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Other Than "The Bible Tells Me So," Your Single Best Argument for Creationism

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
I was speaking about the moments after the big bang where it is said that the universe inflated faster than the speed of light.I thought this was a well known idea stemming from the quantum fluctuations.
When space expanded faster-than-light | EarthSky.org
http://earthsky.org/space/when-space-expanded-faster-than-light

And your article points to the issue: it is space itself that is expanding and not anything moving through space. In fact, nothing is moving faster than light in any reference frame. In part, this happens because there is no single reference frame for the whole region of expansion. So there is no violation of relativity: in fact, it is *expected* given general relativity for certain conditions.

The inflation itself was not stemming from quantum fluctuations, per se. It is an aspect of how certain types of quantum particles (spin zero bosons) behave in a general relativistic setting. The fluctuations you are probably thinking baout are prior to the inflationary stage.

That is what I was referring to
And the problem is that anything before that stage is almost pure speculation. The reason is that it involves energies far more than what we have been able to probe. The late stages of inflation are only just now coming into the realm of testability. The early stages are still beyond us.

So going back to the beginning of our universe or of any multiverse where quantum fluctuations began the process where did the quantum field which holds the quantum fluctuations and the quantum physics that drive them come from considering they are something that requires some physics to operate.

And this is purely a matter of speculation. We have several proposed theories of quantum gravity and they say different things for this setting.

For some, there simply is no 'before': time itself started at some point (in these descriptions) and so there was no time and no causality leading up to this.

For others (quantum loop gravity, for example), there was a previous contraction phase before the current expansion phase. The quantum aspects enter in by providing a repulsion leading to the bounce.

For others, there is a multiverse and our universe came from colliding branes in that larger structure (which usually has no beginning).

One aspect is that you are *assuming* there was something before the 'quantum fluctuations'. If time itself began, then that may well not be the case. if time is infinite into the past (as it is in most multiverse descriptions), then again there was no cause for the whole setup.

And, again, these are all speculative. We have several possibilities (and there may be others we haven't found yet), but we simply don't have the evidence to decide which is correct. The energies are currently more than what we can generate.

Just like some of the other ideas proposed such as consciousness or intelligent agents behind what we see.

Except those don't actually explain anything. Assuming a consciousness doesn't help. It just pushes the question off to a place that cannot be tested, even in theory. Plus, it gives no specifics about how things would progress after that. How do galaxies originate differently if there is a consciousness than if not? Does consciousness affect the cosmic background radiation? if so, how?

Not to different to some of the ideas presented like a multiverse.

The muliverse ideas arise quite naturally from attempting to merge quantum mechanics and general relativity. I think most physicists would *prefer* to avoid such descriptions, but all ways we have found to combine the two best descriptions we have (QM and GR) have some aspect of a multiverse in them. So it is something that it seems we have to deal with.

Consciousness, on the other hand, doesn't arise naturally. All we know about consciousness arises from brains and not from fundamental aspects of the universe. So it is an incredibly ad hoc way to address questions. But even if it is assumed, it helps nothing at all in giving a real explanation.
 

stevevw

Member
And your article points to the issue: it is space itself that is expanding and not anything moving through space. In fact, nothing is moving faster than light in any reference frame. In part, this happens because there is no single reference frame for the whole region of expansion. So there is no violation of relativity: in fact, it is *expected* given general relativity for certain conditions.

The inflation itself was not stemming from quantum fluctuations, per se. It is an aspect of how certain types of quantum particles (spin zero bosons) behave in a general relativistic setting. The fluctuations you are probably thinking baout are prior to the inflationary stage.

And the problem is that anything before that stage is almost pure speculation. The reason is that it involves energies far more than what we have been able to probe. The late stages of inflation are only just now coming into the realm of testability. The early stages are still beyond us.
Yes they are and somehow these quantum fluctuations led to the expansion of the universe in super fast time which has never been completely explained so it is all spectualtion anyway. Inflation theory was created to deal with problems with the big bang and its aftermath such as the temperature and horizon problems which meant that the infant universe had to expand in superfast time. But now inflation is in question according to one of the scientists who helped develop the theory Paul Steinhardt. Even Guth is saying that inflation may be wrong. Accoding to a naturalistic creation of the universe it should be clumpy and uneven in its formation but it is precislely smooth and even. Even the settings for the instant the universe was set into reality had to be finely tuned to end up with what we see. The problem is these theories attempt to address problems like the fine tuning of the universe but t end up creating more problems and are scrapped.
Cosmic inflation is dead, long live cosmic inflation!

And this is purely a matter of speculation. We have several proposed theories of quantum gravity and they say different things for this setting.
And many if not all of these ideas are spectualtion and beyond verification. As mentioned they end up creating more problems that need more explaining or bring in problems that the theory was meant to address and it becomes complicated and impossible to fit them into what is being observered. My point is what is the difference between these ideas and say a consciousness or intelligent agent being an option to help address these difficult things we are seeing. They may be just as spectulative, with unsolved aspects and may never be verified just like the ideas that are being proposed now.

For some, there simply is no 'before': time itself started at some point (in these descriptions) and so there was no time and no causality leading up to this.
But as some say what does this prove or predict. Its almost doing what some accuse religious ideas do in appealing to an unknown cause that cannot be explained or verified.

For others (quantum loop gravity, for example), there was a previous contraction phase before the current expansion phase. The quantum aspects enter in by providing a repulsion leading to the bounce.

For others, there is a multiverse and our universe came from colliding branes in that larger structure (which usually has no beginning).
And this just pushes the same problems further back. This idea of some sort of a multiverse is becoming more popular as it helps deal with the difficult problems of there only being the one universe and explaining how that came to be. But to me this is a biit of an escape clause that just avoids dealing with the initial creation of existence.

One aspect is that you are *assuming* there was something before the 'quantum fluctuations'. If time itself began, then that may well not be the case. if time is infinite into the past (as it is in most multiverse descriptions), then again there was no cause for the whole setup.

And, again, these are all speculative. We have several possibilities (and there may be others we haven't found yet), but we simply don't have the evidence to decide which is correct. The energies are currently more than what we can generate.
yet doesnt quantum physics manipulate time anyway which could give it other possibilities and not necessarily contain it to how we understand it works. I think becuase of the problems of trying to explain how some sort of quantum state could produce such a measured univsere that something had to have happened that was not in existence before that point. It seems like a cop out to say that it just happened and that somehow nothing which is some sort of something led to creating such an immense and orchestrated universe.

Except those don't actually explain anything. Assuming a consciousness doesn't help. It just pushes the question off to a place that cannot be tested, even in theory.Plus, it gives no specifics about how things would progress after that. How do galaxies originate differently if there is a consciousness than if not? Does consciousness affect the cosmic background radiation? if so, how?
A bit like the many ideas being presented mentioned. The same effects can all result if some sort of consciousness or intelligent agent with some sort of ability beyiond a materialistic understanding was able to imagine or speak existence into being. It sort of sits better than saying that there was existence of some sort that was just there and no one can explain why as it was just there and somehow it was able to eventually produce what we see through some unexplained and accounted for process such as quantum fluctuations which are not really something and yet can produce such big results.

The muliverse ideas arise quite naturally from attempting to merge quantum mechanics and general relativity. I think most physicists would *prefer* to avoid such descriptions, but all ways we have found to combine the two best descriptions we have (QM and GR) have some aspect of a multiverse in them. So it is something that it seems we have to deal with.
Yes this seems to be the case. Maybe it is the answer. I think it appears like a good idea oin the surface but it brings up many other problems that need to be addressed. plus it can never be directly verified which would make it something that is always spectualted. A bit like consciousness. Many scientists have also been led to a natural conclusion that there may be some sort of consciousness behind what we see.

Consciousness, on the other hand, doesn't arise naturally. All we know about consciousness arises from brains and not from fundamental aspects of the universe. So it is an incredibly ad hoc way to address questions. But even if it is assumed, it helps nothing at all in giving a real explanation.
Not really as mentioned quantum physics has led many scientists to logically conclude that a consciousness is behind things. We have always thought that our mind may have more to it than just its physical makeup. Areas from religion, philosphy, metaphysics to mainstream science have always put forward ideas and possible explanation and now even evidence that our mind can affect the material world. This is in line with the observations we see in the quantum world.

Are We Living in a Computer Simulation?
High-profile physicists and philosophers gathered to debate whether we are real or virtual—and what it means either way
Are We Living in a Computer Simulation?

“A fundamental conclusion of the new physics also acknowledges that the observer creates the reality. As observers, we are personally involved with the creation of our own reality. Physicists are being forced to admit that the universe is a “mental” construction. Pioneering physicist Sir James Jeans wrote: “The stream of knowledge is heading toward a non-mechanical reality; the universe begins to look more like a great thought than like a great machine. Mind no longer appears to be an accidental intruder into the realm of matter, we ought rather hail it as the creator and governor of the realm of matter. Get over it, and accept the inarguable conclusion. The universe is immaterial-mental and spiritual.
https://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v436/n7047/full/436029a.html

Australian scientists recreated an experiment that proves reality doesn’t really exist until we are measuring it, observing it, or ‘looking’ at it, at least to on the scale of quantum mechanics.
http://www.nature.com/nphys/journal/v11/n7/full/nphys3343.html

Psychophysical interactions with a double-slit interference pattern
http://deanradin.com/evidence/RadinPhysicsEssays2013.pdf



 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
Yes they are and somehow these quantum fluctuations led to the expansion of the universe in super fast time which has never been completely explained so it is all spectualtion anyway. Inflation theory was created to deal with problems with the big bang and its aftermath such as the temperature and horizon problems which meant that the infant universe had to expand in superfast time. But now inflation is in question according to one of the scientists who helped develop the theory Paul Steinhardt. Even Guth is saying that inflation may be wrong. Accoding to a naturalistic creation of the universe it should be clumpy and uneven in its formation but it is precislely smooth and even. Even the settings for the instant the universe was set into reality had to be finely tuned to end up with what we see. The problem is these theories attempt to address problems like the fine tuning of the universe but t end up creating more problems and are scrapped.
Cosmic inflation is dead, long live cosmic inflation!

The issue isn't that the universe is 'precisely smooth', but that the fluctuations are not as big as expected.

And many if not all of these ideas are spectualtion and beyond verification. As mentioned they end up creating more problems that need more explaining or bring in problems that the theory was meant to address and it becomes complicated and impossible to fit them into what is being observered. My point is what is the difference between these ideas and say a consciousness or intelligent agent being an option to help address these difficult things we are seeing. They may be just as spectulative, with unsolved aspects and may never be verified just like the ideas that are being proposed now.

And how does a conscious agent help in *any* way? What reactions does it help to explain? Which parts of the expansion does it help with? How does it serve to explain 'smoothness'?

But as some say what does this prove or predict. Its almost doing what some accuse religious ideas do in appealing to an unknown cause that cannot be explained or verified.

Except that a finiite time is predicted by, for example, general relativity, which *is* a tested theory.

And this just pushes the same problems further back. This idea of some sort of a multiverse is becoming more popular as it helps deal with the difficult problems of there only being the one universe and explaining how that came to be. But to me this is a biit of an escape clause that just avoids dealing with the initial creation of existence.

Yes, it pushes the problem back. But it also allows an infinite time into the past, which negates causality of the whole scenario.
 

stevevw

Member
The issue isn't that the universe is 'precisely smooth', but that the fluctuations are not as big as expected.
Which is a problem that needs to be explained and accounted for which current theories don,t address. [/quote] Which is a speculated idea that is still inadequate to account for how the universe begun. Besides I think this idea is in doubt anyway or at least the inflation hypothesis that stems from this. The problem is science will keep coming up with ideas that they try to fit into what is being seen and these just create more problems in the end. It may be that scientific methods are not going to come up with the right answer.

And how does a conscious agent help in *any* way? What reactions does it help to explain? Which parts of the expansion does it help with? How does it serve to explain 'smoothness'?
As far as I understand science is doing a pretty good job in explaining the way a consciousness or intelligent agent works. After all we are only talking about the origin of what we see and what is happening now and being measured by science may be the result of a supernatural origin. Science may be just trying to explain how some creative agent such as God does His creative work. Just because an intelligent agent may have supernaturally begun the process of the universe does not mean it has to work to some magical formula. It is the laws that make it all work and that is what we need to account for from the beginning as everything no matter at what point it began needed some sort of law to govern what happens even quantum fluctuations within a vacuum.

It depends on how you see things. I see that the universe and its workings all point back to an intelligent agent and therefore certain predictions can be made from that. One being that the scientific method will never be verify or even explain how the universe happened without appealing to ideas that require defying how we measure cause and effect. The more investigation science does the more they will find the results to be contradictory to what they predicted. The more things will point to non-material answers that science is limited in understanding or explaining. That is why there are more and more people looking at ideas about consciousness and metaphysical ideas because this is where the observations are pointing to. I believe that we will discover that the universe is more finely tuned and designed to a point that is undeniable for which science cannot account for.
Yes, it pushes the problem back. But it also allows an infinite time into the past, which negates causality of the whole scenario.
It just pushes the problem back further, but the same problem still exists.
 
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Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
Which is a problem that needs to be explained and accounted for which current theories don,t address.
Which is a speculated idea that is still inadequate to account for how the universe begun. Besides I think this idea is in doubt anyway or at least the inflation hypothesis that stems from this. The problem is science will keep coming up with ideas that they try to fit into what is being seen and these just create more problems in the end. It may be that scientific methods are not going to come up with the right answer.[/QUOTE]

Yes, that is exactly how science proceeds: it looks at actual observations, makes hypotheses, tests those hypotheses against new observations, and modifies the hypotheses or invents new one to match any disagreements.

And what happens isn't to get a 'right answer'. The process produces a sequence of answers that concerges to the correct answer for each observation.

As far as I understand science is doing a pretty good job in explaining the way a consciousness or intelligent agent works. After all we are only talking about the origin of what we see and what is happening now and being measured by science may be the result of a supernatural origin. Science may be just trying to explain how some creative agent such as God does His creative work. Just because an intelligent agent may have supernaturally begun the process of the universe does not mean it has to work to some magical formula. It is the laws that make it all work and that is what we need to account for from the beginning as everything no matter at what point it began needed some sort of law to govern what happens even quantum fluctuations within a vacuum.

And we need a different level of laws to account for the consciousness. At this point, consciousness is only known to happen with brains. it is a result of the laws of nature, not the originator of them.


It depends on how you see things. I see that the universe and its workings all point back to an intelligent agent and therefore certain predictions can be made from that. One being that the scientific method will never be verify or even explain how the universe happened without appealing to ideas that require defying how we measure cause and effect. The more investigation science does the more they will find the results to be contradictory to what they predicted. The more things will point to non-material answers that science is limited in understanding or explaining. That is why there are more and more people looking at ideas about consciousness and metaphysical ideas because this is where the observations are pointing to. I believe that we will discover that the universe is more finely tuned and designed to a point that is undeniable for which science cannot account for.

Nothing at all is pointing to a 'non-material answer'. That is sort of the whole point. Nothing *could* point to such because such a position is inherently untestable. Yes, classical notions of cause and effect are gone. They have been gone for about a century now. There is no reason to think they will be revived.

At *every* stage of science, some predictions work and other fail. That is how progress is made: we learn through time what actually happens. So, the predictions of Newtonian mechanics failed when applied to the motion of Mercury. That didn't imply a consciousness. It implied the theory needed to be changed. Many of our ideas today will turn out to be wrong. But they will be shown wrong through observations that point to how things really work. We have several contenders for quantum gravity at this point and very little ability to test between them. When we develop such an ability, we will see what happens.

You seem to think the failures point to an unreliability in science. But we *do* find that many of the observations, for example, of the background radiation fit very, very well with predictions. We have a *much* more accurate description of the universe than we did 100 years ago--by several orders of magnitude. While the age of the universe when I was young was known to be between 10 and 20 billion years, that was all the accuracy we had at the time. Now, we know it to be 13.7 billion.

