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| Tags: anthropic, god, principle, relativistic |
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#31
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"George Hammond" wrote in message ... On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 01:09:01 +0100, "Andy F." wrote: [Andy F.] There's a human opinion based on sensory perception that the universe has been around for billions of years. [Hammond] There is overwhelming evidence based on scientific deduction that *IF* a person existed a billion years ago, then he would have indeed observed the Universe to exist. I throughly agree with that and anybody who doesn't is certifiably either crazy or incompetent. [Andy F.] This means the universe existed before humans did. [Hammond] WRONG, DEAD WRONG ANDY. 1) The "existence", of anything, depends entirely on the sensory perception of Man. There IS NO definition of the word "existence" that is independent of the action of a HUMAN observer. Proof: If all men died tomorrow at 9am, there would no longer be any way to ascertain at 9:01am if ANYTHING whatsoever "existed". The word "existence" has no meaning whatsoever without the existence of human beings. 2) But what your statement above says, is that circumstantial evidence indicates (indeed conclusively) that *IF* a human observer existed a billion years ago, then he "would have" observed that the Universe "existed". And I thoroughly agree with that statement. An event has to happen BEFORE it can be observed.The light from an object has to travel to your eyes before you can see it. If the object is close by, this takes a few billionths of a second.When you look at the sun, you're seeing what was there 8 minutes ago.And if you look through a powerful telescope, you can observe events which hapened millions of years ago. 3) However, in point of fact, no such human observer did exist a billion years ago, therefore, by paragraph 1 above, the Universe actually did *NOT* "exist" a billion years ago.... even though it "would have" if anybody was around to see it. [Andy F.] So it's not possible for humans to have created the universe. [Hammond] Wrong again. The above proof demonstrates conclusively that Man "caused" the Universe to come into "existence" since ONLY A HUMAN can confirm that anything "exists". In short, "existence" is a PROPERTY of the human mind. No people, no existence, of anything! But a human can't confirm that something exists until after it exists.Which would make it logically impossible for anything to come into existence. |
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#32
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On Apr 23, 1:46*pm, "Andy F." wrote:
An event has to happen BEFORE it can be observed.The light from an object has to travel to your eyes before you can see it. If the object is close by, this takes a few billionths of a second.When you look at the sun, you're seeing what was there 8 minutes ago.And if you look through a powerful telescope, you can observe events which hapened millions of years ago. Ouch! waiting in anticipation for GH to respond to that. The universe around us is created by human perception. I agree with this in the sense that humans "conjure" the universe out of a chaotic background of overlapping interference patterns and through the act of observation, give form and solidity to this reality, but why do we create a history that according to GH does not exist. This is a bit like the preacher who, when confronted by evidence of dinosaur bones, claims that god put them there, already pre-aged at several hundred millions of years old. Start thinking GH |
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#33
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On Apr 20, 6:14*pm, Uncle Al wrote:
George Hammond wrote: * * * * * * * * * GOD = RAP [snip rest of crap] Hindus have 36 crores of gods - 360 million deities. *How is India doing, Georgie boy? Holy cow! Idiot. -- Uncle Alhttp://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/ *(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/lajos.htm#a2 |
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#34
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On Apr 20, 5:28*pm, George Hammond wrote:
* * * * * * * * * GOD = RAP * * * (Relativistic Anthropic Principle) * *The Anthropic Principle is well known to Science today. Carter, Barrow, Tipler, Wheeler and even Hawking and Penrose and Weinberg have written extensively on the subject. * *What Science DOESN'T KNOW is that the Anthropic Principle was actually discovered thousands of years ago by Religion. The irony of this has not been lost on Religious experts. * *Fact is, the "Anthropic Principle" simply says: "observables exist because observers exist". *After all, it doesn't take rocket science to figure out that if there was no such thing as an observer, then there would be no such thing as observables; since the testimony of observers is the ONLY WAY we know that the observables exist. * *As far as Physics is concerned of course, "Man" is THE observer. *This proves that it is MAN who causes the Universe to exist. *After all, if all people died at 9am tomorrow, there would no longer be any observables, no universe, no time, no space; no nothing. *NOTHING WOULD "EXIST". Nope, you are contardicting yourself. If GOD exists then GOD will be the observer and everything will exists even if all men died. Since the totality of human intelligence cannot surprass GOD's intelligence according to religion, then GOD, since HE is also an observer, created reality and not man. * *Religion recognized this principle thousands of years ago, St. Augustine in particular. *In fact Bishop George Berkeley formally published the thesis 300 years ago, and as recently as 1900 Mary Baker Eddy founded the highly successful Christian Science Church on the principle. * It is therefore a fascinating irony that Science has finally stumbled on the PRACTICAL DISCOVERY of the Anthropic Principle... they finally recognized such elementary facts as WHY the Universe is 13 billion years old... i.e. that it took that long for Man to emerge, and without Man there is no "Universe"... therefore, the Anthropic Principle not only explains the "age of the Universe"... but that realization actually proves that the AP explains the existence of the Universe in the first place! * *OK... but the scientists have YET to realize this; that the existence itself, of anything, depends on the Anthropic Principle... and therefore, that the Anthropic Principle de facto explains the so called "Biblical Creation"... existence itself only came into being 200,000 years ago when Man appeared; Homo Sapiens sapiens. *Note that the Bible figures this was 6,000 years ago, but Anthropology was in a primitive state when the Bible was written, so they're about 194,000 short of the correct date of Creation... but still a good guess for nonscientific people in primitive times. The term "anthropic" was a bad choice as Carter huimself admitted. The principle applies to intelligent aobservers in general and not restricted to human beings. * OK.... here's the REAL ENTERTAINMENT aspect of all this. Religious people are far smarter and more widely educated than Scientists (believe it or not), and consequently they view the Scientific "discovery" of the Anthropic Principle with MUCH AMUSEMENT, since they have known about it for thousands of years. * The Religious people of course realize that "Man created reality" and they further realize that Scientists think that "Reality created Man". * [snip] Listen yo: if man created his own reality he did a bad job. Even a monkey would have created a betetr reality for its race. This universe is hostile to poeple, thanks we have Van Allen to protect us and ozone layer at least for now. Even yo would have creaated a better universe. Actually, some belive that this universe was created by a young God as an experiment and at that time he only had experience with the Poisson equation and Gaussian distributions. Mike |
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On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 12:46:25 +0100, "Andy F."
wrote: "George Hammond" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 01:09:01 +0100, "Andy F." wrote: [Andy F.] There's a human opinion based on sensory perception that the universe has been around for billions of years. [Hammond] There is overwhelming evidence based on scientific deduction that *IF* a person existed a billion years ago, then he would have indeed observed the Universe to exist. I throughly agree with that and anybody who doesn't is certifiably either crazy or incompetent. [Andy F.] This means the universe existed before humans did. [Hammond] WRONG, DEAD WRONG ANDY. 1) The "existence", of anything, depends entirely on the sensory perception of Man. There IS NO definition of the word "existence" that is independent of the action of a HUMAN observer. Proof: If all men died tomorrow at 9am, there would no longer be any way to ascertain at 9:01am if ANYTHING whatsoever "existed". The word "existence" has no meaning whatsoever without the existence of human beings. 2) But what your statement above says, is that circumstantial evidence indicates (indeed conclusively) that *IF* a human observer existed a billion years ago, then he "would have" observed that the Universe "existed". And I thoroughly agree with that statement. An event has to happen BEFORE it can be observed.The light from an object has to travel to your eyes before you can see it. If the object is close by, this takes a few billionths of a second.When you look at the sun, you're seeing what was there 8 minutes ago.And if you look through a powerful telescope, you can observe events which hapened millions of years ago. [Hammond] Idiocy, the Universe didn't "exist" until the human race arrived to "make" it exist by seeing it. Makes no difference that the light took 13 billion years to get here, it didn't "exist" until the human race arrived to see it. 3) However, in point of fact, no such human observer did exist a billion years ago, therefore, by paragraph 1 above, the Universe actually did *NOT* "exist" a billion years ago.... even though it "would have" if anybody was around to see it. [Andy F.] So it's not possible for humans to have created the universe. [Hammond] Wrong again. The above proof demonstrates conclusively that Man "caused" the Universe to come into "existence" since ONLY A HUMAN can confirm that anything "exists". In short, "existence" is a PROPERTY of the human mind. No people, no existence, of anything! But a human can't confirm that something exists until after it exists.Which would make it logically impossible for anything to come into existence. [Hammond] Idiot..... nothing existed until Humans arrived to "make" it exist by seeing it. You're an imbecile who will never rise above moronic world games... I suggest you try crossword puzzles. Moron. ===================================== SCIENTIFIC PROOF OF GOD WEBSITE http://geocities.com/scientific_proof_of_god mirror site: http://proof-of-god.freewebsitehosting.com GOD=G_uv (a folk song on mp3) http://interrobang.jwgh.org/songs/hammond.mp3 ===================================== |
