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

1 answers

Here are some thoughts you might consider relevant.

The first reference approaches scientific theories from the perspective of the beauty of the equations. I doubt that it mentions God.

The second, written by the head of the Human Genome Project, delves deeply into the structure and meaning of DNA as a language. To put it crudely, "and God said, 'ATCGGACTTGATTAGCCT.......CGGAT' and there was cat." To put it my own way, hopefully more eloquently, is that, as part of creation, God created the mechanism of DNA, and then seeded the DNA space by 'speaking' (creating) a few specific genetic sequences to form the original unique organisms, and then let the genetic mechanism produce variants within clusters.

Another new set of fields of science attempts to explain the physical universe, with its particles and forces, using the mathematics of superstring and M-brane theories. In general, they also don't address God. But they are the closest we have toward a purely mathematical explanation of the universe. Even if it succeeds, it will be inadequate to explain God, who created the physical universe but isn't really part of it, and most likely isn't even physical.

I hope that's enough to get you started.

2007-09-29 16:58:13 · answer #1 · answered by Frank N 7 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers