Big Bang?
jbor at bigpond.com
jbor at bigpond.com
Tue Sep 27 07:37:49 CDT 2005
Playing devil's advocate here, obviously, but there's a leap of faith
required to accept the "cosmic microwave background" (?) and "the
abundance of elements" as evidence for the universe from nothing
hypothesis (or the Divine Creation hypothesis, for that matter), is my
point. It's "evidence" of the same order as the Miracle at Lourdes.
best
On 27/09/2005 Paul Taylor wrote:
> Umm, I think the Big Bang's consequences are seen explicitly in the
> universe around us: as I mentioned, the cosmic microwave background,
> the abundance of elements... quite well predicted by that event. That
> gives it some plausibility in reality in which we live.
>
> --PT
>
> On 9/27/05, jbor at bigpond.com <jbor at bigpond.com> wrote:
>> >> can't explain how the universe came to be any more than human
>> >> Religion can explain how its various "Gods" came to be. The logic
>> of
>> >> both requires an enormous leap of faith on the part of the true
>> >> believer.
>>
>> On 27/09/2005 ioannissevastianos wrote:
>>
>> > Of course scientists can't explain how the universe came to be: they
>> > don't have enough data to go on. All they can do is formulate the
>> most
>> > plausible hypothesis based on the available amount of data. That's
>> > what science does; it's an honest procedure and requires no faith.
>> As
>> > soon as new data come along which refute the hypothesis, then it is
>> > abandoned and something else is put together in its place.
>>
>> I don't see much if any difference between a priest-caste of
>> scientists
>> fantasising, with no proof or logical explanation, that the universe
>> magically appeared from nothing, and another group of equally
>> reasonable and intelligent men and women positing the existence of a
>> Divine Creator. They're equally implausible hypotheses, in my opinion,
>> with no reason to justify the imposition of either the one or the
>> other
>> worldview as gospel.
>>
>> best
>>
>> >
>> > Religion, on the other hand, doesn't give a rat's ass (I always
>> wanted
>> > to use that expression, thanks for the opportunity) what the data
>> say.
>> > The Bible says so, so it's so. And you need tons of faith to buy
>> that.
>>
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