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#36
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On Apr 22, 5:17*am, George Hammond wrote:
On Tue, 22 Apr 2008 00:25:37 -0700 (PDT), Immortalist wrote: On Apr 20, 9:53*pm, George Hammond wrote: On Sun, 20 Apr 2008 16:03:06 -0700 (PDT), Immortalist wrote: [Hammond] * *Fact is, the "Anthropic Principle" simply says: "observables exist because observers exist". *After all, it doesn't take rocket science to figure out that if there was no such thing as an observer, then there would be no such thing as observables; since the testimony of observers is the ONLY WAY we know that the observables exist. [Immortalist] If a system observable is a property of the system state that can be determined by some sequence of physical operations and if there was no such thing as an observer, then it is not determined that there would or would not be such things as observables even if the testimony of observers is the ONLY WAY we know that the observables exist since whether there is or is not someone existing doesn't determine determinability and the possibility of abstract thought processes whether they exist or not. [Hammond] * *Immortalist, thanks for your refreshing post. *Out of 11 posts to this target article so far, you are the ONLY ONE who has attempted to say something on topic. *However, you have COIMPLETELY missed the point! * *You have FAILED to distinguish between two fundamentally DIFFERENT cases: CASE 1: * * *If I turn my back and look the other way, * *does the Moon still exist? * * * * * (correct answer, YES) CASE 2: * *If the human race never existed or became * *totally EXTINCT, would the Moon "exist". * * * *(correct answer, NO) [Immortalist] Case two depends upon how you are defining "exist" [Hammond] * *NO KIDDING, Sherlock! *Can't you get it through your head that "exist" is, and ONLY is, absolutely defined as: *"A human opinion based on sensory perception". *There is no OTHER definition of the word "exists". *Ergo, if there are no humans, then there is no "existence" of anything. ...the world we see in conscious experience is not the real world itself, but merely a miniature virtual-reality replica of that world in an internal representation. Representationalism is also known (in psychology) as Indirect Perception, and (in philosophy) as Indirect Realism, or Epistemological Dualism. Why Representationalism? As incredible as it might seem intuitively, representationalism is the only alternative that is consistent with the facts of perception. The Epistemological Fact (strongest theory): It is impossible to have experience beyond the sensory surface. Dreams, Hallucinations, and Visual Illusions clearly indicate that the world of experience is not the same thing as the world itself. The observed Properties of Phenomenal Perspective clearly indicate that the world of experience is not the same as the external world that it represents. http://cns-alumni.bu.edu/~slehar/Rep...tionalism.html Representationalism (or indirect realism) with respect to perception is the view that "we are never aware of physical objects, [but rather] we are only indirectly aware of them, in virtue of a direct awareness of an intermediary [mental] object. (Dancy, 145) Because there are both direct and indirect objects of awareness in representationalism, a correspondence relation arises between the mental entities directly perceived and external objects which those mental entities represent. And thus perceptual error occurs when the two objects of awareness do not correspond sufficiently well. In opposition to representationalism, both (direct) realism and idealism agree that perception is direct and unmediated, despite their disagreements about what the object of perception is. (Dancy, 145) In any form of direct perception, no correspondence relationship is possible, since there is only one object of perception. Thus only representationalism will give rise to the view that perceptual errors exist and must be part of a theory of perception. Nevertheless, both idealism and realism must still account for the facts that are referred to as "perceptual errors" by the representationalist. http://www.dianahsieh.com/undergrad/rape.html ...representation is central to psychology as well, for the mind too is a system that represents the world and possible worlds in various ways. Our hopes, fears, beliefs, memories, perceptions, intentions, and desires all involve our ideas about (our mental models of) the world and other worlds. This is what humanist philosophers and psychologists have always said, of course, but until recently they had no support from science... http://www.kurzweilai.net/meme/frame.../art0162.html? [Immortalist] Does the existence of humans who can determine, determine or create the possibility of determinability in the first place? [Hammond] YES, a thousand times, YES! I suppose if the created the world outside the boundries of the world represented in their head, maybe in five