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The Big Bang and the Big Question: A Universe without God?
Aish ^ | Lawrence Kelemen

Posted on 06/23/2003 11:31:49 AM PDT by yonif

Aish.com http://www.aish.com/societywork/sciencenature/The_Big_Bang_and_the_Big_Question_A_Universe_without_God$.asp

The Big Bang and the Big Question: A Universe without God?
by Lawrence Kelemen

The history of scientific search for the origins of the Universe gives us permission to believe in God.

Until the early twentieth century, astronomers entertained three possible models of the universe:

1. The universe could be static.

According to this theory, though the mutual gravitational attractions of stars and planets might hold them together in the form of solar systems and galaxies, each of these stellar-terrestrial groups slide through space along its own random trajectory, unrelated to the courses tracked by other groups of stars and planets.

The static model works for atheists and believers: Such a universe could have been created by God at some point in history, but it also could have existed forever without God.

2. The universe could be oscillating.

It might be a cosmic balloon alternately expanding and contracting. For a few billion years it would inflate, expanding into absolute nothingness. But the gravitational attraction of every star and planet pulling on every other would eventually slow this expansion until the whole process would reverse and the balloon would come crashing back in upon itself. All that existed would eventually smash together at the universe's center, releasing huge amounts of heat and light, spewing everything back out in all directions and beginning the expansion phase all over again.

Such a universe could also have been created by God or could have existed forever without God.

3. Finally, the universe could be open.

It might be a cosmic balloon that never implodes. If the total gravitational attraction of all stars and planets could not halt the initial expansion, as in the oscillating model, the universe would spill out into nothingness forever. Eventually the stars would burn out and a curtain of frozen darkness would enshroud all existence. Such a universe could never bring itself back to life. It would come into existence at a moment in history, blaze gloriously, and then pass into irrevocable night.

Crucially, the latter model proposes that before the one-time explosion, all the universe's matter and energy was contained in a singularity, a tiny dot that sat stable in space for eternity before it detonated.

This model proposes a paradox: Objects at rest -- like the initial singularity -- remain at rest unless acted upon by an outside force; and yet, since the initial dot contained all matter and energy, nothing (at least, nothing natural) existed outside of this singularity that could have caused it to explode.

The simplest resolution of the paradox is to posit that something supernatural kicked the universe into being. The open model of the universe thus implies a supernatural Creator -- a God.

THE THEORY OF RELATIVITY

In 1916 Albert Einstein released the first drafts of his general theory of relativity, and the scientific world went wild. It appeared that Einstein had revealed the deepest secrets of the universe. His equations also caused a few problems -- technical dilemmas, mathematical snags -- but not the sort of thing to interest newspapers or even popular science journals.

Two scientists noticed the glitches. Late in 1917 the Danish astronomer Willem de Sitter reviewed general relativity and returned a detailed response to Einstein, outlining the problem and proposing a radical solution: general relativity could work only if the entire universe was exploding, erupting out in all directions from a central point.

Einstein never responded to de Sitter's critique. Then, in 1922, Soviet mathematician Alexander Friedmann independently derived de Sitter's solution. If Einstein was right, Friedmann predicted, the universe must be expanding in all directions at high speed.

Meanwhile, across the sea, American astronomer Vesto Slipher actually witnessed the universe's explosive outward movement. Using the powerful telescope at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, Slipher discovered that dozens of galaxies were indeed rocketing away from a central point.

Between 1918 and 1922, de Sitter, Friedmann, and Slipher independently shared their findings with Einstein, but he strangely resisted their solution -- as if, in his brilliance, he realized the theological implications of an exploding universe.

Einstein even wrote a letter to Zeitschrift fur Physik, a prestigious technical journal, calling Friedmann's suggestions "suspicious," and to de Sitter Einstein jotted a note, "This circumstance [of an expanding universe] irritates me." In another note, Einstein reassured one of his colleagues, "I have not yet fallen in the hands of priests," a veiled reference to de Sitter, Friedmann, and Slipher.