But let's go one further. Suppose we adopt the position that there is an intelligent designer. Exactly how does that help us to explain *anything*? It still doesn't explain the *mechanism* of fine tuning. It doesn't explain the mechanism for solving the horizon problem. It makes no prediction for the character of the background radiation, nor of how galaxies evolve. It says nothing about whether the constants in our physical laws can change or how they might do so. The assumption of an intelligent designer says nothing about the exact mechanism for how life got started: which chemicals were assembled and how. It says nothing about how life evolved after that point. It fails to answer why the amino acids of life are left-handed instead of right-handed. It fails to explain why matter rather than anti-matter dominates the universe.

That is why the assumption isn't investigated more thoroughly: it gives absolutely no new information of *how* things work.

It just pushes the problem back further, but the same problem still exists.

If time is infinite into the past, the question of the cause of the multiverse goes away.
 

stevevw

Member
Yes, that is exactly how science proceeds: it looks at actual observations, makes hypotheses, tests those hypotheses against new observations, and modifies the hypotheses or invents new one to match any disagreements.
And what happens isn't to get a 'right answer'. The process produces a sequence of answers that concerges to the correct answer for each observation.
Except the observations they are looking at demand explanations that are beyond testing and verifying and thats the problem becuase it allows spectualted ideas to be proposed and accepted as scientifically supported because when enough people get behind those ideas like Krausses something from nothing it becomes popular and used as proof for example that there is no need for a God.

And we need a different level of laws to account for the consciousness. At this point, consciousness is only known to happen with brains. it is a result of the laws of nature, not the originator of them.
There are already laws and there is a lot of evidence supporting consciousness being more than just associated with the physical brain. In fact many scientists cannot even explain or account for consciousness let alone link it to a physical origin. Many prominant mainstream scientists have acknowledge consciousness as being something beyond a biological origin of wires and chemical reactions.

We have laws that work well with consciousness already such as with quantum physics and that is what most scientists are relating consciousness with. It works well becuase consciousness relates to an active entity that exists and links the non material world of many possibilities to the material world just like in the quantum world. The observer effect shows it is the conscious thought that is behind the material world.

Well known mainstream scientists like physicist Michio Kaku, Neuroscientist Christof Koch, Sir Roger Penrose, theoretical physicist Edward Witten and Nobel Laureate Francis Crick (who went on to dedicate as much time on the brain and consciousness as he did for genetics) have all supported consciousness in some way or form.

A Neuroscientist’s Radical Theory of How Networks Become Conscious
The Curious Wavefunction: Physicist Ed Witten on consciousness: "I tend to believe that it will remain a mystery"
http://blog.wellcomelibrary.org/2016/09/crick-on-consciousness/

Another is physicist John Archibald Wheelerwhose experiement provided evidence for the observer effect in quantum physics.

Wheeler suggested that reality is created by observers and that: “no phenomenon is a real phenomenon until it is an observed phenomenon.” He coined the term “Participatory Anthropic Principle” (PAP) from the Greek “anthropos”, or human. He went further to suggest that “we are participants in bringing into being not only the near and here, but the far away and long ago.”

This claim was considered rather outlandish until his thought experiment, known as the “delayed-choice experiment,” was tested in a laboratory in 1984. This experiment was a variation on the famous “double-slit experiment” in which the dual nature of light was exposed (depending on how the experiment was measured and observed, the light behaved like a particle (a photon) or like a wave).

The results of this experiment, as well as another conducted in 2007, proved what Wheeler had always suspected – observers’ consciousness is required to bring the universe into existence. This means that a pre-life Earth would have existed in an undetermined state, and a pre-life universe could only exist retroactively.

'The Conscious Universe' -- "The Universe Exists Because We Are Here" (VIEW VIDEO)

Nothing at all is pointing to a 'non-material answer'. That is sort of the whole point. Nothing *could* point to such because such a position is inherently untestable. Yes, classical notions of cause and effect are gone. They have been gone for about a century now. There is no reason to think they will be revived.
To say that consciousness is an invalid idea because it is untestable would rule out most of the ideas in science such as multiverses, string theory and holgram worlds. But to say there is nothing pointing to a non-material answer is incorrect considering the amount of evidence and support from highly credentialed scientists already posted and many other sources of support out there that have not been included.

At *every* stage of science, some predictions work and other fail. That is how progress is made: we learn through time what actually happens. So, the predictions of Newtonian mechanics failed when applied to the motion of Mercury. That didn't imply a consciousness. It implied the theory needed to be changed. Many of our ideas today will turn out to be wrong. But they will be shown wrong through observations that point to how things really work. We have several contenders for quantum gravity at this point and very little ability to test between them. When we develop such an ability, we will see what happens.
Most scientists think we will never be able to test the ideas that have been proposed for a uniting theory of everything. This has caused some scientists to propose that some of these ideas like multiverses and string theory be accepted dispite a lack of verification. Becuase these ideas eloquently explain what we see and fit so well they say they should be accpeted on that basis alone.

Newtons discovery and failure would not lead to consciousness anyway as it is dealing with macro observations and laws. We have only really arrived at considering consciousness as an idea since the discovery of the quantum world and it is only going to be related to such a world where things begin to break down and become non material just as consciouness is.

As theory pulls further and further ahead of the capabilities of experiment, physicists are taking this question seriously. “We are in various ways hitting the limits of what will ever be testable, unless we have misunderstood some essential point about the nature of reality,” says theoretical cosmologist George Ellis. “We have now seen all the visible universe (i.e. back to the visual horizon) and only gravitational waves remain to test further; and we are approaching the limits of what particle colliders it will ever be feasible to build, for economic and technical reasons.

In fact, you can reason your way to the “multiverse” in at least four different ways, according to MIT physicist Max Tegmark’s accounting. The tricky part is testing the idea. You can’t send or receive messages from neighbouring universes, and most formulations of multiverse theory don’t make any testable predictions. Yet the theory provides a neat solution to the fine-tuning problem. Must we throw it out because it fails the falsifiability test?

Does Science Need Falsifiability? - The Nature of Reality — The Nature of Reality | PBS

As mentioned these ideas are hard to test and verify yet they are being used as support that everything began from a naturalistic origin. If scientists can use this sort of reasoning to promote their ideas then why cant ideas like consciousness and intelligence be proposed as they have as much indirect support.

You seem to think the failures point to an unreliability in science. But we *do* find that many of the observations, for example, of the background radiation fit very, very well with predictions. We have a *much* more accurate description of the universe than we did 100 years ago--by several orders of magnitude. While the age of the universe when I was young was known to be between 10 and 20 billion years, that was all the accuracy we had at the time. Now, we know it to be 13.7 billion.

But let's go one further. Suppose we adopt the position that there is an intelligent designer. Exactly how does that help us to explain *anything*? It still doesn't explain the *mechanism* of fine tuning. It doesn't explain the mechanism for solving the horizon problem. It makes no prediction for the character of the background radiation, nor of how galaxies evolve. It says nothing about whether the constants in our physical laws can change or how they might do so. The assumption of an intelligent designer says nothing about the exact mechanism for how life got started: which chemicals were assembled and how. It says nothing about how life evolved after that point. It fails to answer why the amino acids of life are left-handed instead of right-handed. It fails to explain why matter rather than anti-matter dominates the universe.That is why the assumption isn't investigated more thoroughly: it gives absolutely no new information of *how* things work.
The Scientific method takes a certain view and uses assumptions to make its predictions. It may be that some of the fundamental ideas about reality are wrong and it is only in the past recent decades that science is reaching a point where these things are coming into doubt because of what is being found. This could not have been known until now because of the technology so back in time we were none the wiser and like you say scientific results were continuously being revised. But now that we are reaching a point in reality that is having to unite the worlds of classical physics with quantum physics the whole of scientific assumptions are being questioned.

You say that the background radiation fits well with predictions but there are glaring anomalies such as the temperature and horizon problems that call into question the assumption this was based on. Inflation is being shown to be wrong so it seems more and more evidence is showing that there may be some fundamental problems that may mean the whole idea is wrong. It seems sometimes that scientific ideas are made to fit what is being seen and then later their predictions are shown to be wrong so they are always being adjusted but it may be that the basic assumption was wrong in the first place. This seems to be what is happening with areas such as astrophysics.