minutes, but I doubt it; "…how can we know that the universe wasn't created a few minutes ago? " --Bertrand Russell ...suppose the universe were suddenly created five minutes ago, complete with memories, historical and geological records, and so forth. That is, at the moment of creation, the universe would have all the evidence that it was billions of years old already "packed in." How could it ever be known that the creation of the universe did not occur five minutes ago? The hypothesis initially seems implausible, yet how can we know that the universe wasn't created a few minutes ago? Certainly the Five- Minute World hypothesis is inconsistent with many of our other beliefs. If it were true, we would have to give up these other beliefs if we were to hold it, but how could we prove beyond any shadow of doubt what is the case? From a purely empirical point of view, no evidence is available which could prove that God isn't constantly creating the universe moment by moment. In fact, as we will see in Part III of this text, some persons who believe in predestination eschew the notion of causality and believe God actually does create the universe moment by moment. Main Divisions of Philosophy http://philosophy.lander.edu/intro/i...k2.1/x924.html ---------------------------------- It seems you can think of Russell as giving the following argument: I can prove that the world wasn't created five minutes ago only if my evidence that it wasn't created five minutes ago establishes, beyond any possible doubt, that the world wasn't created only five minutes ago. But my evidence for the claim that the world wasn't created five minutes ago is based on my memories of previous events, and those memories do not establish, beyond any possible doubt, that the world wasn't created five minutes ago. Why not? Because it seems possible that all my memories could have been placed in my mind when the world, along with everything else, was created five minutes ago. If that had happened, I wouldn't be able to tell the difference between that world and one in which my memories of things are really memories of things that happened more than five minutes ago. So there is some, admittedly slight, ground for doubt about my memory evidence that the world wasn't created five minutes ago. And since there is some ground for doubt about my evidence, I can't prove the world wasn't created five minutes ago. Another way to think of it would be this. If I can prove the world existed more than five minutes ago, there would have to be no alternate explanation for the memories I seem to have of things that happened more than five minutes ago. For the memories are the evidence, and they'd only allow me to prove the world wasn't created five minutes ago if the only possible way I would have those memories is by actually experiencing the world more than five minutes ago. But that's just not the only possible way I could have got those memories. For instance, God could have created me five minutes ago and given me what seem to be memories of things that happened long before. This seems unlikely, but it's a possible explanation for my having these memories. And so there is an alternate explanation for the memories that constitute my evidence that things were going on more than five minutes ago, and so I can't prove the world existed more than five minutes ago. Jacob Miller http://www.pathways.plus.com/questions/answers_1.html -------------------------------- Ludwig Wittgenstein - Lectures on Philosophy (1932-33) 22 Let us turn to the view, which is connected with "All that is real is my experience", namely, solipsism of the present moment: "All that is real is the experience of the present moment". (Cf. Wm. James' remark "The present thought is the only thinker", which makes the subject of thinking equivalent to the experience.) We may be inclined to make our language such that we will call only the present experience "experience". This will be a solipsistic language, but of course we must not make a solipsistic language without saying exactly what we mean by the word which in our old language meant "present". Russell said that remembering cannot prove that what is remembered actually occurred, because the world might have sprung into existence five minutes ago, with acts of remembering intact. We could go on to say that it might have been created one minute ago, and finally, that it might have been created in the present moment. Were this latter the situation we should have the equivalent of "All that is real is the present moment". Now if it is possible to say the world was created five minutes ago, could it be said that the world perished five minutes ago? This would amount to saying that the only reality was five minutes ago. Why does one feel tempted to say "The only reality is the present"? The temptation to say this is as strong as that of saying that only my experience is real. The person who says only the present is real because past and future are not here has before his mind the image of something moving. past present future .This image is mispast present future leading, just as the blurred image we would draw of our visual field is misleading inasmuch as the field has no boundary. That the statement "Only the present experience is real" seems to mean something is due to familiar images we associate with it, images of things passing us in space. When in philosophy we talk of the