Classical Newtonian mechanics assumes no randomness- everything is controlled by simple equations of motion, and that's the end of the story. However, in modern physics we have a key concept called the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, which states that you can never truly measure both an object's position and momentum with total accuracy. Hence it's impossible to predict with total accuracy how one particle will affect another. This effect is most pronounced for objects at the atomic level, but the effect on the real world is profound. The way that molecules in a gas interact, for example, can only be modeled as random.
Think about this experiment that shows how randomness is present in every day life - suppose you line up 10 billiard balls, with each ball separated 1 meter from the next. Using a cue ball, is it possible to hit the first ball into the second, so that the second hits the third, the third hits the fourth, and so on for all ten balls? It sounds simple enough - just a very good combination shot. But if you do the math you'll see that any error in the way two balls collide is magnified by about a factor of 30 when the next ball is hit. So for ten balls any initial error is magnified by 30^10, which is about 6 x 10^15. Stated another way, the initial hit would have to be accurate to better than 5x10^-15 cm. To achieve this level of accuracy the balls would need to be smoother than atomic structure allows. At this level the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle sets in. So it's impossible to predict exactly what will happen to the 10 bals - the end result is random.
Now think just how much more incredibly complicated the universe is compared to just 10 billiard balls, and you can see that randomness is indeed fundamental to how things behave.
And life and evolution and this habitable planet and all the universes came about with these vast, vast numbers affecting them?
Do you see how illogical it is to assume that life--emotions, beliefs, principles, in the case of humans--could have possibly chanced into existence? And worked properly?
The numbers would be so amazingly absurd that I don't think there's a computer on the planet that could calculate what went into make us this one life form.
But don't get me wrong, here. Listen to me, please.
I too believe in randomness, science, and evolution. I am no 6,000-year Adventist that believes God put dinosaur bones in rocks to trick us. I have no problem accepting the Bing Bang Theory, the curvature of space that points to different dimensions, or that mankind exists not necessarily to fill a role, but maybe just to exist. Life on other planets? I'd be pretty arrogant to assume I knew there couldn't be with all the vastness of the... how many universes have we counted now? Millions the last time I checked.
And no, Seno, I do not excuse or purport the greatness of my morals on a soapbox proclaiming God.
But with all those things that I can believe in, I can also believe that, somewhere out there, there is a being, a Diety, who fostered evolution so we could grow. Who gave us the right to be "good" or "bad" people.
I don't think heaven and hell are literal places. I think churches are a farce, a business entity used to corrupt what is supposed to be the ultimate good. I don't believe in a "man in the sky" watching our every move and judging us. And along those same lines, I do not believe that God--my God--dangles carrots in front of people to convince them to live a certain way or do certain things anymore than He punishes for not doing certain things.
The only contentious concept I am struggling with y'all is that I believe that God COULD do all these things - if He wanted.
To you, because He doesn't, He isn't there.
And once yet again, I respect your every right to believe or not to believe. I live my life free from judging others except in social-normal occurrences (raping is bad, helping orphans is good). I AM NOT A BIBLE THUMPER STANDING IN LINE TO POP YOU ON THE HEAD WITH IT. Believe as you will.
I look at it this way: if I am wrong, then when I'll die I'll not know I was ever wrong. I haven't lived my life denying myself anything because of my faith in God than I would have otherwise had. I'm a good person, with a good heart, and that is how I enjoy my leisure time: helping others. If there is no God, then my life will not have been wasted (except arguing on silly Internet boards, LOL!)
If you are the one who is wrong, on the other and...
Well, some want to convert you. Some even want to kill you for your lack of belief.
I just want to sit down and have a cold beer with you over a friendly conversation where both of our minds are open to possibly accepting that because we do not and cannot know it all, there may be points brought up worth our honest consideration.
When I sit and contemplate God, I cannot help but feel that atheist and believer alike probably have most of it wrong. I mean, if God really DID create all these things into existence (and I fully believe He did), then who are we to assume that a short, simple book can possibly define His attributes to us? A book flawed with the perceptions and language barriers of human authors?
But I cannot believe that there is no God. All these seeming coincidences are too far fetched for me to make an educated decision that life sprung in all of its forms because two rocks collided. That the rules of life and our emotions are just pat of that randomness.
I believe with all of my soul that Jesus Christ is our sacrifice to enjoy God's company in a place we refer to as "heaven." I believe in the Holy Trinity, the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost. I believe that God loves me, that He wants me to make the right choices.
What's more, I think that my God wants me to SHOW people my beliefs, not force it down their throat in some amniotic state of strangled and stagnant lecture of righteousness.
My God is the One that loves compassion, innocence, and righteous living. But He is not a god to enforce such.
Anyway, I felt that I should elaborate. If we're going to talk, it's important that you don't view me as the typical Christian. Because I'm not. I'm sorry it came out so long, but I sincerely hope you read it and are a little moe willing to share ideas with me, rather than explaining to me how all my ideas are just dead wrong.
:drunkb: