It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Astyanax
reply to post by Greylorn
At the current rate of progress, I'll OP a new idea about once a month and have the complete theory reproduced in about five years.
Sadly, I'm not sure my attention span – or my workload – can handle that. Perhaps I'll just buy your book when it comes out.
Originally posted by Astyanax
*
reply to post by Greylorn
Methinks that you and I are aiming at the same target, but from different mountaintops. If so, I have much to learn from you.
You flatter me, alas. I have no urge to untangle the mysteries of the cosmos. I just dabble in these things for entertainment's sake. As for intellectual elevation, I'm the ploughman in the valley with his face full of mud.
Originally posted by Astyanax
Here's one for you, then. Barbour sees time as a configuration space containing all possible solutions of the universal probability function. A sort of state machine, in other words.
I find his hypothesis fascinating and – as long as he sticks to physics – plausible. Unfortunately, any useful theory of a timeless universe must also explain how and why we experience duration and consequence. Barbour falters when he gets to this part. J.W. Dunne, about a hundred years before Barbour, saw the difficulty and tried to deal with it, but his arguments disappear into an abyss of nested regression where I, at least, cannot follow. Perhaps you will have better luck.
Originally posted by Evanzsayz
reply to post by Greylorn
It's possible this could be true. I have to ask though...if God decided to make a universe all of a sudden, why didn't he make it right? If your going to make something and your God, make it right.
Children born to suffer and die is all the proof I need God doesn't exist. Or he's one sick psychopath.edit on 16-8-2013 by Evanzsayz because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Astyanax
reply to post by Cogito, Ergo Sum
Thanks, Astyanax
You're welcome. I recognise the qualitative differences between the Big Bang hypothesis and the assertion 'God did it.' I agree with the OP only so far as to say that neither of those narratives provides a good causal explanation for the original, universe-creating event. Unlike the OP, I have no expectation that it can be explained given the current state of our knowledge, but I would not object to being proven wrong. In the meantime, I am quite satisfied with the good old Big Bang.
Regarding Crothers, the link I posted was simply to show you that his ideas are indeed being considered and responded to by the physics community. Frankly, I think he gets more attention than he deserves. This may be prejudice – I am certainly not competent to follow his arguments in detail or criticise his mathematics – but I do have special skills of my own, and one of them is the ability to read with insight. It is clear from Crothers's writing that he is a man with an inalienable conviction of his own rightness and intellectual superiority who carries a sequoia-sized chip on his shoulder. That doesn't automatically means his ideas are wrong, but it is telling nonetheless, and combined with the proven success of relativity theory and the widespread dismissal of his work from scientists who have bothered to read it, I consider it damning.
Then doesnt the stuff which man intelligently creates owe its existence to man intelligently creating it?
Surely this contradicts what you said earlier about the basic definition of God being 'an intelligent creator'? Men are not gods. We can only create new forms from existing materials; we cannot bring matter into existence.
Originally posted by Astyanax
reply to post by Itisnowagain
I wonder if you read some of the thread before posting in it? We are not arguing science vs. religion here (except for a few off-topic obsessives who can't give it up). We are considering the possibility that both are inadequate and possibly false representations of the truth. The OP is preparing a revelation, and we are hoping he will not disappoint. Suspend your disbelief (and your belief) for the moment, and take it easy!
Originally posted by Itisnowagain
Originally posted by Astyanax
We're not concerning ourselves with whether any of this matters – at least, most of us are not, and I don't think the OP is either.
It would be nice to see if the OP has any interest in what I have written.
Originally posted by ForteanOrg
Originally posted by Greylorn
Half the population has an IQ lower than 100. None of them will be posting their thoughts here. The freedom to think for oneself is best exercised by those capable of independent thought.
However - I assume you still agree that all man are created equal?
Who are you to define what a god is?
Who are you to tell us that we are not gods, even though we do create?
There are many things we have brought into being, many concepts and identities created through us.
Creating is creating. You can't just say it's not good enough to be considered godly.
To you, we are not gods.
Our modern miracles are too commonplace for you to respect or appreciate them.
But to ancient civilizations, we have done the impossible, many times over. To them, we would be gods. It's all a matter of perspective.
Originally posted by Astyanax
reply to post by Greylorn
I invite you to peruse the OP once again and consider it from a different perspective. It is not about religion, except that the God concept is kind of the super-massive black hole that various religions revolve around, like stars in a galaxy. The OP is about one belief that came out of scientific discovery, the Big Bang, vs. another belief that came from religion.
I'm merely pointing out similarities between beliefs/theories that most people regard as entirely different, with a view to getting a few thoughtful people ready to consider a better theory.
I think the similar form of such theories – I prefer to call them hypotheses or postulates – is easily explained. We are evolved organisms, and that goes for our brains as well as every other part of us. Our brains and the organs of our senses have evolved for the purpose of taking in and interpreting, in ways useful to us, information about our environment. Like any other computer – and its peripherals – the brain and the senses are constructed in a particular way and, it is safe to conjecture, operate in a particular way as well. We interpret the world using processes and parameters that are innate. We interpret it the way our minds have evolved to interpret it: via our native operating systems.
Data that does not compute within these parameters – this framework – is very hard for us to deal with. Hence our difficulties with the realities of quantum mechanics.
Thus it is no accident that different hypotheses regarding the origins of things should exhibit a broad similiarity of development and form. This merely reflects the inner workings of our brains. Our conceptual freedom is restricted by biology. In no wise can we undersand the world as it is – whatever that means – but can only understand it translated into terms we have evolved to be able to understand.
edit on 18/8/13 by Astyanax because: of U-NOS.
Originally posted by PhotonEffect
Originally posted by Greylorn
Since the micropea/singularity and an omnipotent God are inherently complex entities, we would expect a creator. The micropea had to be at Entropy 0 at the point of the Bang--- so who, or what process, squeezed all that energy, matter, and physics into something smaller than a neutrino? A similar point can be made about God.
Yes, which for me begs the question- who, or what process defined the laws for universal existence. Clearly, a very specific checklist of events- governed by very specific laws and rules of interaction- had to occur in specific dimensions (time, place, order) so that life as we know it could develop and proliferate and evolve. Not only life, like a tree or a fish, but life with a level of consciousness that allows for the awareness, observation, and reflection necessary to consider its origins in the first place. "Who" (what) wrote the software package for our universe, and then downloaded it into a neutrino sized hard drive before double clicking 'bigbang.exe'?
(sorry if I strayed a little off topic with that)
Originally posted by PhotonEffect
But what if we begin with an entirely different process for the beginnings? Two independently existing spaces, each defined by an unstructured substance, each capable of exerting a single internal force, both contained in a superspace, both uncreated, existing in a perfectly static state at Entropy 1.
The basis for this idea seems as good as any right now. While there's a fair chance I won't be able to wrap my mind around the more complex version of it, I'd still be interested to read more about how this process could give rise to a God/BB.
Originally posted by The GUT
Originally posted by Greylorn
I hate it when some new chick shows up on a thread, all decked out in her unabashed naivety. Next event, some guy absent a social life sucks up to her, and between them hijack the thread. Where's our moderator?
Whine much? The moderator? YOU bored them to sleep. And you're quite rude.
Doesn't seem any reason for a MOD to step in, imo. I actually thought their discussion was much more interesting than your long-winded opinionated posts that you (though apparently not much of anyone else) seem to think are brilliant.
Maybe you're a tad ticked because you're not receiving the attention you think you deserve? Where's the Yawn icon? This will have to do I guess:
A fairly well-read member of the species which developed the concept of deity, and one who has looked into the subject though not made a wholesale study of it.
Someone who is adept at stating the obvious.
Indeed there are. To contemplate what humanity has achieved over the last ten thousand years or so, and especially the last five hundred, is awe-inspiring. It makes me feel both godlike (because I am a member of the species that achieved it) and insignificant (because my own contribution to the record of human achievement is nugatory).
Now that's just being silly. First you try to tear a strip off me for trying to define God. In the next breath you propose the ability to 'create' – by which you actually mean the ability to push things around, to reshape and modify – is an attribute of divinity, defining God exactly as ImaFungi did. Do try to be consistent, won't you?
I certainly know that I am not a god. My petty hopes and fears, my yearnings after a better life, the envy and bitterness I experience, my helplessness before the forces of nature and society are enough to tell me that. I see others experience the same things, and I know that they are not gods, either.
Because they are not miracles.
I think you underestimate the intelligence of our ancestors.