present, we seem to be referring to a sort of Euclidean point. Yet when we talk of present experience it is impossible to identify the present with such a point. The difficulty is with the word "present". There is a grammatical confusion here. A person who says the present experience alone is real is not stating an empirical fact, comparable to the fact that Mr. S. always wears a brown suit. And the person who objects to the assertion that the present alone is real with "Surely the past and future are just as real" somehow does not meet the point. Both statements mean nothing. By examining Russell's hypothesis that the world was created five minutes ago I shall try to explain what I mean in saying that it is meaningless. Russell's hypothesis was so arranged that nothing could bear it out or refute it. Whatever our experience might be, it would be in agreement with it. The point of saying that something has happened derives from there being a criterion for its truth. To lay down the evidence for what happened five minutes ago is like laying down rules for making measurements. The question as to what evidence there can be is a grammatical one. It concerns the sorts of actions and propositions which would verify the statement. It is a simple matter to make up a statement which will agree with experience because it is such that no proposition can refute it, e.g., "There is a white rabbit between two chairs whenever no observations or verifications are being carried out." Some people would say that this statement says more than "There is no white rabbit between the chairs", just as some would say it means something to say the world was created five minutes ago. When such statements are made they are somehow connected with a picture, say, a picture of creation. Hence it is that such sentences seem to mean something. But they are otiose, like wheels in a watch which have no function although they do not look to be useless. I shall try to explain further what I mean by these sentences being meaningless by describing figures on two planes, one on plane I, which is to be projected, and the other, on plane II, the projection: Now suppose the mode of projecting a circle on plane I was not orthogonal. In consequence, to say "There is a circle in plane II" would not be quite the same as saying that there is a circle in plane I. For a range of angles through which the circle is projected, the figures on plane II are all more or less circular. But now suppose the rays of light effecting the projection were allowed to vary through any range of angles. Then what meaning has it to say there are circles in plane II? When we give the method of projection such freedom, assertions about the projection become meaningless, though we still keep the picture of a circle in mind. Russell's assertion about the creation of the world is like this. The fact that there is a picture on plane I does not make a verifiable projection on plane II. We are accustomed to certain pictures being projected in a given way. But as soon as we leave this mode of projection, statements do not have their usual significance. When I say "That means nothing" I mean that you have altered your mode of projection. That it seems to mean something is due to an image of well- known things. Ludwig Wittgenstein - Lectures on Philosophy (1932-33) http://www.forum-global.de/soc/bibli...nslectures.htm |
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"George Hammond" wrote in message ... On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 12:46:25 +0100, "Andy F." wrote: [Hammond] Idiocy, the Universe didn't "exist" until the human race arrived to "make" it exist by seeing it. Makes no difference that the light took 13 billion years to get here, it didn't "exist" until the human race arrived to see it. Which means, by what you said, LIGHT (and, one would assume, the source of that light) existed BEFORE Humans were here to see it. Odd that you cannot seem to comprehend the contradictive stupidity of your own stance. |
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#38
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"John Smith" wrote in message
news:fqWPj.11363$aq4.9829@trnddc02... Odd that you cannot seem to comprehend the contradictive stupidity of your own stance. Language does not posses adequate functionality to articulate what Hammond cannot comprehend. Marc |
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#39
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On Wed, 23 Apr 2008 23:30:56 -0700 (PDT), Immortalist
wrote: [Hammond] * *You have FAILED to distinguish between two fundamentally DIFFERENT cases: CASE 1: * * *If I turn my back and look the other way, * *does the Moon still exist? * * * * * (correct answer, YES) CASE 2: * *If the human race never existed or became * *totally EXTINCT, would the Moon "exist". * * * *(correct answer, NO) [Immortalist] Case two depends upon how you are defining "exist" [Hammond] * *NO KIDDING, Sherlock! *Can't you get it through your head that "exist" is, and ONLY is, absolutely defined as: *"A human opinion based on sensory perception". *There is no OTHER definition of the word "exists". *Ergo, if there are no humans, then there is no "existence" of anything. snip [Immortalist, citation] ...the world we see in conscious experience is not the real world itself, but merely a miniature virtual-reality replica of that world in an internal