Trouble is Jem you're a one trick pony with no trick left. Your top scientists' science has never said , suggested or inferred what you want it to or wish it did. There is no sign of your God in science. That's not what science is for anyway. Get used to it.
1. I think you meant implied not inferred. 2. How can you write such b.s. now when your typical criticism is that my quotes of top scientists were wrong. I do not have to imply anything I even gave you MIT papers on the subjects. 3. Any time you wish to show us a recent quote or statement for top scientists saying that our universe got here by random chance or that they have proof life evolved from non life... go for it. Untill then you shall be the guy who got science wrong. p.s. were you not a man made global warming is caused by CO2 bag of nuts also? you really have trouble identifying reliable research don't you.
You can reject out of hand whatever you want but it doesn't prove anything. Especially by arbitrarily claiming what top scientists believe. A statement I have shown with my quotes to be absolutely false. Plenty of top scientists think it completely plausible for a random untuned Big Bang.
name one, in the last 10 years. Who does not resort to the multiverse theory. I am not arbitrarily claiming squat... I gave you links, and I gave you a paper from mit. You are rejecting the science.
This is probably the third time I have to post this. Please don't make it a fourth. "Because there is a law such as gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing," he writes. "Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather than nothing, why the universe exists, why we exist. "It is not necessary to invoke God to light the blue touch paper and set the universe going." -Stephen Hawking http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2010/sep/02/stephen-hawking-big-bang-creator I gave you referenced quotes. So what?
No I meant inferred. If you do not have to imply anything, why link to MIT. Was it to imply something? The science which explains a universe from nothing. The natural science of how biological life originates from inorganic matter. The science which explains and proves evolution. All quite clearly are of no real interest to you. Quotes, statements, information, explanations, have been given. There is also an internet full of them you ignore to practice the one dysfunctional trick you have, which is to repeat over and over the same dumb request for a quote or statement whilst constantly posting a few mined quotes , misrepresented and misunderstood by yourself enough to imply whatever meaning you want them to . Obviously the only thing you're capable of is to be purposely dishonest about it all. I don't recall making a single comment about global warming, but I do know however you made a complete twat of yourself as a birther so don't talk to me about reliable research. Talking of nut bags though, you should really stop so desperately trying to attach irrational personal religious belief to the fact based knowledge of science. Try twinning your religion with superstition, then you certainly will have a supportable argument.
exactly, and this is the third time I am explaining to you he invokes the multiverse hypothesis to explain what he said is amazing fine tunings. he is the article which discusses the book again. * BOOK EXCERPT * SEPTEMBER 3, 2010 Why God Did Not Create the Universe There is a sound scientific explanation for the making of our worldââ¬âno gods required By STEPHEN HAWKING And LEONARD MLODINOW According to Viking mythology, eclipses occur when two wolves, Skoll and Hati, catch the sun or moon. At the onset of an eclipse people would make lots of noise, hoping to scare the wolves away. After some time, people must have noticed that the eclipses ended regardless of whether they ran around banging on pots. Ignorance of nature's ways led people in ancient times to postulate many myths in an effort to make sense of their world. But eventually, people turned to philosophy, that is, to the use of reasonââ¬âwith a good dose of intuitionââ¬âto decipher their universe. Today we use reason, mathematics and experimental testââ¬âin other words, modern science. Albert Einstein said, "The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is comprehensible." He meant that, unlike our homes on a bad day, the universe is not just a conglomeration of objects each going its own way. Everything in the universe follows laws, without exception. Newton believed that our strangely habitable solar system did not "arise out of chaos by the mere laws of nature." Instead, he maintained that the order in the universe was "created by God at first and conserved by him to this Day in the same state and condition." The discovery recently of the extreme fine-tuning of so many laws of nature could lead some back to the idea that this grand design is the work of some grand Designer. Yet the latest advances in cosmology explain why the laws of the universe seem tailor-made for humans, without the need for a benevolent creator. Many improbable occurrences conspired to create Earth's human-friendly design, and they would indeed be puzzling if ours were the only solar system in the universe. But today we know of hundreds of other solar systems, and few doubt that there exist countless more among the billions of stars in our galaxy. Planets of all sorts exist, and obviously, when the beings on a planet that supports life examine the world around them, they are bound to find that their environment satisfies the conditions they require to exist. It is possible to turn that last statement into a scientific principle: The fact of our being restricts the characteristics of the kind of environment in which we find ourselves. For example, if we did not know the distance from the Earth to the sun, the fact that beings like us exist would allow us to put bounds on how small or great the Earth-sun separation could be. We need liquid water to exist, and if the Earth were too close, it would all boil off; if it were too far, it would freeze. That principle is called the "weak" anthropic principle. The weak anthropic principle is not very controversial. But there is a stronger form that is regarded with disdain among some physicists. The strong anthropic principle suggests that the fact that we exist imposes constraints, not just on our environment, but on the possible form and content of the laws of nature themselves. The idea arose because it is not only the peculiar characteristics of our solar system that seem oddly conducive to the development of human life, but also the characteristics of our entire universeââ¬âand its laws. They appear to have a design that is both tailor-made to support us and, if we are to exist, leaves little room for alteration. That is much more difficult to explain. [W3Feature1] Stephen Youll The tale of how the primordial universe of hydrogen, helium and a bit of lithium evolved to a universe harboring at least one world with intelligent life like us is a tale of many chapters. The forces of nature had to be such that heavier elementsââ¬âespecially carbonââ¬âcould be produced from the primordial elements, and remain stable for at least billions of years. Those heavy elements were formed in the furnaces we call stars, so the forces first had to allow stars and galaxies to form. Those in turn grew from the seeds of tiny inhomogeneities in the early universe. Even all that is not enough: The dynamics of the stars had to be such that some would eventually explode, precisely in a way that could disperse the heavier elements through space. In addition, the laws of nature had to dictate that those remnants could recondense into a new generation of stars, these surrounded by planets incorporating the newly formed heavy elements. By examining the model universes we generate when the theories of physics are altered in certain ways, one can study the effect of changes to physical law in a methodical manner. Such calculations show that a change of as little as 0.5% in the strength of the strong nuclear force, or 4% in the electric force, would destroy either nearly all carbon or all oxygen in every star, and hence the possibility of life as we know it. Also, most of the fundamental constants appearing in our theories appear fine-tuned in the sense that if they were altered by only modest amounts, the universe would be qualitatively different, and in many cases unsuitable for the development of life. For example, if protons were 0.2% heavier, they would decay into neutrons, destabilizing atoms. If one assumes that a few hundred million years in stable orbit is necessary for planetary life to evolve, the number of space dimensions is also fixed by our existence. That is because, according to the laws of gravity, it is only in three dimensions that stable elliptical orbits are possible. In any but three dimensions even a small disturbance, such as that produced by the pull of the other planets, would send a planet off its circular orbit, and cause it to spiral either into or away from the sun. The emergence of the complex structures capable of supporting intelligent observers seems to be very fragile. The laws of nature form a system that is extremely fine-tuned. What can we make of these coincidences? Luck in the precise form and nature of fundamental physical law is a different kind of luck from the luck we find in environmental factors. It raises the natural question of why it is that way. Many people would like us to use these coincidences as evidence of the work of God. The idea that the universe was designed to accommodate mankind appears in theologies and mythologies dating from thousands of years ago. In Western culture the Old Testament contains the idea of providential design, but the traditional Christian viewpoint was also greatly influenced by Aristotle, who believed "in an intelligent natural world that functions according to some deliberate design." That is not the answer of modern science. As recent advances in cosmology suggest, the laws of gravity and quantum theory allow universes to appear spontaneously from nothing. Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather than nothing, why the universe exists, why we exist. It is not necessary to invoke God to light the blue touch paper and set the universe going. Our universe seems to be one of many, each with different laws. That multiverse idea is not a notion invented to account for the miracle of fine tuning. It is a consequence predicted by many theories in modern cosmology. If it is true it reduces the strong anthropic principle to the weak one, putting the fine tunings of physical law on the same footing as the environmental factors, for it means that our cosmic habitatââ¬ânow the entire observable universeââ¬âis just one of many. Each universe has many possible histories and many possible states. Only a very few would allow creatures like us to exist. Although we are puny and insignificant on the scale of the cosmos, this makes us in a sense the lords of creation. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100...orld_MIDDLENews