Oddly enough, he both knows *and* doesn't know.
2007-08-28 06:23:11
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answer #1
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answered by ? 6
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Unfortunately the Uncertainty Principle was only a theory and new evidence has proven it a fallacy. There are even smaller particles that cause the "random" decay.
It's to bad, too. All those cats...
ADD: There is NO uncertainty if there is an "omniscient" being, just unknown to us.
If a deity has "focused omniscience" then uncertainty can only exist in places that it is not paying attention to. The direction of a deity's attention can therefore be measured using divination.
2007-08-28 13:23:57
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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You see, Schrodinger's cat IS God... Thanks to the wonders of quantum mechanics, every successive cat put in a box with a chance of death if radioactive decay happens retroactively replaces God as having been God for all of time. This is a natural consequence of both being dead and alive at the same time, and explains quite a bit about the universe around us.
2007-08-28 13:23:55
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answer #3
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answered by yelxeH 5
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The cat is both alive and dead until a human opens the box to check. In god's view all things are... we are the ones who make it one way or another.
2007-08-28 13:23:45
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Not if Bell's Nonlocality Theorem holds.
Edit: Why are people saying yes? Are people denying the validity of quantum mechanics now? I thought that ended in the 70's.
2007-08-28 13:19:42
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes. He also knows if you are twice dead right now, even if you're walking around.
Once Christ proclaimed of the live men, burying a dead man, 'Let the dead bury the dead'. See? He knew that those walking around were actually really dead.
Amazing stuff. You ought to check it out sometime. That is, if you're truly alive.
2007-08-28 13:24:07
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answer #6
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answered by Notfooled 4
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God knows all possibilities and probabilities because God lives outside of time.
2007-08-28 13:25:17
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answer #7
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answered by wisemancumth 5
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Since an indeterminacy which restricted to the atomic domain cannot be transformed into macroscopic indeterminacy and, as such, is, unresolvable, the question is as answerable as the experiment is practical.
[P.S. He prefers to be cited as Dr. Schrödinger, hon. Please bear that in mind for future references.]
2007-08-28 13:43:14
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answer #8
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answered by two11ll 6
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Sure he does!God loves and created animals including Mr.S's cat.He wants him to cherish the memories of this lovely cat, know his cat is in a place of peace and to be comforted
at this time.
2007-08-28 13:24:59
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answer #9
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answered by Mercede's Lamp 4
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Yes
2007-08-28 13:20:03
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answer #10
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answered by guru 5
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Yes, God knows everything.
2007-08-28 14:08:12
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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