Author Topic: Multiverse Fantasy  (Read 560 times)

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Offline ChemEngrMBA

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Multiverse Fantasy
« on: February 06, 2020, 06:46:17 pm »
http://MultiverseFantasy.wordpress.com

The Eye of God
Helix Nebula NGC 7293

Only a few decades ago, Christophobes (atheists) claimed that the universe is SO LARGE that no creator would possibly have gone to such trouble and wasted so many resources to make this entire universe just for the benefit of us pathetic humans here on earth.  It was preposterous, inconceivable, they said.
Now, exactly the opposite argument is being made, in order to counter advances in science.  The Multiverse, *scientists* tell us, can counter the insuperable statistics of the Anthropic Principle, which examines forty or more physical constants which are exquisitely precise, much to mankind's benefit.  The physical constants are precise to an extent that would be statistically impossible without a Designer.  Hence God's deniers came up with their fantasmagoric Multiverse.
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Light is extraordinarily fast, 186,000 miles per second (871,875 times faster than sound).  This not only makes radio communications virtually instant anywhere on the earth, but it also helps us see our surroundings in real time, unlike hearing.  Moreover the energy derived from solar fusion is likewise extraordinarily high, proportional to the square of the speed of light.  Slower light would mean much, much colder earth.  Contrast this value for c with the speed of sound, a paltry 768 miles per hour.  It is slow enough that we can hear the direction from which sounds originate. We can also enjoy music in stereo, only because our ears can differentiate between tiny differences in the time sounds arrive at one ear versus the other - differences as small as 1/10,000th of a second.  The fine tuning of values for the electromagnetic constant, the electron-proton mass and charge ratios, strong and weak nuclear forces, among many others, defy naturalistic explanation.   And so, intellectuals argue (with straight faces) that there must surely be an infinite number of "multiverses," all of which have different values for all these physical constants, and we just happen to be in the *right* universe, permitting our very existence.

Thus *intellectuals* have gone from one extreme, that our universe is much too large for any creator to have bothered with it, to the other, multiverses, an infinite number of universes.  Most of them are like the three bears’ porridge of the Goldilocks story, either too hot or too cold.  Our universe happens to be just right.  Just so science.
The gravitational constant is precise to within one part in 10 to the 10 to the 120th power.  Who determined this impossible precision?  Why it just picked itself, we are told.  How simple.
[By way of comparison, the universe is comprised of ~10 to the 80th fundamental particles. If you had fifteen spheres the size of our solar system, out to Pluto, full of sand, and there were one and only one chance to select a unique and specially marked grain in these fifteen solar systems full of sand, the probability of a man in a vehicle capable of navigating in the sand without any windows or any way of seeing his surroundings, would have to pick that grain on his first and only try. That is 1 chance in 10 to the 50th, my definition of “impossible.” Compare that to the gravitational constant, precise to one part in 10 to the 1 followed by 120 zeroes.]
PROBLEM:  The universe could not have created itself, from absolutely nothing.  That would violate the first law and second laws of thermodynamics.
The first explicit statement of the first law of thermodynamics, by Rudolf Clausius in 1850, referred to cyclic thermodynamic processes.
In all cases in which work is produced by the agency of heat, a quantity of heat is consumed which is proportional to the work done; and conversely, by the expenditure of an equal quantity of work an equal quantity of heat is produced.
Clausius also stated the law in another form, referring to the existence of a function of state of the system, the internal energy, and expressed it in terms of a differential equation for the increments of a thermodynamic process. This equation may described as follows:
In a thermodynamic process involving a closed system, the increment in the internal energy is equal to the difference between the heat accumulated by the system and the work done by it.

Delta E = Q + W

where delta E is the total energy of the universe, Q is the change in heat, and W is the change in work.
Energy can neither be created nor destroyed.
 
How these values instantaneously changed from nonexistent to incomprehensibly massive has never and can never be explained in naturalistic terms.
PROBLEM:  The second law of thermodynamics, as expressed by Rudolf Clausius:
 
The entropy of an isolated system never decreases, because isolated systems spontaneously evolve towards thermodynamic equilibrium —the state of maximum entropy.
 
In other words, the entropy, or disorder, of a closed system constantly increases.  Chaos can only increase within a closed system.  The pretense of orderliness increasing dramatically after the Big Bang, to produce stars, planets, heat and light is the largest conceivable violation of the second law of thermodynamics.  But who made these laws?  Wellll, we are told, they simply made themselves.  Talk about convenient.
How matter, energy, organization, elegance, physical laws, and the profound fortuitous interdependences which embrace and nurture mankind, moved uphill, against the forces of entropic degradation, has never and can never be explained in naturalistic terms.



