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Does Quantum Theory disprove the idea of God?

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jdogmoney said:
Motion to make this the new thread?

quantumleap02m.jpg
Seconded.
 
Dunk#7 said:
Sorry that I did not pick out the important parts for you.
Apology accepted. Generally, if you're c/ping old posts from totally different threads, relevance will not be high. It's your responsibility to make a reasoned and relevant argument, not ours to carefully comb through what you've said before and try to guess what you're saying now.
 
Archer said:
who/what created the dimensions, the rules, and why?
Dimensions are inherent just how the second and third dimension are inherent. Whoever happens to be at the top has the greatest influence and ability to affect the lower dimensions. We just so happen to call this being God.
 
Dunk#7 said:
I suggest you watch the movie Expelled with Ben Stein.
i did, and i slapped my forehead repeatedly for the length of the film.

The concept of intelligent design is being pushed out of society when there is no reason to do so. There is evidence for ID all around. Science has never been able to explain how everything began. The best attempts to explain how we went from lifeless matter to organisms is laughable at best. I am not saying that God did it as that is not the point of ID. Some things in biology are best explained by ID.
ID is not science. it is philosophy. it is being pushed out of science classes... but the only reason it needs to be pushed out of science classes is because people with ulterior motives were pushing it into science classes in the first place.

science cannot explain everything, but its ridiculous to expect it to.

'we don't know yet' is a fundamental part of science, and that drive to try to explain the things we don't know yet is important.

you can believe in ID, but it isn't scientific. that doesn't make it wrong... but it isn't science.

Even Richard Dawkins claimed that ID was possible in that movie. However he claimed that the ID was more likely the work of aliens.
he really didn't. he made the point that if it's logical to believe that a complex system was made by something else of equal or higher complexity, that it's logical to believe that the creator must have it's own creator. he used aliens in his hypothetical example out of kindness.

people who claim that ID isn't a religious belief don't specify what the creator is, in order to attempt to sidestep the religion vs science debate and get it into science lessons. he pandered to that.

ben stein missed his point and mocked him for what he misunderstood the point to be.

It is funny that people consider those that hold onto the concept of ID as idiots when they are very versed in their field of study. There are scientists around the world that believe in ID, but they cannot speak out for fear of losing their jobs.
and there are scientists that have lost their jobs for teaching evolution in the states that don't permit it... and it has nothing to do with science one way or another, it only has to do with politics.

science is only interested in finding the explanation for things we can observe but can't currently explain. it isn't interested in disproving religion, or anything else. it's only agenda is a greater understanding of the physical universe. nothing more, nothing less.

Evolution and ID can coexist. Evolution does exist anybody who claims that things don't chug over time is an idiot. However, this does not mean that all things had a single source and evolved from it. That is where the problem and the discussion arises.
the problem with ID, is that in a purely scientific discussion you have to explain where the creator came from too... which gets you right back to the problem you had before.

only when you bring in religion and philosophy can you make that work, and absolutely people can believe the two themselves, and operate perfectly well... but ID remains unscientific.

note that unscientific doesn't mean untrue. it just means that it isn't science.
 
Step #1: define god....


when a consensus is found on that I'll let the world know step two...


****walks out of building never to be heard from again****
 
Dunk#7 said:
Sorry that I did not pick out the important parts for you.

That quote was relevant to the discussion of the possibility of God and therefore intelligent design.

There is no concept for the beginning of our universe that is proven. Nobody knows. It takes faith to believe in any current theory whether it is religious or science based.
I believe you. Here's all my money. May they call you the new Jesus. Now lead me to paradise.
 
Dunk#7 said:
Sorry that I did not pick out the important parts for you.

That quote was relevant to the discussion of the possibility of God and therefore intelligent design.

There is no concept for the beginning of our universe that is proven. Nobody knows. It takes faith to believe in any current theory whether it is religious or science based.
Hmmmm..... not really dude.
 
Azih said:

There is a subtle but significant difference between asking "Is God scientifically incompatible with this theory?" versus "If you accept this scientific theory as a premise, can you logically disprove God?" - despite the fact that my answer to both questions would be "No."
 
Stumpokapow said:
Pretend you are someone who does hold that belief.

On what basis do you believe in a god or higher being?

I've heard of people basing it on experience. Sure, there are people who lose their faith when the god they believe in fails them, by taking their loved one away. But the opposite holds true as well. When that God they believe in actually answers a call.

Sometimes the experience is so profound, that that person's doubt is wiped out forever. Like crying for water in the desert, or for safety when bombs are falling around you, or for a dollor when you are the poorest amongst the poor. Or if your child's in hospital.

It's not a good argument, with too many reasons why it isn't definitively proof, or full proof; but it is one of the reasons why some people believe in a god. They asked for help; and they got help.
 
Just with regards to the thread title, I wonder how many posters in here are actually well versed in the field of quantum mechanics.
 
Ashes1396 said:
I've heard of people basing it on experience. Sure, there are people who lose their faith when the god they believe in fails them, by taking their loved one away. But the opposite holds true as well. When that God they believe in actually answers a call.

