Sunday, September 28, 2008

Dual views of God

Today's liberal atheistic (is that even communistic, that social experiment that proved to be a failure?) view here in the US, where the attempt to separate religion from the government is a radical misinterpretation of our founding fathers.

Einstein's famous work on physics and the theory of relativity were based in applying the clean discipline of mathematics to the order of the Universe. Einstein made no secret of his belief in God and saw no conflict between that belief and his occupation as a scientist. One of Einstein's difficult conflicts was between classic physics and the new developing discipline quantum mechanics. In classic physics things are neatly explained in mathematics, but in quantum mechanics, the mere act of trying to measure things introduces unusual unpredictable behavior at the smallest levels. This was fundamentally bothersome to Einstein and he was quoted as saying:
"God does not play dice"

In an effort to offer an alternative to this "messy" new quantum mechanics theory, Einstein embarked on a "Theory of everything". He continued to his dying day working on this theory, even when sick he covered bed sheets in calculations. He wanted a clean theory that would "read the mind of God" and replace the unpredictability of quantum mechanics. Even today the quest for the "Grand Unification" theory continues. As Stephen Hawking explains in "A brief History of Time", this achievement is so important it will give us a "glimpse at God". But the proponents of quantum mechanics, despite its unpredictability, responded with a quote seeming to taunt Einstein with this quote:

"Stop telling God what to do with his dice"

Ironically the closest thing to the Grand Unification Thoery today is String Theory, which incorporates quantum mechanics.

The other thing that I find very ironic is that the most gifted scientists can admit the existence of God, so why can't our government and the liberal secularists?