Posts Tagged ‘creation’

The Last Question

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

A Univac computer at the Census Bureau.

A Univac computer at the Census Bureau.

The most wicked show I ever saw was not in a theatre or on TV. It was at a planetarium. Highly touted in the press, the presentation was Isaac Asimov’s short story “The Last Question.”

The question, asked of a colossal computer named Multivac, was whether or not entropy could be reversed (and life continue). Multivac answered, “INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR MEANINGFUL ANSWER.”

Over trillions of years mankind fills not only our home galaxy but all the galaxies of the universe. Future generations ask the question again and again of Multivac’s successors which have more and more intelligence. Before the last man fuses with Multivac which has now become Cosmic-AC, he asks the question again and AC replies, “THERE IS AS YET INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR A MEANINGFUL ANSWER.”

The story ends this way:

The consciousness of AC encompassed all of what had once been a Universe and brooded over what was now Chaos. Step by step, it must be done.

And AC said, “LET THERE BE LIGHT!”

And there was light –

Humans have a tendency to make gods of created things and of what their hands have made. This tendency is aptly illustrated in Asimov’s story and in reader’s/viewer’s reactions to it. Despite gross scientific inaccuracies,* the story receives raves across the web. Readers revel in its blasphemy. One declared “I have found a new religion.” Some acknowledge that seeing this show led them to embrace atheism.

In “The Thinking Machine,” an Asimov essay which corresponds to this story, he declared that the only difference between a computer and the human brain is complexity. Evidently he also believes that the only difference between God the Creator and a computer is an even higher level of complexity. In his “wisdom,” he reached the pantheistic religious position that the totality of the universe itself is god.

I consider “The Last Question” the most wicked show I’ve seen because it directly, willfully defies the first and second commandments, “You shall have no other gods before me,” and “you shall not make for yourself an idol.” Fancy throwing away faith on untenable hypotheses such as hyperspace and the non-existence of spirit.


*For example, Asimov declares all galaxies are the same and inhabitable; they are not; and at the rate they are stretching apart many will not even be visible from ours on a time scale far shorter than his story encompasses.

Seen and Unseen

Sunday, April 12th, 2009
Big Bang

Is the Big Bang one line of evidence confirming the Bible's assertion that things seen were made from nothing visible?

Christian theologians often state that God created the cosmos ex-nihilo: that is to say, out of nothing. The Bible actually says something slightly different. It says God created the things we can see out of nothing visible (Hebrews 11:3). This may seem like a minor quibble, but to me it has significant implications.

The Bible presupposes that God created natural stuff out of the spiritual. The consequence of this is different than if it was created out of nothing at all. If it were created out of nothing at all, I suppose the universe might after all be closed to all outside influence as some scientists and philosophers claim; but if it was created out of spiritual stuff, then it can have an invisible spiritual back door.

The first piece of evidence I give you is the Big Bang. Interpret the data as you please, it proves there was a time when our universe was not. Before the moment of the Big Bang there was nothing we could have seen. This is about as direct evidence for the scripture proposition as can be imagined, but it does not prove the unseen was spiritual.

For those who deny the Big Bang, there is another line of evidence showing that the seen comes from the unseen. This is the nature of atomic and subatomic particles.

How do atoms confirm scripture? The solids we see turn out to be largely composed of emptiness—of atoms which are practically invisible. However, since we can “see” the components of atoms with electron microscopes, I do not consider them to be the things which the Bible calls unseen; subatomic particles are not the ultimate physical reality.

It turns out that subatomic particles are composed of smaller entities known as quarks, and those in turn are probably manifestations of even more fundamental entities known as strings. Quarks are universally accepted by physicists, but strings are not yet. When we get to the level of strings we can no longer see, even indirectly, but can only theorize, devise experiments and test hypotheses through carefully conceived experiments. Here perhaps we are on the borderland of the things unseen; here, perhaps, we are in touch with entities that probe out of the spiritual realm into our own universe.

Or we may just be discovering another level of the physical. At any rate, the seen is clearly composed of the unseen.

To demonstrate that the seen world is ultimately a manifestation of spiritual realities, I will have to take another tack. I will do so in another post.