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A scientific argument for the existence of God?

  • 10-03-2014 12:05am
    #1
    Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 963 ✭✭✭


    Not trolling. This is a serious science question, to do with probability, not God.


    Take a point in a perfect vacuum. The average event is zero. But the probability of non-zero events follows a Gaussian distribution. There is a paradox. Time limited Gaussian distributions always give a bell shaped curve. But if time is infinite, all events have an equal probability of occurring. They all occur. But for the occurrence of every infinitesimal probable event, the probability for a cancelling event has the equal probability of occurring. So all possible events do occur, but they all cancel (though there probably is an infinite set of events that are events that do not cancel.).

    At any time, at every point in space, the God of the old testament, with his beard and temperament, exists. But simultaneously, there is an anti-god at precisely the same point that cancels God.

    God aside, is it non-absurd, to assume space is full of infinite energy particles, but simultaneously full of cancelling anti-particles?


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