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For example, the Physical World follows the Laws of Cause and Effect, meaning that everything that happens now was caused by something right before that which was caused by something before that and so on, up until you reach the beginning of the universe, where God started it. Now, Atheists would now say that God can't exist because he has no cause. Yet, in the quantum world, it is shown that not everything in the quantum world has a cause, yet it does have an effect. Meaning that it is possible for God to have an effect, but no cause.

Only answer if you understand what I mean, please.

2007-06-20 07:57:15 · 13 answers · asked by J 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

I think science has a lot more potential that sticking with a no-god theory.

2007-06-20 08:09:57 · update #1

Jan,

I'm not trying to prove God for myself, I'm trying to save an atheist.

2007-06-20 08:11:32 · update #2

13 answers

Everything can be proved by quantum physics for at least 20 minutes at a time. But seriously, if it does prove the existence of a God, which God? Are you one of those pushy, proselytizing Zoroastrians? I will *never* accept Ahura Mazda as my personal savior! You can't make me, you can't make me!

2007-06-20 08:04:22 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Why do you bother yourself with that?

There were people who swore that Earth was flat even when they saw that the Sun and the Moon and the stars are perfectly round. In that time religion was the powerful force, made so by satan to bring grieve and division.

Today it is science the powerful force, which is in denial of the apparently unknown. Because farther than the quantum or strings can only be found the same God's spirit that was hovering the Earth when it was formed.

2007-06-20 08:16:45 · answer #2 · answered by Davinci22 3 · 0 0

I think that in essence, yes....
but I don't think what will become apparent is going to be anything anyone is expecting. Certainly not a big father figure sitting in the sky in judgment.
I think that there is a collective of all that ever was, or could be, and that there are much higher expressions of "us" existing now.
I believe that as we come into our own, through this level of understanding (quantum mechanics), that windows of perception will continue to open that no one here has yet to imagine. Can any one us really comprehend "no time"?
This wellspring of life has always been and always will be, no beginning, no end - That is a vast elusive and abstract concept, one that we can barely touch the tip of.

And I also believe that as this takes place, things will become much more simple, more clear, more self evident. This to me seems to be the true nature of being self aware, self responsible - which one must be actively within, in order to participate in QM with any apparent conscious result. You must know who it is that is really doing the directing, as it were.

2007-06-20 08:14:27 · answer #3 · answered by cosmicshaktifire? 5 · 1 0

Atheists do not say that "God can't exist because he has no cause." Most of us say that we don't believe in God because we have seen no evidence of such a being.

Albert Einstein,and Bertrand Russell were unable to find God through math or physics. Stephen Hawkings has tried. Perhaps he will be the one to finally prove something one way of the other. Until then, I remain a steadfast atheist.

Only pick my answer as best if you understand what I mean.

2007-06-20 08:02:55 · answer #4 · answered by Kathryn™ 6 · 1 1

Perhapses but I am more convinced that Quantum Mechanics will prove to the masses once and for all that The Flying Spaghetti Monster does exist.

2007-06-20 08:03:32 · answer #5 · answered by John C 6 · 0 0

Maybe maybe not. I'm not going to wonder about it till more information comes along. They say the big bang and our universe may have come from other dimensional universes, but where did those come from? Why does there even have to be a beginning and an end. Maybe everything is shaped like a donut?

2007-06-20 08:02:05 · answer #6 · answered by punch 7 · 2 0

Ultimately the supernatural is outwith the scope of science so no it isn't going to prove any God exists.It might provide evidence that suggests he exists but never conclusive proof.

2007-06-20 08:01:21 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Well should this turn out to be the case, you will need to remove St Thomas proofs of God from the Christian play book.

2007-06-20 08:09:19 · answer #8 · answered by Herodotus 7 · 0 0

What you are missing is that the true Church of Christ - that is to say, the true, real followers and soldiers of Christ, DO NOT care to, nor do we feel a need to, prove Gods existance.
Believe it when you see it.

2007-06-20 08:03:03 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I understand what you mean, but how does that explain how god knows your thoughts and intentions, and judges you according to socially constructed notions of right and wrong? Your argument falls on its **** unfortunately

2007-06-20 08:03:08 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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