The evidence for an intelligent designer would be no different than what we seen now as everything still has to have laws and codes to make things work in our physical world. It is how those laws and codes came about and what is behind what we see that is important as far as intelligence or consciousness is concerned. We have gradually discovered how the physical works and this is where we are at now. Science has given its perspective and that is how we see things from a scientific point of view. But now we are looking at the point of how what we see came into reality and this is where an intelligent creator or consciousness will be most relevant.

As far as classical science is concerned intelligence and consciousness wont give any new info because it cannot measure this. So just like the quanum world has defied classical science perspective and measuremnet there may need to be further understanding about how we can measure the effects of intelligence and consciousness.
 
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Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
Except the observations they are looking at demand explanations that are beyond testing and verifying and thats the problem becuase it allows spectualted ideas to be proposed and accepted as scientifically supported because when enough people get behind those ideas like Krausses something from nothing it becomes popular and used as proof for example that there is no need for a God.

It is common for the predictions of science to take decades before we can test them. The prediction of the Higg's boson is one example. The EPR 'prediction' is another. We are still verifying various aspects of general relativity. So this is nothing new.

Now, I agree that a clearer distinction needs to be made between established results (like the expansion of the universe and its age) and speculation (inflation is right at the border now, string theory is much more speculative).

But the argument on the religious side is that you cannot get 'nothing' from 'nothing'. What recent speculation in science, based on the ideas we *know* about quantum mechanics and general relativity, is that this position need not be valid. Which *does* mean there may not be a need for a God to explain the uniiverse as we see it.

Well known mainstream scientists like physicist Michio Kaku, Neuroscientist Christof Koch, Sir Roger Penrose, theoretical physicist Edward Witten and Nobel Laureate Francis Crick (who went on to dedicate as much time on the brain and consciousness as he did for genetics) have all supported consciousness in some way or form.

And on the other side, we have scientists like Daniel Dennett, Steven Weinberg (another Nobel laureate), philosophers like Steven Pinker, and cosmologists like Hawking and Krauss. And this fails to mention that consciousness isn't as critical to quantum mechanics as many seem to think: the work on decohertence has been verified and is even crucial for the studies we do on quantum computing.



http://blog.wellcomelibrary.org/2016/09/crick-on-consciousness/

I'd point out that thi sis even admitted to be a 'radical theory'. Which means it is not very well accepted, right?


This claim was considered rather outlandish until his thought experiment, known as the “delayed-choice experiment,” was tested in a laboratory in 1984. This experiment was a variation on the famous “double-slit experiment” in which the dual nature of light was exposed (depending on how the experiment was measured and observed, the light behaved like a particle (a photon) or like a wave).

The results of the delayed choice experiments are predicted by quantum mechanics and do NOT require a consciousness to intervene. The difficulty is that if you attempt to understand quantum phenomena from a classical viewpoint, you *will* get strange results. Quantum mechanics is the more accurate description. Classical viewpoints are the old. You shouldn't attempt to understand the new from the standpoint of the old.


To say that consciousness is an invalid idea because it is untestable would rule out most of the ideas in science such as multiverses, string theory and holgram worlds. But to say there is nothing pointing to a non-material answer is incorrect considering the amount of evidence and support from highly credentialed scientists already posted and many other sources of support out there that have not been included.

Consciousness is a phenomenon that we all agree exists in the universe. ALL the examples we have happen in brains. So it is reasonable to think that consciousness is related to the activities that happen in brains and is NOT a universal aspect aside from complex organisms.

Most scientists think we will never be able to test the ideas that have been proposed for a uniting theory of everything. This has caused some scientists to propose that some of these ideas like multiverses and string theory be accepted dispite a lack of verification. Becuase these ideas eloquently explain what we see and fit so well they say they should be accpeted on that basis alone.

And I would be dead-set against this. Testing of hypotheses is the foundation of knowledge. If a multiverse description has no other testable aspects, then it should be rejected. For some such theories, however, there *are* testable aspects in our universe.

Newtons discovery and failure would not lead to consciousness anyway as it is dealing with macro observations and laws. We have only really arrived at considering consciousness as an idea since the discovery of the quantum world and it is only going to be related to such a world where things begin to break down and become non material just as consciousness is.

