From the Spirit of Truth blog:
"It would be very difficult to explain why the universe should have
begun in just this way, except as the act of a God who intended to
create beings like us." - Stephen Hawking, 'A Brief History of Time', p.127
“Scientists are slowly waking up to an inconvenient truth - the
universe looks suspiciously like a fix. The issue concerns the very laws
of nature themselves. For 40 years, physicists and cosmologists have
been quietly collecting examples of all too convenient "coincidences"
and special features in the underlying laws of the universe that seem to
be necessary in order for life, and hence conscious beings, to exist.
Change any one of them and the consequences would be lethal. Fred Hoyle,
the distinguished cosmologist, once said it was as if "a
super-intellect has monkeyed with physics".
To see the problem, imagine playing God with the cosmos. Before you
is a designer machine that lets you tinker with the basics of physics.
Twiddle this knob and you make all electrons a bit lighter, twiddle that
one and you make gravity a bit stronger, and so on. It happens that you
need to set thirtysomething knobs to fully describe the world about us.
The crucial point is that some of those metaphorical knobs must be
tuned very precisely, or the universe would be sterile.
Example: neutrons are just a tad heavier than protons. If it were the
other way around, atoms couldn't exist, because all the protons in the
universe would have decayed into neutrons shortly after the big bang. No
protons, then no atomic nucleuses and no atoms. No atoms, no chemistry,
no life. Like Baby Bear's porridge in the story of Goldilocks, the
universe seems to be just right for life.” ― Paul Davies
Read more here: http://thespiritoftruth.blogspot.com/2012/07/why-belief-in-god-is-reasonable.html
1 comment:
Most scientists worth their salt begin to realize the universe is too complex and too well designed to be anything but designed. However, like the church in the medieval period that couldn't accept the earth revolved around the sun; our day the church of science just can't admit gasp they might be a bit wrong.
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