The measure of GOD

Quote from nitro:

"A scientist once visited the offices of the great Nobel Prize-winning physicist Neils Bohr in Copenhagen, and was amazed to find a horseshoe was nailed to the wall over his desk, so he said to Bohr: 'Surely you don't believe that horseshoe will bring you good luck, do you Professor Bohr?' Bohr replied: 'I believe no such thing, my good friend. Not at all. I am scarcely likely to believe in foolish nonsense. However, I am told that a horseshoe will bring you good luck whether you believe it or not! How can one argue with such logic?'

:D

i don't understand it? what's the portentous message? :confused:
 
Quote from killthesunshine:

i don't understand it? what's the portentous message? :confused:

"Insist on yourself; never imitate. ... Shakespeare will never be made by the study of Shakespeare" - Ralph Waldo Emerson
 
Quote from nitro:

"Insist on yourself; never imitate. ... Shakespeare will never be made by the study of Shakespeare" - Ralph Waldo Emerson

insist on yourself for what.. reliable knowledge? truth?

:confused:
 
Quote from killthesunshine:

insist on yourself for what.. reliable knowledge? truth?

:confused:
LOL.

Longshot. It's Saturday. Go out on campus, find a pretty girl, talk to her.

I used to go to a bookstore on Berkeley campus, arrrg, I forget the name, probably still there. Near there is a coffee shop with lots of conversations going on.

You could buy "Either/Or" and then go to the coffee shop and read it. Who knows maybe some pretty girl will strike a conversation about Kierkegaard with you. You could tell her that you are reading Either/Or, but that your favorite Kierkegaard writings are the ones on women. The rest is up to you.
 
Quote from nitro:

...A proton has three "cores" as far as we can tell, the two up quarks and one down quark. ...
I just realized this is incorrect. I did not take into account the virtual "cloud" that surround all "real" constituents of matter.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_particle

I don't really know how many there are or how, if they are long lived enough, aid in computation, but it is very conceivable that the number is enormous, and perhaps this virtual cloud can be tapped into and made into a virtual computational cloud. So a proton may have access to 100 trillion quantum computational-cores for a fleeting amount of time for all I know.

[I don't really understand virtual particles. It seems as if they are concoction to plug gaps in our understanding. For example, it is hard for me to distinguish between a virtual particle and the underlying quantum field that governs the physics that real particles obey. It could be that the entire universe is nothing more than the a virtual particle event that created virtual matter anti-matter pairs, and the "real" particles that are left over are statistical manifestations that for every 1000 anti-matter particles created at creation, 1001 matter particles were created. The matter/anti-matter asymmetry is another mystery]
 
Quote from nitro:

... We call them the "Laws of Physics", but who wrote it?
I should have been more careful when I wrote this. The current thinking is that the laws of physics are nothing more than what is forced upon physicists when you make the models "point of view invariant"

http://www.colorado.edu/philosophy/vstenger/Nothing/Laws.pdf

So in essence, this says that all of physics is essentially dimensional analysis and conversion factors, a very powerful view that gives me pause in the "ordered universe argument for a creationist GOD" argument.
 
No, measuring an omnipotent God is not possible using limited instrumentation.

What about that equation doesn't make sense?


Quote from killthesunshine:

i've been thinking you can't measure an omnipotent being. the very definition precludes scientific investigation doesn't it :confused:
 
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