Posted on 06/23/2003 11:36:57 AM PDT by yonif
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A nuclear physicist clarifies some of the most commonly asked questions about the Jewish approach to science.
Here are the most frequently asked questions, and the answers I give "while standing on one foot." For the two-footed answers, refer to my books, "Genesis and the Big Bang" (Bantam Doubleday), "The Science of God" (Free Press) and "The Hidden Face of God" (Free Press).
It took an Einstein to discover how "ages" could be squeezed into a day. The laws of relativity taught the world that the passage of time and the perception of time's flow varies from place to place in our most amazing universe. One minute on the sun passes more slowly. The duration -- between the ticks of a clock, the beats of a heart, the time to ripen oranges -- stretches and shrinks. Wherever you are, time seems normal, because your body is in tune with your local environment. Only when looking across boundaries from one location relative to another very different location can we observe the relativity of time. If you cannot understand how this can be, do not despair. Most of the 5 billion inhabitants of planet Earth are in a similar quandary. We look back in time, studying the history of the universe. From our vantage we find, correctly, that billions of years have passed. But the Sages told us that the Bible sees the six days of Genesis looking forward from the beginning. Viewing the six days from that beginning holds the answer to how our generations fit into those days. The universe we live in is not static. It is expanding. The space of the universe is actually stretching. If we took a mental trip back in time, sending our information back to the moment from which Genesis views time, the effect of our mental trip would be to pass to a time when the universe was vastly smaller, in fact a million-million times smaller than it is today. Space would have shrunk a million-millionfold. This huge compression of space would equally compress the perception of time for any series of events. That's because as the string of information that described those events traveled back in time, the space through which it was passing was shrinking, squeezing the data ever closer together. To calculate the effect of that million-million compression, divide the 15 billion years we observe looking back in time by the million-million. You get six days. Which of course is just what the first chapter of Genesis has been claiming for the past 3,300 years. Genesis and science tell the same account, but seen from vastly different perspectives. * * *
Still, young children get multiple sclerosis and earthquakes cause buildings to topple and crush the innocent. The same God that streaks the sky with a rainbow of red at sunrise and produces the beauty of a flower must also be connected to these horrors. Although we may see it as unfortunate, bad things happening to good people is consistent with the biblical description of God's role in the world. By chapter four, Cain has murdered Abel. According to the Bible, Abel was the good guy. God had accepted his special offering while rejecting Cain's run-of-the-mill sacrifice. God had the power to prevent Abel's murder but chose not to. Isaiah hints at why: "I am the Eternal, there is no other. I make light and create darkness. I make peace and create evil" (Isaiah 45:6,7). God, the infinite source of light, creates darkness by withdrawing some of the light. Similarly God, the infinite source of peace, creates evil by shielding a portion of the peace. The biblical definition of creation is the partial withdrawal of God's presence. God pulls back, and in so doing creates the universe with its laws of nature. For the most part, nature takes its natural course. Only when events get way off course does the Bible recount that God steps in and overrides nature. A natural-looking world is an essential part of the biblical game plan of life, namely the exercising of our free will. "I call to you witness today the heavens and the earth, I have placed life and death before you, the blessing and the curse. Therefore choose life so that you may live, you and your progeny" (Deut. 30:19). If humans are to have the will to choose freely, the world must look natural. A natural world has radiation which produces crippling mutations and earthquakes which crush the innocent. * * *
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The plot was that while developing the atomic bomb, Israel
discovered that a moving (bomb, missle, arty warhead,)
fission device can't work.
The US, of course, already knew, and was faking having workable nukes.
Of course science is compatible with the bible. The catch is, only God knows how. We know what he wants us to know and discover.
(steely)
And the evidence for this is...?
Earth existed long before there was a history.
I assume you meant
"The universe existed long before there was an Earth?"
Does that help?
BTW - there are a number of thread where I have offered extensive comment. But those usually are done from home where I have more time to thoughtfully contribute.
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