Capt'n Midnight wrote: » In the beginning the Universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move. Many races believe that it was created by some sort of God, though the Jatravartid people of Viltvodle VI believe that the entire Universe was in fact sneezed out of the nose of a being called the Great Green Arkleseizure. The Jatravartids, who live in perpetual fear of the time they call The Coming of The Great White Handkerchief, are small blue creatures with more than fifty arms each, who are therefore unique in being the only race in history to have invented the aerosol deodorant before the wheel. However, the Great Green Arkleseizure Theory is not widely accepted outside Viltvodle VI and so, the Universe being the puzzling place it is, other explanations are constantly being sought." - Douglas Adams
Ariana Squeaking Supper wrote: » Surely it makes sense that with all the complexity we are finding in the universe that we have gone beyond the idea of a random bang theory. It points to a Creator and if it was created, then so were we.
Midster wrote: » it’s a tricky one alright. So much to think about in the world of quantum science, multi verses, atoms being in more than one place at any one time, things behaving differently one way if you observe them to another way if you don’t, even recording gear or cameras have an effect on experiment, it’s an extremely confusing subject, even people trying to study it get confused by it.
Midster wrote: » The simple answer is no. But also it’s fare to say that for as long as there are things that we cannot understand or explain, that it leaves the door open to there being one.
one world order wrote: » Science is pointing in the direction of a creator. It's not possible to create everything out of nothing.
Eire Go Brach wrote: » Who created the creator? If he created stuff from nothing?
one world order wrote: » God has always existed. Time is linked to matter and space. As God created the universe he is therefore outside of time.
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » I'll just wait until there's evidence of gods anywhere. What will you do?
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » Sounds like you’ve got it all sorted. No need to try to understand reality when you already know things like this based on absolutely no evidence. Mucking around with evidence is only for the ignorant and the those who don’t already know everything.
Midster wrote: » I completely agree, science has done a pretty good job through the years of throwing out god theories. I grew up in a world were almost everything god had already been thrown out by science. Water is just water, no mater how many times you bless it. Stone is stone Everything is just exactly what it looks and feels like and nothing more. I first became interested in quantum science because it challenged that, it tells us that things at the tiniest of scales are not always as they seem, and not always straight forward. Why should certain things behave differently if you watch it to if you don’t? And if there are so many multiverses, and tiny atoms can be in more than one place at any one time, are they jumping between universes, and if so are the universes linked together somehow, and if they are, are all of the multiverses combined part of something even bigger. Does the universe we see only exist because living beings are here to observe it, and if that’s true, what happens when every star is dead and after every living being dead, would the universe shink down to nothing in less than a second and perform another expansion. It might sound silly to some, but I believe the quantum science subject has the very best chance of uncovering a deeper meaning to everything. Maybe all this time we have been searching for god in the clouds, and in space we were looking in the wrong place, and now we have the tech, we are finding tiny clues.
one world order wrote: » If you have alternative evidence then feel free to share. We already have God's message in the bible that mentions the circle of the earth and God hangs earth on nothing. This was 2,000 years ago ever before it was proven the earth was round or it hangs in space.
nthclare wrote: » If you're going to debate the God thing, you've a lot of research and understanding as to what God the non believer doesn't believe in. An absolute nightmare.
one world order wrote: » Science is pointing in the direction of a creator. It's not possible to create everything out of nothing. At present the evil that control this world at the top are trying to find the God particle by opening the door to the other dimension in CERN, a 27km tunnel spanning Switzerland and France.
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » Why bother going to a pop science forum to discuss gods? The burden of proof is on anyone who claims gods exist. They don’t have to meet that burden in the religious forums but surely they understand that they will need to have some good evidence in a science forum. Shoehorning gods onto things we don’t understand is as old as things we don’t understand. Not understanding things isn’t evidence for gods, though some people mistake it for evidence.
Midster wrote: » All I’m saying is that the reality that science presented to us before quantum was always very dependable, with strict laws governing everything from, size, weight, speed, formation etc etc. that type of science explains very well what everything is and what it’s made of. But quantum explains everything else. Is is the flexible non reality that the previous cold hard reality sits on. It’s the place we’re literally everything comes into question. And it gives reality itself almost a form of intelligence all of its own Now if there is a god, personally I really don’t know. But if there is one at all ever, it’s going to be there.
Ariana Squeaking Supper wrote: » Surely it makes sense that with all the complexity we are finding in the universe that we have gone beyond the idea of a random bang theory.
Ariana Squeaking Supper wrote: » It points to a Creator and if it was created, then so were we.
Black Swan wrote: » Scientific theories continue to emerge, evolve (see Wallace's Wheel of Science), and in some cases have no longer been supported by the data. They are theories, or educated guesses, and to the extent that they are falsifiable, they remain within the scientific domain (see Karl Popper). Furthermore, the scientific method only suggests, provided that the preponderance of data supports such suggestions. This a position of faith, not science.
Midster wrote: » Ok so here is my question: With our galaxy being the jaw dropping size that it is. The universe our galaxy moves through trillion times of more massive than that. And the space outside of our universe being of unmeasurable size. And if all of the multiverses including our own are to make our own planet look like nothing more than an atom, not visible to the naked eye, and only visible under extreme magnification. If that is true so far If god created everything and is therefore of same size or bigger (possibly much bigger) then how would anyone ever expect to be able to prove definitively, that he exists at all.