representation. Representationalism is also known (in psychology) as Indirect Perception, and (in philosophy) as Indirect Realism, or Epistemological Dualism. [Hammond] I agree completely. I am very grateful that you find no quarrel with this commonly accepted fact. snip cited evidence snip [Immortalist] "…how can we know that the universe wasn't created a few minutes ago?" --Bertrand Russell [Hammond] This is the well known OMPHALOS THEORY which is a perennial subject of discussion and was seriously investigate by Russell, although it is originally due to Gosse. Incidentally the Opthalmos theory was discussed extensively on ARK a few years ago. [Immortalist, citation] ...suppose the universe were suddenly created five minutes ago, complete with memories, historical and geological records, and so forth. That is, at the moment of creation, the universe would have all the evidence that it was billions of years old already "packed in." How could it ever be known that the creation of the universe did not occur five minutes ago? [Hammond] It turns out we have had this conversation before, but I don't think you recognized the significance of it at the time..... check out this post, by you to ARK, from November 2007: ======2007 post by Immortalist=========== On Thu, 08 Nov 2007 21:13:30 -0800, Immortalist wrote: -???? ???? ?????- -???? ???? ?????- Or maybe the world was created 5 minutes ago. The omphalos hypothesis was named after the title of an 1857 book, Omphalos by Philip Henry Gosse, in which Gosse argued that in order for the world to be "functional", God must have created the Earth with mountains and canyons, trees with growth rings, Adam and Eve with hair, fingernails, and navels (omthalmos is Greek for "navel"), and that therefore no evidence that we can see of the presumed age of the earth and universe can be taken as reliable. [Hammond, Nov. 2007] The Omphalos Theory is in fact correct, but the Universe was not created "5 minutes ago" it was actually created 100,000 years ago WHEN our species (Homo Sapiens sapiens) came into existence. snip =========end 2007 Immortalist post================ [Hammond] The Omphalos Theory cannot be disproved, as Russell authoritatively demonstrated many years ago. However as Wittgenstein pointed out, the reason it is not a plausible theory is simply that there is no compelling reason for it, and it does not yield any tangible physical result. Interestingly however, the Omphalos Theory does now have a compelling plausible scientific reason; namely, that Hammond has discovered that the "internal representational model of reality" that you discussed above, is ACTUALLY RELATIVISTICALLY CURVED!!!, and that this scientifically measurable fact completely explains the historical phenomenon of "God". So what we see now, is that the appearance of Man (our species, Homo Sapiens sapiens) 200,000 years ago WAS actually an "Omphalos Creation" because that is when "existence" i.e. "reality" actually "suddenly" came into being. This is when the "internal model" was created, and thus "human reality" itself was born. Thus the Genesis Creation was actually an "Omphalos Creation" that took place 200,000 years ago. In addition to that of course, the discovery of the significance of the Anthropic Principle in modern science, has now brought to the fore the fundamental significance of the "Representationalism" you described above. The reason the Universe appears as it does, is because an "Omphalos Creation" took place 200,000 years ago! What Physics fails to distinguish between is the Omphalos Creation and the Big Bang creation. the former is the creation of reality itself, while the latter is the creation of physical structure within that reality. Incidentally, since the Omphalos Creation created time itself, the Omphalos (Biblical) creation"predates" the Big Bang, even though the Big Bang is 13 billion years old! snip citation of Omphalos Theory by Miller snip citation of Omphalos Theory by Wittgenstein [Hammond] Incidentally, your contribution to this discussion has been far superior to anything any one else has contributed, even PhD physicists have failed miserably to comprehend the basic scientific issues, whereas you have apparently digested them quite easily. All of this points out to me the key position of the Philosophy Department in this development (I assume you are posting from alt.philosophy) Sooner or later there is going to be a head on collision between Science and Religion over this discovery, and at that time the Philosophy Department is going to be called on to mediate the problem. And from the looks of things, you seem to be way out in front of the crowd. Congratulations. ===================================== SCIENTIFIC PROOF OF GOD WEBSITE http://geocities.com/scientific_proof_of_god mirror site: http://proof-of-god.freewebsitehosting.com GOD=G_uv (a folk song on mp3) http://interrobang.jwgh.org/songs/hammond.mp3 ===================================== |
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On Thu, 24 Apr 2008 09:33:45 +0100, "marc"
wrote: "John Smith" wrote in message news:fqWPj.11363$aq4.9829@trnddc02... Odd that you cannot seem to comprehend the contradictive stupidity of your own stance. Language does not posses adequate functionality to articulate what Hammond cannot comprehend. Marc It's retrodictive stupidity, not contradictive stupidity. |
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