Yerda
Veteran Member
I was trying to be funny.I'm not sure what point you are trying to make. Sure, we have a legend that Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead and most people are familiar with this story. So? And?
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I was trying to be funny.I'm not sure what point you are trying to make. Sure, we have a legend that Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead and most people are familiar with this story. So? And?
I got it, I got it!I was trying to be funny.
It is a simple FACT that water does not contain the necessary atoms to reconstruct as wine. In order to turn water into wine, you would literally have to tear apart the water atoms into their subatomic particles and form entirely different atoms, and this technology does not exist. It may never exist. Even if we START OFF with a buttload of subatomic particles, we can't combine them into atoms.
And you are making the argument that we don't know everything so anything is possible, it is a bad variation on the argument from ignorance when the possible is a 2000 year old myth from a book that is literally wrong about just about everything in nature. As a moral story it is fine, but as science, not so much.You're making an argument that's perfectly sound within the context you're making it. It's similar to aboriginals arguing among themselves about them white fellers claiming the I-phone was made with nothing other than what's found on planet earth.
"Yit Yit. You ever in all your journeys found anything from which that tool could be made"?
"No."
"Case closed. Them white fellers messin wit us."
The point isn't that your logic and knowledge are flawed. They clearly aren't. But just as even someone as brilliant as Albert Einstein would never have believed some of the miracles of quantum physics (since they're impossible in the classical model) so too, you're merely making the assumption that the facts you state ---correctly mind you ----hold true on a scale that simply isn't the case. You're error, like the error of all of us, is assuming, like the aborigines, that our own own knowledge base circumscribes reality to a level that it doesn't. Atoms, and the laws of physics, are constructs that make sense of things as we now have the ability to perceive them. Beyond what we perceive is a multilayered reality we could never imagine.
The picture of science of which I have so far only hinted may be sketched as follows. There is a reality behind the world as it appears to us, possibly a many-layered reality, of which the appearances are the outermost layers. What the great scientist does is boldly to guess, daringly to conjecture, what these inner realities are like. This is akin to myth making.Popper Selections, p. 122.
John
Quantum physics is the perfect example. According to classical physics, say Einstein's General Relativity, faster-than-light travel and or communication is as impossible as turning water to wine. The laws of physics prove it's utterly impossible without shattering everything we know to be true. Einstein was initially as doubtful concerning many of the revelation of quantum physics as you are about the revelation that water was in fact turned into wine as was recorded to have occurred at Cana. Unfortunately, we now know faster-than-light communication can, does, occur. Repeated scientific experimentation has proven that.
Ironically, and to the point of this message, the evolution of science that led to the shattering of the belief in classical physics (faster-than-light communication, and such) came about when a Christian thinker (Bishop Berkeley) confounded his scientific-minded contemporaries with annoyingly logical treatises on why a chair doesn't exist when someone who does exist isn't looking at it. Dozens of our greatest scientists to include Einstein himself have remark that there's little doubt that Berkeley's treatises, with Kant's own Christian idealism, led, eventually, to the revelations of quantum physics.
The point isn't that your logic and knowledge are flawed. They clearly aren't. But just as even someone as brilliant as Albert Einstein would never have believed some of the miracles of quantum physics (since they're impossible in the classical model) so too, you're merely making the assumption that the facts you state ---correctly mind you ----hold true on a scale that simply isn't the case. You're error, like the error of all of us, is assuming, like the aborigines, that our own own knowledge base circumscribes reality to a level that it doesn't. Atoms, and the laws of physics, are constructs that make sense of things as we now have the ability to perceive them. Beyond what we perceive is a multilayered reality we could never imagine.
Another thing Is in Quantum Field Theory (QFT) - the Quantum Entanglement.
From I am able to grasp so far about QFT, the most fundamental things in the universe, more fundamental than the quantum particles, lIke quarks, neutrinos, gluons, photons, Higgs boson, etc, is quantum fields. Quantum fields exist everywhere including in the vacuum, and everything are made of quantum fields, including those subatomic particles I have just mentioned.
The point is that Quantum Entanglement (which is based on the 1935 paper - the EPR Paradox, named after Einstein, Boris Podolsky & Nathan Rosen) stated that certain particles can vibrate certain way, say an electron or a quark on one location, other particles on the other side of planet will vibrate at the same time. That would be faster than speed of light. While experiments have verified that Quantum Entanglement is scientifically true, and there have been active researches to use this science in communication that are faster than speed of light, every efforts have failed.
You keep talking about faster-than-light communication, but none of that support Jesus’ miracle, because they are completely unrelated, so that make your argument & points irrelevant & useless, as even if faster-than-light communication were even possible, that still won’t turn water into wine.
And you are making the argument that we don't know everything so anything is possible, . . .
it is a bad variation on the argument from ignorance when the possible is a 2000 year old myth from a book that is literally wrong about just about everything in nature. As a moral story it is fine, but as science, not so much.
Yup and one of those is that turning water into wine actually happened.I don't think anything and everything are possible. I merely believe that just as has been occurring for thousands of years, things believed to be impossible, turn out to be quite possible as knowledge and reality evolve.
The Bible isn't wrong about anything. Various interpretations of the Bible are wrong about almost everything.
John
QM isn't something I know an awful lot about but I think you might be making a couple of errors here. There is a correlation in the measurements we make on entangled pairs. But neither of us can know the outcomes before we measure and we can't send a message to each other faster than light to each other to say we have made a measurement so no instantaneous signal, I'm afraid.In experiments like the Aspect experiment, researchers can make a change to a photon that's entangled with another photon and the change they make will occur to the entangled photon instantaneously no matter how far away it is. That's faster-than-light communication since if someone light years away has access to a photon entangled with one on earth, then a change to the photon on earth can be a communicative signal to the person observing the entangled photon on a planet light years away. The scientists on earth can send a communicative signal instantaneously to someone light years away so long as the receiver of the signal has the ability to observe the photon entangled with the one on earth.
