English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

10 answers

Who's to say that God didn't intend for there to be a theory that could explain everything. Science will never disprove God's existence, it all comes down to faith. You either believe in something you can't measure, or you don't.

2007-05-23 10:54:32 · answer #1 · answered by mark r 4 · 0 0

On one hand:
The theory of everything (if we get there) may well depict God.
Actually, if you study modern, mainstream theology, you find that everything already is theorized to be God for many of the belief structures. Judeo-Christian, Islam, and many other faiths see all things coming from God.
Consider that Biblical scholars did not know modern science, yet they correctly got the sequence exactly right in Genesis.

On the other hand:
On My website, I present a fully coordinated model which starts at the Big Bang (past), through modern astrophysics, the basis of atomic physics and chemistry, gravity and even the source of mitochondria & the advent of cells on Earth. It depicts a philsophical approach to fundamental physics which is not mainstream, and I believe it will be what your children will first be taught before they learn chemistry or physics. The model continues until after the next Big Bang.
The site is my religious ministry on the Internet.

On the Gripping Hand:
Science does not make God any less dynamic for those of us who believe, but rather rewards us with the magnificence of profundity. We are constantly bringing ourselves closer to God by learning how these things are accomplished in the universe.

2007-05-23 19:16:30 · answer #2 · answered by science_joe_2000 4 · 0 0

That question is yet one to find a answer to because it is just that a "theory" now if asked to disprove God. Who are we to decide which theories are right we have knowledge of an answer is just that "acknowledgment" that an answer may exist but it cannot be written without true absolution because another known theory may also exist.

2007-05-23 18:36:57 · answer #3 · answered by k 2 · 0 0

Who knows, it may actually prove God *does* exist -- from a purely scientific standpoint.

One can always state that no matter how many dimensions of existance the universe contains (4, 6, 10, 15, 21 are some of the number of dimensions from attempts at "theories of everything"), that God exists in a number of dimensions beyond those in the "theory", so you still couldn't prove or disprove his existance. It still comes down to faith.

.

2007-05-23 17:58:58 · answer #4 · answered by tlbs101 7 · 0 0

No, because the theory would explain how things happen but not why, as so many theories do.

For example, why do we grow old and die? We know how this happens biologically, but there is no reason as to why, our cells could live forever and so we would, no one knows why they dont.

2007-05-23 18:00:44 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, since a theory is just a theory, it can't prove anything.

2007-05-23 19:40:32 · answer #6 · answered by John B 4 · 0 0

Would not this theory rather include explicit
expression for Hamiltonian of God?

2007-05-23 17:55:42 · answer #7 · answered by Alexander 6 · 0 0

we will worry about that after the theory is discover

2007-05-23 17:55:33 · answer #8 · answered by MAHAL 2 · 0 0

How would I know?

2007-05-23 18:01:08 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, it would find him.

2007-05-24 00:07:01 · answer #10 · answered by mw_il 1 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers