, or the reasoning mind, because of its limited, temporal, 4-D oriented nature, is a blank nothingness. Read “nihilo.” To the faculty or ability of Conscious Awareness, it is ALL.
This is the “nihilo” all ex is from: The Mind of God, His very Being, percieved in the glory of Beatific Vision, not separate, but ALL. Our conclusions based on a fragmentary world of mistakenly aprehended discreet objects is a perceptual and proceedural error. A great exegisis of this is F. Merrell-Wolff’s “The Philosophy of Consciousness Without and Object,” a contemporary treatment of an age old universal experiential Truth.