The God Particle

Clearly this creation we call the universe had a creator, who is forever outside the purview of science.  This is because science is restricted to what we can observe, understand, quantify, and explain.  Professor John Lennox, of Oxford University, gave a lecture titled A Matter of Gravity.  Professor Lennox elegantly responded to Richard Dawkins’ clever ploy of asking “Who made God?”  Said Lennox, “If someone made God, then He wouldn’t be God, would He.”
Precisely.

You must choose between two and only two inconceivable prospects.
Either:
A.  The universe made itself, out of nothing, or else,
B.  An infinite intellect and power made the universe.
Alternative A is, shall we say, distasteful, unconvincing, and largely offered only because its proponents have an illogical aversion to Alternative B, which is at once elegant and compelling if incomprehensible.  But then again, we are truly surrounded by things that are at the threshold of incomprehensibility, like invisible waves of varying types (frequencies) flying through the air, to our computers, smart phones, televisions, radios, ears, eyes, and grass. 

Until man duplicates a  blade of grass, nature can laugh at his so-called scientific knowledge. – Thomas Edison

“Many people don’t realize that science basically involves assumptions and faith.   Wonderful things in both science and religion come from our efforts based on observations, thoughtful assumptions, faith and logic.  (With the findings of modern physics, it) seems extremely unlikely (that the existence of life and humanity are ) just accidental.” – Charles Townes, Nobel Laureate and Professor of Physics at UC Berkeley

“It seems to me that when confronted with the marvels of life and the universe, one must ask why and not just how. The only possible answers are religious…. I find a need for God in the universe and in my own life.” – Arthur L. Schawlow, Professor of Physics at Stanford University, winner of the Nobel Prize in physics, believes that new scientific discoveries provide compelling evidence for a personal God.

“As a man who has devoted his whole life to the most clear headed science, to the study of matter, I can tell you as a result of my research about atoms this much: There is no matter as such. All matter originates and exists only by virtue of a force which brings the particle of an atom to vibration and holds this most minute solar system of the atom together. We must assume behind this force the existence of a conscious and intelligent mind.”  ― Max Planck

“Only a rookie who knows nothing about science would say science takes away from faith. If you really study science, it will bring you closer to God.” – James Tour, Professor of Biochemistry, Rice University
 
 
 


« Last Edit: February 06, 2020, 09:27:01 pm by DeerSlayer »
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Offline ChemEngrMBA

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Re: Multiverse Fantasy
« Reply #1 on: February 06, 2020, 09:30:05 pm »
Forty-two views and not a single comment. Hmmmm.
No questions?  Everyone understands the post completely and agrees?
I have expanded the discussion so nobody needs to go to the link now; it's posted in its entirety.

That word suggests a pun to me.  Where do you find an inner tube on a bicycle? Entirety.
The Book Commentary: "The book (Brilliant Creations - The Wonder of Nature and Life) is pure genius."
Review by John Orosz, M.D. "It is beyond outstanding. Please send me twenty signed copies for colleagues, family, and libraries."
"I was running every morning for twenty years with a genius." - Mike McCartney, D.D.S.
"You have the most agile mind of anyone I know." -
Avice Marie Griffin, PhD, Clinical Psychologist

Offline Gefn

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Re: Multiverse Fantasy
« Reply #2 on: February 06, 2020, 09:57:22 pm »
The idea of a multiverse is fascinating. I’m going to ponder this.

It’s a very complex subject. But thank you for posting this. I look forward to other people’s opinions too.
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Offline ChemEngrMBA

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Re: Multiverse Fantasy
« Reply #3 on: February 10, 2020, 05:04:37 pm »
What has your pondering produced, @Gefn ?  I gots ta know.
The Book Commentary: "The book (Brilliant Creations - The Wonder of Nature and Life) is pure genius."
Review by John Orosz, M.D. "It is beyond outstanding. Please send me twenty signed copies for colleagues, family, and libraries."
"I was running every morning for twenty years with a genius." - Mike McCartney, D.D.S.
"You have the most agile mind of anyone I know." -
Avice Marie Griffin, PhD, Clinical Psychologist

Offline sneakypete

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Re: Multiverse Fantasy
« Reply #4 on: February 10, 2020, 06:30:43 pm »
Forty-two views and not a single comment. Hmmmm.
No questions?  Everyone understands the post completely and agrees?
I have expanded the discussion so nobody needs to go to the link now; it's posted in its entirety.

That word suggests a pun to me.  Where do you find an inner tube on a bicycle? Entirety.

@DeerSlayer

It is a waste of time trying to argue reason with a closed mind.
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