This is just flat-out false. Consciousness has been seen as an important aspect of human existence for millenia.

As theory pulls further and further ahead of the capabilities of experiment, physicists are taking this question seriously. “We are in various ways hitting the limits of what will ever be testable, unless we have misunderstood some essential point about the nature of reality,” says theoretical cosmologist George Ellis. “We have now seen all the visible universe (i.e. back to the visual horizon) and only gravitational waves remain to test further; and we are approaching the limits of what particle colliders it will ever be feasible to build, for economic and technical reasons.

In fact, you can reason your way to the “multiverse” in at least four different ways, according to MIT physicist Max Tegmark’s accounting. The tricky part is testing the idea. You can’t send or receive messages from neighbouring universes, and most formulations of multiverse theory don’t make any testable predictions. Yet the theory provides a neat solution to the fine-tuning problem. Must we throw it out because it fails the falsifiability test?

Nonetheless, to be scientific, those ideas must be testable.

As mentioned these ideas are hard to test and verify yet they are being used as support that everything began from a naturalistic origin. If scientists can use this sort of reasoning to promote their ideas then why cant ideas like consciousness and intelligence be proposed as they have as much indirect support.

One *huge* difference between the various speculative theories we have been talking about and 'intelligent design' is that they come out very naturally from what we already *know* about quantum mechanics. For example, we *know* quantum mechanics is a very good description of the universe at the subatomic level. We also know that general relativity is a very good description at the larger scale. The question for decades has been how to unite them into a single, coherent, description of the universe. These are two very non-speculative theories that are very different. The speculations you have been talking about are attempts, primarily, to unify these two viewpoints.

Every attempt we have made to unify these two viewpoints leads to multiverses of some sort. Every single one. That alone makes multiverses something that should be taken seriously. And this is completely irrelevant to questions of religion. The 'Intelligent Design' theories don't even have *this* aspect of unification to propose. They are at best an add-on to whatever else scientists have done with no link with other aspects of known science.


The Scientific method takes a certain view and uses assumptions to make its predictions. It may be that some of the fundamental ideas about reality are wrong and it is only in the past recent decades that science is reaching a point where these things are coming into doubt because of what is being found. This could not have been known until now because of the technology so back in time we were none the wiser and like you say scientific results were continuously being revised. But now that we are reaching a point in reality that is having to unite the worlds of classical physics with quantum physics the whole of scientific assumptions are being questioned.

You say that the background radiation fits well with predictions but there are glaring anomalies such as the temperature and horizon problems that call into question the assumption this was based on. Inflation is being shown to be wrong so it seems more and more evidence is showing that there may be some fundamental problems that may mean the whole idea is wrong. It seems sometimes that scientific ideas are made to fit what is being seen and then later their predictions are shown to be wrong so they are always being adjusted but it may be that the basic assumption was wrong in the first place. This seems to be what is happening with areas such as astrophysics.

I can point to other aspects that are far, far more concerning. The discrepancy between the predicted value of the cosmological constant from quantum thoery and the observed value is 120 orders of magnitude. That *clearly* shows we are missing something when it comes to quantum gravity.

So, how does ID help with this?

The evidence for an intelligent designer would be no different than what we seen now as everything still has to have laws and codes to make things work in our physical world. It is how those laws and codes came about and what is behind what we see that is important as far as intelligence or consciousness is concerned. We have gradually discovered how the physical works and this is where we are at now. Science has given its perspective and that is how we see things from a scientific point of view. But now we are looking at the point of how what we see came into reality and this is where an intelligent creator or consciousness will be most relevant.

In other words, ID has nothing real to contribute.

As far as classical science is concerned intelligence and consciousness wont give any new info because it cannot measure this. So just like the quanum world has defied classical science perspective and measuremnet there may need to be further understanding about how we can measure the effects of intelligence and consciousness.

We can and do measure intelligence and consciousness. We have many good examples of both in human affairs.That experience can be used to determine the existence of intelligence and consciousness in other cases. But we have to first know what is possible *without* such intelligence to compare.
 
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