Einstein [...]. The idea that the universe could be explained and understood and that the laws of physics would exist without a Creator was completely foreign to their minds.
Einstein was Jewish and was considered the smartest man alive in his time. He regarded mathematics as the key to understanding the fundamental design of the universe. His famous phrase, "God does not play dice with the world [universe]" was his counter-argument to Max Planck's quantum mechanics. He said this even though Einstein's own photoelectric effect and photon theory of light depended on it.
To say the laws of nature arise out of chaos without a Creator is to say entropy can be reversed and matter arises from nothing, assembles itself into complex structures and then spends the rest of eternity in decay.
Can the universe create itself? Is then the universe not God?
The semantics here seem murky. Why not instead ask if the universe is just some kind of weird entropy-violating perpetual motion machine? Why bring "God" into it by default? Are there NO other possibilities?
Is this quote from the same source you cited or another?
Quote from: QwazyWabbit on July 15, 2008, 08:18:33 PMTo say the laws of nature arise out of chaos without a Creator is to say entropy can be reversed and matter arises from nothing, assembles itself into complex structures and then spends the rest of eternity in decay.This seems to be stated somewhat in the manner of a False Dilemma. We've already discovered and observed processes and laws by which matter does indeed assemble itself into complex structures. So we're left pondering the cause of the Big Bang. Even if entropy were violated, why make the leap to positing something as complex as a Creator? (A creator who by definition should be complex enough to ponder the question of its own origins?)As Bertrand Russell said so succinctly, "If everything must have a cause, then God must have a cause. If there can be anything without a cause, it may just as well be the world as God, so that there cannot be any validity in that argument."Quote from: QwazyWabbit on July 15, 2008, 08:18:33 PMCan the universe create itself? Is then the universe not God? The semantics here seem murky. Why not instead ask if the universe is just some kind of weird entropy-violating perpetual motion machine? Why bring "God" into it by default? Are there NO other possibilities?[1] Einstein and Religion by Max Jammer, Princeton University Press, 1999, p. 97
False dilemma? I don't think so. The observable universe always runs toward increasing entropy but then again there is a lot of unobserved universe out there. As far as increasing complexity is concerned, these are processes where entropy is decreased in one locality at the expense of an increase of entropy in another. My main point was that the human brain inescapably ascribes a prime mover to every effect. The dilemma is how to escape the trap.
Einstein may never have accepted a personal God but he was still confined by his childhood social programming enough to say "God doesn't play dice..." and to speak in public as a believer in some kind of God.
This is what I was trying to illustrate about mankind's inability to escape from the concepts of alpha-omega and a prime mover.Name something that doesn't have a cause? We can't escape it. We even have to say the "cause" of the universe was the big bang.
You didn't honestly answer the two questions, but they were largely rhetorical. I wanted to see if anyone would fall into the trap of explaining a self-creating universe or a Pantheism.
A weird entropy-violating perpetual motion machine? Weirdness is "the unexplained", this doesn't satisfy the requirements of the TOE whose goal it is to explain everything. To accept "weirdness" as an explanation is to cop out of the whole discussion.
Name something that doesn't have a cause? We can't escape it. We even have to say the "cause" of the universe was the big bang. The end of the universe is the big crunch. Einstein tried and failed to describe an eternal universe. But this all still leaves the question unanswered about the certainty of the fundamental nature of it.
science is a religion in its own right, it is just slightly easier to prove things, but it has so many questions left unanswered