THE HUBBLE DISCOVERY

In 1925, the American astronomer Edwin Hubble dealt the static model of the universe a fatal blow. Using what was then the largest telescope in the world, Hubble revealed that every galaxy within 6 x 1017 miles of the Earth was receding.

Einstein tenaciously refused to acknowledge Hubble's work. He continued teaching the static model for five more years, until, at Hubble's request, he traveled from Berlin to Pasadena to personally examine the evidence. At the trip's conclusion, Einstein reluctantly admitted, "New observations by Hubble ... make it appear likely that the general structure of the universe is not static."

Einstein died in 1955, swayed but still not fully convinced that the universe was expanding.

THE SOUND OF THE BIG BANG

Ten years later, in 1965, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson were calibrating a supersensitive microwave detector at Bell Telephone Laboratories in New Jersey. No matter where the two scientists aimed the instrument, it picked up the same unidentified background noise -- a steady, three-degree Kelvin (3K) hum. On a hunch, the two Bell Labs employees looked over an essay on general relativity by a student of Alexander Friedmann. The essay predicted that the remnants of the universe's most recent explosion should be detectable in the form of weak microwave radiation, "around 5K or thereabouts."

The two scientists realized they had discovered the echo of the biggest explosion in history: "the Big Bang." For this discovery, Penzias and Wilson received the Nobel Prize.

The discovery of the "3K hum" undermined the static model of the universe. There were only two models left: one that worked without God and one that did not.

The last issue to be settled was: Had the primordial universe exploded an infinite number of times (the oscillating model) or only once (the open model)?

Researchers knew the issue could be settled by determining the average density of the universe. If the universe contained the equivalent of about one hydrogen atom per ten cubic feet of space, then the gravitational attraction among all the universe's particles would be strong enough to stop and reverse the expansion. Eventually there would be a "big crunch," which would lead to another big bang (and then to another big crunch, etc.). If, on the other hand, the universe contained less than this density, then the big bang's explosive force would overcome all the gravitational pulls, and everything would sail out into nothingness forever.

THE PANIC AND ITS RESOLUTION

Curiously, the death of the static model inspired panic in many quarters of the scientific world. Mathematicians, physicists, and astronomers joined forces to prove the eternity of the universe.

Dr. Robert Jastrow, arguably the greatest astrophysicist of the time and director of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Goddard Center for Space Studies, was named head of the research project. For fifteen years Jastrow and his team tried to demonstrate the validity of the oscillating model, but the data told a different story.

In 1978 Jastrow released NASA's definitive report, shocking the public with his announcement that the open model was probably correct. On June 25 of that year, Jastrow wrote about his findings to the New York Times Magazine:

This is an exceedingly strange development, unexpected by all but the theologians. They have always accepted the word of the Bible: "In the beginning God created heaven and earth." ... [But] for the scientist who has lived by his faith in the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream. He has scaled the mountains of ignorance; he is about to conquer the highest peak; [and] as he pulls himself over the final rock, he is greeted by a band of theologians who have been sitting there for centuries.

Dr. James Trefil, a physicist at the University of Virginia, independently confirmed Jastrow's discovery in 1983. Drs. John Barrow, an astronomer at the University of Sussex, and Frank Tipler, a mathematician and physicist at Tulane University, published similar results in 1986.

GENESIS CONFIRMED

At the 1990 meeting of the American Astronomical Society, Professor John Mather of Columbia University, an astrophysicist who also serves on the staff of NASA's Goddard Center, presented "the most dramatic support ever" for an open universe.

According to the Boston Globe reporter covering the conference, Mather's keynote address was greeted with thunderous applause, which led the meeting's chairman, Dr. Geoffrey Burbridge, to comment: "It seems clear that the audience is in favor of the book of Genesis - at least, the first verse or so, which seems to have been confirmed."

In 1998, Drs. Ruth Daly, Erick Guerra, and Lin Wan of Princeton University announced to the American Astronomical Society, "We can state with 97.5 percent confidence that the universe will continue to expand forever."

