The point is, we can explain how thunder occurs without requiring God's involvement, just by the physics involved. It's no different with the formation of planets.
How do you know for sure that all the things in place to make it happen wasn't his doing. Looks like the formation of planets takes a great deal of organized processes. Not just "random" happenings.
Who is arguing that it is a random process? It's like planets orbiting a star, and stars orbiting the center of a galaxy... Does God have to be involved at every moment, just so the Earth doesn't fly out of orbit from the sun? Sure we don't know that god has to be helping the Earth stay in orbit at every moment, but really, unless God is a fan of busy-work why bother having it work that way?
well to answer both of your questions:the "fire" is actually just heat which is caused by immense pressure that was caused by gravity, which in turn was caused by the huge mass of the earth affecting the surrounding space.if you dug a hole in arkansas and somehow found a way to safely go straight through the core, which is pressurized molten metal, you'd end up coming out the other side somewhere in the vicinity of the Indian subcontinent... possibly under the Indian Ocean. (depends on the angle you dig... if it's a shallow enough angle, you could come out in california after digging in a straight line under the earth's curved surface)any more questions Mr. Duke?
But should we rule out God's involvement (which seems to be the default response) just because we can apparently explain just by the physics involved how something happens apparently without requiring God's involvement (or at least his apparent non-involvement based on and according to our perception levels)?
Quote from: quadz on January 18, 2007, 10:47:28 PMHeh, well, you're straining the limits of my infinitesimal knowledge of cosmology and astrophysics, but...Don't let'm get to ya Quadz. If he'd read the thread, he'd a seen the humor in our exchange
Heh, well, you're straining the limits of my infinitesimal knowledge of cosmology and astrophysics, but...
if god created the universe, the creation of planents (as popular science shows) would be wrong and/or incomplete.
Why are we all going round and round about the planets are made and being made anyhow ???All you have t do is pick up a copy of Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy. They explaned everything.Sheeez, Wake up people.
The cool thing is that the behavior of the observable Universe seems to derive from very fundamental forces.
So: "Why does God need to involve Himself in a thunderclap?" is the same question as "Why does God need to involve Himself in the formation of a planet?" Because thunder and planets are formed out of the same most basic underlying forces.
By creating a Universe governed by fundamental forces, God hasn't left Himself _room_ to tamper with it. Because such tampering would change outcomes that _should_ have been predictable based on the fundamental forces.
Unless God would tamper with stuff just to strain our ape-brains with trying to figure out why some observed event didn't seem to conform to any known natural laws. But I think that may be a whole 'nother topic.
Quote from: QuakeDuke on January 19, 2007, 03:19:14 PMBut should we rule out God's involvement (which seems to be the default response) just because we can apparently explain just by the physics involved how something happens apparently without requiring God's involvement (or at least his apparent non-involvement based on and according to our perception levels)?Well the cool thing about this Universe, whether it was designed by God, or whether the Universe itself emerged the concept of God through monkey-brain evolution or whatever: (As an aside: "Who created the Universe?" and "Who created God?" seem to me fundamentally the same question.)
i was saying, since we don't know what happened before the big bang, the explanation of a planets creation doesn't suffice.
At the moment of the Big Bang, all of the matter and enegry in the Universe was supposedly compressed down to an infinitesimal point. It's not supposed to 'matter' what happened before that. Why do you think we need to know what happened before the big bang to understand how planets are formed?
since we don't know what happened before the big bang, you are assuming what happened before the big bang isn't part of the creation of the universe, and the planets within it.
One wonders how you manage to tie your shoes in the morning, without knowing where the fibers in the laces came from. Regards,quadz