Sometimes the experience is so profound, that that person's doubt is wiped out forever. Like crying for water in the desert, or for safety when bombs are falling around you, or for a dollor when you are the poorest amongst the poor. Or if your child's in hospital.

It's not a good argument, with too many reasons why it isn't definitively proof, or full proof; but it is one of the reasons why some people believe in a god. They asked for help; and they got help.
That's not entirely accurate. There's also people who claim to converse with a god or gods, they claim they communicate with messengers from god or gods, they say it's less belief, more truth.. So there's an entire landscape of believers and backings for beliefs.

The simple truth is that people like to be mysterious, they like to show off their awesome secret red phone with which they talk to the big guy, and furthermore, they believe whatever's been told to them the earliest, they take for real the myths that are the most fuzzy, all that. It's really the same thing with ghosts, the afterlife, manifest evil, aliens, Â… The fuzzier, the better.

If you take a hard look at the guy, the Christian God doesn't really give much to define him with. What is it, all-powerfulness, independence of space and time, agelessness, being the prime mover, love, some pretty obvious rules, exclusive rights as a godÂ… Altogether pretty weird things to define an actual being with.

So what are you left with? People talking about a weird being noone can actually work with unless one's dead, the world has ended, a miracle's going on or other things you can't really deal with in terms of observation, data and so on. Sweet. So that's something you wouldn't want to bother science with, it's another realm altogether.
 
The Frankman said:
I won't lie, I read this as "Does Quantum Leap disprove the idea of God?"
...

Right on. Quantum Leap is my favorite TV show ever.

MaddenNFL64 said:
Nothing can disprove deities like the Christian god.
Everything we as humans discover will be just part of that deities creation.
So, just fuck it. Let them believe whatever.

Yeah, you can't really 'disprove' God.
 
vordhosbn said:
To what extent does science verify the non-existence God or something more fundamental?

To no extent.
You can always wrap up all we know about the Universe and then say "and there's an external force that can control everything".
 
Stumpokapow said:
Pretend you are someone who does hold that belief.

On what basis do you believe in a god or higher being?
What basis? Nothing more than faith obviously. Nothing objective can be measured as we know it.

I was just addressing that you can hold a belief in a higher being without being part of a "religion."
 
Dunk#7 said:
Sorry that I did not pick out the important parts for you.

That quote was relevant to the discussion of the possibility of God and therefore intelligent design.

There is no concept for the beginning of our universe that is proven. Nobody knows. It takes faith to believe in any current theory whether it is religious or science based.

Or, just accept the model that best fits for the time being, until it's replaced by something more accurate or improved.
 
How can the universe and our existence be based on randomness from the start if everything is governed by physical laws? When we, as humans, make any simulation-type software, or a virtual world, or even robots, everything must be programmed, and everything must be place and/or governed by physical equations.

It's not random. There's a design for everything that exists.

Einstein said nothing is an accident. I agree with him. There are no accidents, because every phenomenon in this universe is governed by mathematical and physical equations.
 
Does the principle of superposition imply that Rifftrax are overrated garbage made by unfunny douches?

No. Rifftrax would suck even in a purely Relativistic universe.

The questions not only have nothing to do with one another, but the discoveries made in the field of Quantum Physics have actually led otherwise perfectly reasonable people to posit non-scientific hypotheses like the Strong Anthropic Principle (based on a misreading of the point Schroedinger was trying to make with his cat example) or the Best of All Possible Worlds thing that takes the principle of Superposition and the Many Worlds hypothesis and posits that it just doesn't get any better than this path in all of space-time.
 
womfalcs3 said:
How can the universe and our existence be based on randomness from the start if everything is governed by physical laws? When we, as humans, make any simulation-type software, or a virtual world, or even robots, everything must be programmed, and everything must be place and/or governed by physical equations.

It's not random. There's a design for everything that exists.

Einstein said nothing is an accident. I agree with him. There are no accidents, because every phenomenon in this universe is governed by mathematical and physical equations.
He also said:
“It seems to me that the idea of a personal God is an anthropological concept which I cannot take seriously. I also cannot imagine some will or goal outside the human sphere.”

Completely disregarding the possibility of a God, while being more interested in the mystery of the unknown. There is no logical, scientific and plausible reason to believe in god.
 
womfalcs3 said:
How can the universe and our existence be based on randomness from the start if everything is governed by physical laws? When we, as humans, make any simulation-type software, or a virtual world, or even robots, everything must be programmed, and everything must be place and/or governed by physical equations.

It's not random. There's a design for everything that exists.
The simulations humans make would actually involve the randomness factor without the need to specifically model it. And the randomness usually doesn't play out in a scale we can easily observe; when it does, it's mostly in optics.

Anyway, very often, randomness is treated wrong. You can have high randomness with a very small variance, for instance. If the variance exceeds your observation detail, you won't be able to properly measure it, but it would still be there. So a simulation could or could not involve such a randomness and deterministically lead to the same outcome.
 