Later that year, Dr. Allan Sandage, a world-renowned astrophysicist on the staff of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, was quoted in The New Republic saying, "The big bang is best understood as a miracle triggered by some kind of transcendent power."

Newsweek columnist George Will began his November 9, 1998, column with this quip: "Soon the American Civil Liberties Union or People for the American Way, or some similar faction of litigious secularism, will file suit against NASA, charging that the Hubble Space Telescope unconstitutionally gives comfort to the religiously inclined."

PERMISSION TO BELIEVE

The same year, Newsweek reported a recent and unexpected swing of opinion among the once passionately agnostic: "Forty percent of American scientists now believe in a personal God - not merely an ineffable power and presence in the world, but a deity to whom they can pray."

There are, of course, mathematicians, physicists, astronomers, and cosmologists who choose not to believe in God today. For a variety of reasons, they choose instead to have faith that new natural laws will be discovered or that new evidence will appear and overturn the current model of an open, created universe.

But for many in the scientific community, the evidence is persuasive. For many, modern cosmology offers permission to believe.

LAWRENCE KELEMEN is the author of Permission to Believe: Four Rational Approaches to God's Existence (Targum/Feldheim, 1990) and Permission to Receive: Four Rational Approaches to the Torah's Divine Origin (Targum Press, 1996). He studied at U.C.L.A., Yeshiva University of Los Angeles, and Harvard University. He was also a downhill skiing instructor on the staff of the Mammoth Mountain Ski School in California and served as news director and anchorman for KMMT-FM radio station. Currently he teaches medieval and modern Jewish philosophy at Neve Yerushalayim College of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem.

Jewish Matters This essay is excerpted from "Jewish Matters: A pocketbook of knowledge and inspiration." "Jewish Matters" includes short essays on topics from relationships, prayer, happiness, and Shabbat, written by top male and female educators from around the world. Deep, funny, and fascinating, "JM" is available in Jewish bookstores, and on Amazon.com , and Chapters.ca. More information and excerpts can be seen at www.jewishmatters.com.

Author Biography:
Lawrence Kelemen is Professor of Education at Neve Yerushalayim College of Jewish Studies for Women in Jerusalem. He is the author of Permission to Believe and Permission to Receive; and his most recent book, To Kindle a Soul: Ancient Wisdom for Modern Parents and Teachers, was recently ranked the 48th best-selling book in the United States. His website is www.lawrencekelemen.com


This article can also be read at: http://www.aish.com/societywork/sciencenature/The_Big_Bang_and_the_Big_Question_A_Universe_without_God$.asp



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TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: bigbang; colossalcrash; crevolist; steadystate; stephenhawking; stringtheory
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To: js1138
From the point of view of science it makes no difference if the universe was created last Thursday,

Whaddya mean if?
41 posted on 06/23/2003 1:20:21 PM PDT by Dimensio (Sometimes I doubt your committment to Sparkle Motion!)
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To: Physicist
Saying "God" may be a short answer, but a simple one? Only to a simpleton.

This depends on how "God" is defined. I've actually seen some people try to define "God" as all of the unknowns in the universe. With this definition, it's incredibly simple because this "God" exists so long as something within the universe is unknown. Of course, this definition is totally worthless and misleading, and it implies no special qualities of this "God", including sentience. Of course, this person then tried to equivocate this definition of "God" with the Christian one, wherein he instantly invoked the equivocation fallacy and destroyed his argument. It is not a "simple" explanation to use the lack of absolute knowledge of the workings of the universe as "evidence" for the existence of the Christian God (or any specific deity, for that matter). That's an assertion without any foundation in logic.
42 posted on 06/23/2003 1:23:52 PM PDT by Dimensio (Sometimes I doubt your committment to Sparkle Motion!)
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To: RRWCC
Sorry, I would think that the existance of God would directly relate to evolution.

Well, you would think incorrectly, then.

