Big Bang: Is there room for God?

EnglishLady

Veteran Expediter
I thought this was very interesting ...... theologians, philosophers and physicists all around one table



In the exhibit - a short film that projects images of the birth of the Universe onto a huge screen - the narrator poses the question: "Will we find the Higgs boson"?

Now that the Higgs has finally been spotted - a scientific discovery that takes us closer than ever to the first moments after the Big Bang - Cern has opened its doors to scholars that take a very different approach to the question of how the Universe came to exist.

On 15 October, a group of theologians, philosophers and physicists came together for two days in Geneva to talk about the Big Bang.

So what happened when people of such different - very different - views of the Universe came together to discuss how it all began?

"I realised there was a need to discuss this," says Rolf Heuer, Cern's director general.

"There's a need for us, as naive scientists, to discuss with philosophers and theologians the time before or around the Big Bang."

Cern's co-organiser of this unusual meeting of minds was Wilton Park - a global forum set up by Winston Churchill.

It is an organisation usually associated with high-level discussions about global policy and even confidential exchanges on matters of international security, which perhaps emphasises how seriously Cern is taking this exchange.

But even the idea of a "time before the Big Bang" is impossible territory for physicists.

It is a zone of pure speculation - before time and space as scientists understand it came to exist, and where the laws of physics completely break down.

So does that make it a realm where science and religion can come to an understanding?

One of the meeting's most outspoken participants, Lawrence Krauss, a theoretical physicist and director of the Origins Project at Arizona State University, says definitely not.

"One gets the impression from a meeting like this that scientists care about God; they don't," he says.

"You can't disprove the theory of God.

"The power of science is uncertainty. Everything is uncertain, but science can define that uncertainty.

"That's why science makes progress and religion doesn't."

But the suggestion that science and religion are fundamentally incompatible was a point of contention during the meeting.

John Lennox, professor of mathematics at the University of Oxford, is also a self-declared Christian. He thinks the very fact that human beings can do science is evidence for God.

"If the atheists are right the mind that does science... is the end product of a mindless unguided process.

"Now, if you knew your computer was the product of a mindless unguided process, you wouldn't trust it.

"So, to me atheism undermines the rationality I need to do science."

But this seemingly intractable God versus science debate was only a part of the meeting.

Prof Heuer said he wanted the participants to "develop a common understanding" of one another's viewpoints.

But even exchanging ideas was, at times, tricky; scientists and philosophers often speak a very different language

Andrew Pinsent is research director at the University of Oxford's Ian Ramsey Centre for Science and Religion. He is also a trained physicist who once worked at Cern.

"We have to educate one another in the terms that we use," he says.

For example, he explains, "philosophers have been discussing the meaning of [the word] truth for centuries".

But for many physicists, it is uncomfortable territory to use that word when talking about what we know about the Universe and the Big Bang.

Prof Krauss says that the word is at the heart of "one of the fundamental differences between science and religion".

"People who are religious believe they know the truth," he says.

"And they know the answer before even asking the question. Whereas, with scientists, it's the exact opposite.

"In science, although we use the word truth, what really matters is if it works.

"That's why it's a sensitive issue, because if you know the truth, there's no need to deal with this little question of whether something works or not."

Despite the barrier of opposing world views and incompatible lexicons, Dr Pinsent believes that engaging with philosophy could help science to better address the very big questions.

"There has been no new conceptual breakthrough in physics in a quarter of a century," he says.

He says this is partly because science in isolation "is very good for producing stuff" but not so good for producing ideas.

He invokes Einstein as an example of a truly philosophical scientist.

"[He] began by asking the sorts of questions a child would ask," says Dr Pinsent, "like, 'what would it be like to ride on a beam of light?'"

And Rolf Heuer is open to the idea of bringing philosophy into Cern itself.

"I wouldn't go so far as to let them run experiments here," he jokes, "but I wouldn't see any problem to have a philosopher in residence."
Too specialised?

The main conclusion of the event has been simple: keep talking.

"We face a problem in our culture of hyperspecialisation," says Dr Pinsent.

"This ignorance of other fields can cause problems, like a lack of social cohesion."