Einstein made some great scientific discoveries. That doesn't add scientific weight or truth to everything he says.

or another way of putting it, i don't have to surrender everything i hold to be true just because someone with a higher IQ than me holds different things to be true.

if someone is saying 'a clever person agrees with me' it makes me instantly skeptical, whatever statement they're trying to support.
 
MaddenNFL64 said:
Nothing can disprove deities like the Christian god.

Everything we as humans discover will be just part of that deities creation.

So, just fuck it. Let them believe whatever.

Pretty much. We could discover the exact chain of events that lead to creation of the universe and life on earth and religious types would just note that God gave this to us or wanted us to find out.

(No offense if you do believe)
 
MaddenNFL64 said:
Nothing can disprove deities like the Christian god.

Everything we as humans discover will be just part of that deities creation.

So, just fuck it. Let them believe whatever.

It might be possible to disprove the Christian god.

The deistic god, the god outside of time and space, is the one thats the problem.
 
vordhosbn said:
He also said:


Completely disregarding the possibility of a God, while being more interested in the mystery of the unknown. There is no logical, scientific and plausible reason to believe in god.
There are perfectly logical arguments that can be made regarding the existence of a deity. It just depends on your assumptions going in.

Logic is a mix of mathematics with a bit of philosophy thrown in - not Science. Science uses both logic and mathematics, but they're not the same thing.
 
The concept of intelligent design is being pushed out of society when there is no reason to do so. There is evidence for ID all around. Science has never been able to explain how everything began. The best attempts to explain how we went from lifeless matter to organisms is laughable at best. I am not saying that God did it as that is not the point of ID. Some things in biology are best explained by ID.

So what's your evidence for ID? Because right now it seems to merely be a lack of evidence supporting current abiogenesis theories. That's not evidence for ID.

ID shouldn't be in science classes because ID doesn't follow scientific principles. You can't "test" for God. It's more of a philosophical or religious concept.

Back on topic, there's so little that's understood about the way our universe works that currently nothing can disprove the concept of God, yet.
 
The existence or non-existence of god can neither be proved nor disproved because the concept of god is entirely abstract and has no fixed nor arguably fixed meaning.
 
God is but born of the imagination of story tellers many moons ago, when they had no Timey Wimey programs to keep them occupied. I mean ALL the tales and stories born of the same period are true ..........right?? When people trying to make medicines and stuff where crucified for defying God's will. Lol.

You don't need quantum physics to disprove God.
 
DefectiveReject said:
God is but born of the imagination of story tellers many moons ago, when they had no Timey Wimey programs to keep them occupied. I mean ALL the tales and stories born of the same period are true ..........right?? When people trying to make medicines and stuff where crucified for defying God's will. Lol.

You don't need quantum physics to disprove God.

If god is the personification of reality, and reality exists does that still mean god doesn't exist?
 
I don't know about PROVING anything, but...

zntcV.jpg


Quantum Theory was bad enough that it made me lose faith in god.
 
Atramental said:
That's an unfalsifiable claim. There is no way of proving that one way or another.

I can say that all reality is really bull semen on its most basic scale and there is no way you can prove or disprove that until we have EVIDENCE!

And if you don't have evidence for a claim, fuck off and stop wasting our time.

No right, only things that can produce evidence can be said to be proved within limits of error. But the concept of god is utterly abstract (and again, has no fixed meaning). Additionally, it is a concept that can never be quantified. Thus, there is no hypothesis that can be tested. And since it can't be tested, nor can be semantically fixed, it can never be proved nor disproved.

My response was to a statement that summarizes as "because a conception of god was forged by imaginative story-tellers in the past - god does not exist". My statement was not to prove the existence of god, but to point out the error in the reasoning of the post I quoted.
 
Atramental said:
That's an unfalsifiable claim. There is no way of proving that one way or another.

I can say that all reality is really bull semen on its most basic scale and there is no way you can prove or disprove that until we have EVIDENCE!

And if you don't have evidence for a claim, fuck off and stop wasting our time.
lol, he mad

You say there's no way of proving one way or another but then say you need evidence... which is it?
 
plagiarize said:
the problem with ID, is that in a purely scientific discussion you have to explain where the creator came from too... which gets you right back to the problem you had before.

only when you bring in religion and philosophy can you make that work, and absolutely people can believe the two themselves, and operate perfectly well... but ID remains unscientific.

note that unscientific doesn't mean untrue. it just means that it isn't science.

I agree with you, but with that being said you would also have to accept that many other claims out there are not science.

Every current concept about the beginning also has to explain where it came from. You can only go back so far before something had to come from nothing. At which point you have to take that on faith.

You either accept that something came from nothing based on faith.

Or you accept that a creator must have always existed and created the universe.

Either way you are relying on something that cannot be proven.

Science cannot and will not ever explain the beginning of the universe. It is unscientific to claim you can spontaneously have something from nothing.
 
mac said:
Why quantum physics? Doesn't it disprove God just as well as any other field?
Beats me. I guess it just occupies a pretty big, important headspace. I mean, look at The Secret and What the Bleep Do We Know? They're not just bullshit, they're quantum bullshit.
foodtaster said:
lol, he mad
Goodnight, sweet junior.
 
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