Particularly, as the discussion related to the Genesis

I didn't see how the article was trying to support a literal interpretation of Genesis. I'll reread it to see if such an implication is there.
43 posted on 06/23/2003 1:25:33 PM PDT by Dimensio (Sometimes I doubt your committment to Sparkle Motion!)
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To: this_old_man_101
"If there need be a creator, the same question applies to that creator--where did the matter or energy (or whatever) come from to create the creator? If you say the creator was always there, then why cannot that same answer apply to the universe."

Not true in the eternal sense - it's only true in the physical realm which we're confined.

Genesis Ch. 1 V. 1 "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth."

This beginning is that of our Universe and not that of the Creator. He told Moses through the burning bush "I AM THAT I AM" revealing His constant, unchanging nature.

Time had no meaning until the Sovereign placed the Universe into existence, and as thus the Creator is not bound to the laws of the Universe, but the Universe to the laws of its Creator.

There's an often overlooked verse in Ecclesiastes Ch 3 that says "That which hath been is now; and that which is to be hath already been; and God requireth that which is past.", which reveals to us that time is not in linear form, but in a comprehensive form to the Creator. IOW, similar to the saying "on the outside looking in."

44 posted on 06/23/2003 1:26:03 PM PDT by azhenfud
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To: showme_the_Glory
Based of the facts that one theory ends in death, and one perpetuates life, I choose life. Thank you Jesus.

Ah, argument from wishful thinking. Not a common fallacy, because most people realise right away that it is totally devoid of logic.
45 posted on 06/23/2003 1:27:10 PM PDT by Dimensio (Sometimes I doubt your committment to Sparkle Motion!)
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To: yonif
I think theory #3 is correct, and was proven several months ago. Correct me if I'm wrong.
46 posted on 06/23/2003 1:27:56 PM PDT by Capitalism2003
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To: TonyRo76
Of course this thread will probably be deluged with evolutionist zealots attacking you

Nothing in his article addresses evolution. I don't see why you think that it would be a target for such an attack.
47 posted on 06/23/2003 1:28:32 PM PDT by Dimensio (Sometimes I doubt your committment to Sparkle Motion!)
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To: Dimensio
I forgot you were tha founding prophet of Last Thursdayism. Sorry.
48 posted on 06/23/2003 1:28:39 PM PDT by js1138
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To: Dimensio
I can't go in depth since Missler's program is 1/2 hour and very generalized thinking today by way of introducing his topic. He dealt primarily with the expanding universe and the scientific studies that proved this. He goes on that by very nature of an expanding universe suggests that the universe is finite, having a beginning and an end. Further, the topic dealt with energy, matter, space and time being measured and thereby related. For 1/2 hour program, that's all I can remember of relevance. He'll be on tomorrow for further listening. As a matter of fact he'll be on tonight at 5:00 p.m. replaying this morning's 8:00 a.m. program.
49 posted on 06/23/2003 1:31:19 PM PDT by lilylangtree
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To: js1138
I forgot you were tha founding prophet of Last Thursdayism. Sorry.

That honour goes to the fortunate slave of Queen Maeve, Michael Keene. I am but a humble servant of the feline race.
50 posted on 06/23/2003 1:32:25 PM PDT by Dimensio (Sometimes I doubt your committment to Sparkle Motion!)
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To: this_old_man_101
That's kind of an old question that sort of makes sense on a shallow human level. No one can really fathom eternity. So the question is understandable. But it's somewhat shallow. It says that if one cannot figure it all out and apply the same consistent reasoning to how man or God got here then we should reject the concept that the universe was created.

We can not understand God or comment on his origin. We cannot even understand the creation much less the creator. So first things first. But we can comment on what we observe and what has been observed by others. I don't need to know why the sky is blue or came to be blue to know that it is blue.

God is spirit and man is matter. In the universe we observe the result of intelligent design that is so obvious even we humans can observe it. In fact the designs are so blatant it's as if the creator wanted us to see them once we matured as a people to some level. We also have evidence of God's direct interaction with us via OT prophets and Jesus Christ.

On the nature of God Himself all we have are the scriptures which reveal much about God's personality and character and point out that God eternal and timeless. As a Clint Eastwood character once said, "a man has to know his limitations".
51 posted on 06/23/2003 1:32:52 PM PDT by plain talk
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To: yonif
Both Risen Apes and Fallen Angles have an origin. Whether a big or little bang answers the question of that origin is in the end relative only to the size of the universe.

No matter how much knowledge we gain, Doubt is central to Faith because until the end of time, man will remain the only creature who has the power to define himself for himself.

Things would be so much easier if Eve had never bit the apple...Knowledge and choice can be cruel masters.

52 posted on 06/23/2003 1:38:48 PM PDT by Van Jenerette (Our Republic...If We Can Keep It!)
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To: Noachian
Dear Abby,
Once upon a nothing
Something blew apart?
I'm just a big bang nothing?
But wow, what interesting parts!
Confused
53 posted on 06/23/2003 1:54:19 PM PDT by kkindt (knightforhire.com)
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To: Dimensio
The wishful thinking could be in reverse? Wishing there weren't a Creator to whom you are responsible? Not so?

Wishful thinking doesn't mean something is not true - or else what about you?

You surely don't wish there is a God to whom you must pray and to whom you are responsible, do you? SO you wish the opposite - so you can be supposedly free to be whatever you want to be.
54 posted on 06/23/2003 1:57:07 PM PDT by kkindt (knightforhire.com)
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To: yonif
Faith, Hope and Love. The greatest of these 3 is Love.

The big three that supply a stumbling block to rational explanations.

55 posted on 06/23/2003 1:58:59 PM PDT by VRWC_minion (Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and most are right)
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To: Dimensio
You'll be taking your logic to your grave. Logic and truth are not one in the same. I'll stick with my choice. Have a nice logical life here on earth. I hope to meet you in heaven.
56 posted on 06/23/2003 2:00:58 PM PDT by showme_the_Glory (No more rhyming, and I mean it! ..Anybody got a peanut.....)
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To: Dimensio
My apologies. Wrong place, wrong time.

I'm out of this one...
57 posted on 06/23/2003 2:06:18 PM PDT by RRWCC (Even under a good king, a subject is still a subject.)
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To: RightWhale
And this discontinuity came from what.....?
58 posted on 06/23/2003 2:07:03 PM PDT by mdmathis6
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To: mdmathis6
this discontinuity came from what.....?

Sorry, sonny.

.

It's turtles,

.

all

.

the

.

way

.

down.

59 posted on 06/23/2003 2:19:43 PM PDT by RightWhale (gazing at shadows)
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To: Russell Scott
"One irony of this painstakingly cautious approach is that ... naturalism may die of natural causes --- before ID advocates reach steps two or three. In the upper echelons of research and scholarship, naturalistic theories’ frailty is more and more freely acknowledged. Even if ID proponents do nothing to expose the inadequacies and inconsistencies of its explanation for the cosmos and life, naturalism may self-destruct."

"Winning the argument for design without identifying the designer yields, at best, a sketchy origins model. Such a model makes little if any positive impact on the community of scientists and other scholars. Such a model does not lend itself to verification, nor can it make specific, credible predictions. On both counts, scholars, particularly scientists, would be reluctant to acknowledge the concept’s viability and give it serious attention. Nor does this approach offer them spiritual direction."

"As I speak on university campuses and elsewhere, I see a larger challenge to Christianity than naturalism: the challenge of a vague or idiosyncratic spirituality, faith detached from objective truth and legitimate spiritual authority. In fact, virtually all forms of spirituality except Christianity seem in vogue with the new “spiritual” people, who tend to be less receptive than nontheists to the Christian gospel. In other words, leading a nontheist to a belief in an “intelligent designer” could do more spiritual harm than good."

60 posted on 06/23/2003 2:24:08 PM PDT by f.Christian (( I'm going to rechristen evolution, in honor of f.Christian, "shlockology"... HumanaeVitae ))
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