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There are many theories in the field of physics that are unexplained. One such theory is the multiverse theory, which may be proven sometime next year. If there are truly 11 dimensions and we may live in one of countless universes, then could there be an unexplained supernatural dimension? For example, if there were a supernatural dimension, could this explain God? I am not referring to any specific god, but just a generalization.

2007-12-14 05:17:59 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

10 answers

Totally love this question!!! I'm probably wrong....but....

The supernatural...I have no other alternative but to say it exists...and, since it exists, it will have to have form...if it does, then it exists here and now...an overlapping universe/dimension...or, one which is 'bleeding' into ours...like the 'gravity' theory.

Elysabeth Faslund

2007-12-14 05:51:20 · answer #1 · answered by Elysabeth 7 · 1 1

Physics usually does a pretty good job at explaining the supernatural.... AWAY.

So far, no sign of the supernatural has been found. People have made up a lot of stuff, for sure. But that is not enough. If you put something in your mouth, you better be also able to put it on the table. And that is exactly where all the supernatural stuff falls apart. There is a tiny little table in front of it to fill and in centuries of paranormal "research" and occultism it has not put one thing on it. Not one.

Which puts it squarely into the realm of another discipline: law enforcement. The DA will be much more interested in your average supernaturalist than the physics department. But then... isn't it all just entertainment?

:-)

PS: There are neither eleven dimension not are there any parallel universe. You just don't understand physics.

And since you stir God into the dimensionality soup, you clearly also don't understand theology. Go ask your Rabbi, Priest or Shaman.

2007-12-14 05:49:52 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

Free will is different then free agency. Free will is about the decisions people make. Free agency is whether everything is planned, every act of nature was predestined, so to speak, or whether there is some randomness or circumstance in the events of nature. God is not bound by the laws of physics or the laws of nature, God transcends those laws because he is supernatural. The question is if God allows free agency and does not interfere (i.e Deism) or if God acts through Providence and may sometimes bend or break those laws (i.e. walking on water). We have free will, but we are not supernatural so we are bound by the laws of nature.

2016-04-09 03:01:32 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Why would such a dimension have to be supernatural... nevermind I'm getting into semantics.

If there are really 11 dimensions and humans only perceive 4 or at most 5 of them, then anything that exists primarily in these other dimensions would seem supernatural to us.

2007-12-14 05:34:56 · answer #4 · answered by Christopher F 4 · 2 2

It depends on what you're asking.

If you're asking if supernatural phenomena obey the currently established laws of physics, the answer is definitively no: the typically held definition of 'supernatural' is a phenomenon that cannot be explained by conventional means. The instant something is explained by physics, it ceases to be 'supernatural' by definition.

If you're asking if some phenomenon currently believed to be 'supernatural' may someday be addressed by physics, the answer is quite probably yes. Recall that before the motion and nature of the planets, moons, sun and other stars were understood, they were thought to be gods or other supernatural entities, that natural disasters were thought to be supernatural at various periods in history, and that even things like lightning have only been relatively recently explained and understood by science.

Physics (and other sciences) have been quite historically successful at allowing us to understand extraordinary phenomena and banish our old myths and stories regarding them in favor of useful understanding.

2007-12-14 07:41:38 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

In order to explain the "spuernatural" you first have to observe the "supernatural" in order to have anything to explain. Anecdotes from untrained observers do not count.

2007-12-14 05:41:21 · answer #6 · answered by ZikZak 6 · 3 0

The supernatural is just physics we haven't figured out yet.

2007-12-14 05:25:40 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

any technology sufficiently advanced is indistinguishable from magic, don't remember where i've heard that, but yea!

2007-12-14 05:29:26 · answer #8 · answered by ash 2 · 1 1

By definition, no!

2007-12-14 06:11:30 · answer #9 · answered by iheart808 3 · 1 0

i dont know can they??

2007-12-14 06:15:00 · answer #10 · answered by this account is no longer in use 3 · 0 2

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