And although Prof Krauss said the meeting felt at times like "people who can't communicate trying to communicate," even he sees some value in this somewhat esoteric exchange.

"Many people of faith view science as a threat," he said.

"I don't think science is a threat, so it is useful for scientists to show that they don't necessarily view it that way."

As one contributor put it during the meeting: "Religion doesn't add to scientific facts, but it does shape our view of the world."

And since Cern is searching for clues about how that world came to exist in the first place, it wants to see how its discoveries might fit into any world view.

BBC News - Big Bang: Is there room for God?
 

pandora2112

Seasoned Expediter
Very interesting article! It reminds of a pagan saying we use jokingly, "I worship nature don't laugh I can prove it exists!" :p


)O( ~ Namaste ~ )O(
 

Monty

Expert Expediter
Paul Harvey, now departed, once said, "It's easy to reconcile, simply add 5 words to the Bible, 'In the begining, [there was a big bang] and God created heaven and earth"
 

skyraider

Veteran Expediter
US Navy
[video]http://www.getyourowndirt.com/[/video] This is an old one, but a good one.




PS As boys, we tried the big bang theory. Light off 4 cherry bombs in a trash can and run away and.............all we got was a ringing of our ears and no new universe was created, but we did need a new trash can.lol
 
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cheri1122

Veteran Expediter
Driver
If there was a Big Bang, I wanna know Who lit the fuse? Someone did...

The inability to accept that some things may never be known is what keeps religion in business - human beings just naturally want to know everything.
The 'big bang' isn't like a dynamite or firecracker fuse, it was a thermodynamic reaction [caused by rapid cooling] so no fuse, and no need for someone to light it.
 

xmudman

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
The inability to accept that some things may never be known is what keeps religion in business - human beings just naturally want to know everything.


Faith is the ability to believe in something that you cannot see or understand. You can't see air (if it's clean) but every breath you take testifies to its existence. By the same token, I believe in the existence of Paris, even though I've never seen it :)
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
You don't understand air? :D

Faith is the ability to have a strong or unshakeable belief in something, especially without proof or evidence, particularly in religious doctrines not based on reason. Faith is often bolstered by the use of illusory corollary for things one cannot see of understand, though, where two things that have nothing to do with each other are spuriously connected to reach a desired conclusion.

With air, as with Paris, there is more than enough empirical evidence (observation and experiment) that is irrefutable to justify the conclusion of existence for each.
 

gospelriders

Seasoned Expediter
The inability to accept that some things may never be known is what keeps religion in business - human beings just naturally want to know everything.
The 'big bang' isn't like a dynamite or firecracker fuse, it was a thermodynamic reaction [caused by rapid cooling] so no fuse, and no need for someone to light it.


rapid cooling of what? i would recommend a further study of the laws of thermodynamics. science(observational,practical) is wonderful,but origins(historical)science has one thing in common with creation based science, neither one was there at the beginning and so what separates the two is the worldview as to which we approach the evidences set before us.
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
The other thing that separates the two, of course, is how each one defines "evidence".
 

pandora2112

Seasoned Expediter
I thought I read somewhere that the big bang does violate the laws of thermodynamics. But the 1st law of thermodynamics wouldn't necessarily apply at the beginning and the 2nd law has something to do with chaos and stability...now I'll have to go the church of Google and look!

)O( ~ Namaste ~ )O(
 

Ragman

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
...now I'll have to go the church of Google and look!

)O( ~ Namaste ~ )O(


Is-Google-God.jpg
 

gospelriders

Seasoned Expediter
Another: how willing each one is to say "It turns out we were wrong about that."


i did after spending more than half my life riding on my intellectual atheistic high horse.very humbling experience for some one who was so sure about his position that i didn't even bother to look at another alternative for what i believed.i am old enough now to have seen the advances in science continue to either disprove or alter the theories that i held so high in esteem.there are many scientists out there that started out as atheists or agnostics ,but as they got farther into their fields of study and as technology advanced they came to the same conclusion that i did. this isn't a giant cosmic accident. don't do as i did arguing your point from one side without honestly researching any opposing evidence.
 
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