No, that is wrong. There is no *change*. There is correlation of results. It is impossible, looking at only one side, to see a difference of results, no matter what the other side does. That means that no communication is possible. Instead, when the results of the two sides are brought together, it is found that the results are correlated.In experiments like the Aspect experiment, researchers can make a change to a photon that's entangled with another photon and the change they make will occur to the entangled photon instantaneously no matter how far away it is.
No, it cannot. Both sides get results that look completely random no matter what the other side does. It is only when the results are brought together that the correlation reveals itself.That's faster-than-light communication since if someone light years away has access to a photon entangled with one on earth, then a change to the photon on earth can be a communicative signal to the person observing the entangled photon on a planet light years away.
Sorry, but you are wrong on this. But the physics is clear and well documented (yes, even in Aspect's experiment). Communication faster than light is impossible in quantum mechanics.The scientists on earth can send a communicative signal instantaneously to someone light years away so long as the receiver of the signal has the ability to observe the photon entangled with the one on earth.
John
QM isn't something I know an awful lot about but I think you might be making a couple of errors here. There is a correlation in the measurements we make on entangled pairs. But neither of us can know the outcomes before we measure and we can't send a message to each other faster than light to each other to say we have made a measurement so no instantaneous signal, I'm afraid.
One of the people on here who know more about QM could probably explain this better. @Polymath257 @exchemist
Jesus willed that water be turned to wine as he yielded to his mother's desires. To us it was a miracle, but to the celestial beings at his disposal they used natural processes, so it wasn't a miracle to them!This thread is about whether such a miracle can occur naturally, or whether it is story invented by a person who has no understanding of how wine are made.
In the gospel of John, John 2 narrated that Jesus attended the wedding at Cana, where they have no wedding feast have no wine. So Jesus made wine, by turning water into wine.
Other than John, the other 3 gospels make no mention of this event.
You will have to ask yourself, can this miracle happen? Can water possibly turn into wine, or is this just a story, another parable or allegory? Or is it fairytale or myth, where the supernatural (like magic) is possible?
From my perspective, and my understanding of chemistry, this cannot be possible, let alone probable. This would only be possible if you believe in miracle, a supernatural occurrence. That's just simply blind faith, a conviction that the story is true.
People have been making wine, as far back as the Neolithic period, as well as the later periods (Bronze Age, Iron Age).
To understand wine making, you have to realize water are just basically molecule of 2 hydrogen atoms bonded to 1 oxygen atom.
But of course, there are type of water may have salt (eg sea water) and all sort of minerals (hence today, we can buy and drink mineral water). Plus, instead of the normal hydrogen atoms, it could be its isotope - deuterium, where the water known as "heavy water".
My point is that none of these types of water can turn into wine.
Wine required not only grapes, it also take time to turn grape juice and fermented the natural sugar in the grape into alcohol, and this chemical reaction can only occur if there are yeasts. That's how fermentation work for any alcoholic drinks (eg wine, beer, brandy, mead, etc).
Yeasts that what would turn sugar into alcohol, yeasts are actually unicellular fungi, more specifically
Fermentation is what distinguish wine from fruit juice.
So not only you would need grapes, you would need yeasts, to make wine.
Wine don't naturally come from water. Water has no grape juice, no sugar, no alcohol.
So Jesus' miracle a myth, or do you still think that water can turn into wine?
Agree...disagree. Your thoughts please.
" hold true on a scale that isn't the case"You're making an argument that's perfectly sound within the context you're making it. It's similar to aboriginals arguing among themselves about them white fellers claiming the I-phone was made with nothing other than what's found on planet earth.
"Yit Yit. You ever in all your journeys found anything from which that tool could be made"?
"No."
"Case closed. Them white fellers messin wit us."
The point isn't that your logic and knowledge are flawed. They clearly aren't. But just as even someone as brilliant as Albert Einstein would never have believed some of the miracles of quantum physics (since they're impossible in the classical model) so too, you're merely making the assumption that the facts you state ---correctly mind you ----hold true on a scale that simply isn't the case. You're error, like the error of all of us, is assuming, like the aborigines, that our own own knowledge base circumscribes reality to a level that it doesn't. Atoms, and the laws of physics, are constructs that make sense of things as we now have the ability to perceive them. Beyond what we perceive is a multilayered reality we could never imagine.
The picture of science of which I have so far only hinted may be sketched as follows. There is a reality behind the world as it appears to us, possibly a many-layered reality, of which the appearances are the outermost layers. What the great scientist does is boldly to guess, daringly to conjecture, what these inner realities are like. This is akin to myth making.Popper Selections, p. 122.
John
It wasn't science or a miracle.Jesus willed that water be turned to wine as he yielded to his mother's desires. To us it was a miracle, but to the celestial beings at his disposal they used natural processes, so it wasn't a miracle to them!
Natural science was used.
Because I want to believe the stories in my book that make me feel good." hold true on a scale that isn't the case"
IOW you believe in magic and assert its real
Refined further its just self indulgenceBecause I want to believe the stories in my book that make me feel good.
Like reading Playboy for the articles.Refined further its just self indulgence
I had to look up that cultural referenceLike reading Playboy for the articles.
QM isn't something I know an awful lot about but I think you might be making a couple of errors here. There is a correlation in the measurements we make on entangled pairs. But neither of us can know the outcomes before we measure and we can't send a message to each other faster than light to each other to say we have made a measurement so no instantaneous signal, I'm afraid.