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Baking a Universe the Hard Way
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16846 |
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Section : |
NATURAL SCIENCE
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| Issue
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9 / 1989 |
3,259 Words |
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Richard L. Lewis Richard L. Lewis is a biochemist currently working as a free-
lance science writer in New York. |
Barring a few dissenters, scientists and theologians agree that the universe we live in originated out of nothing, a process that theologians, who delight in Latin phrases, call "creation ex nihilo."
The prevailing scientific theory of creation is called the "Big Bang" theory. Theological views, on the other hand, can be divided into those that say God created the universe the easy way and those that say He did it the hard way.
The easy way is similar to the method used by the good fairies in the Disney movie Sleeping Beauty. The secret is in the wands. When they wave them, a misty, spark-filled rainbow leaps from the tip, and a cup of tea with a slice of lemon appears.
Many religious people assume that God created the universe the easy way (with or without the misty rainbow and sparkles). The creationist movement takes "And God said, 'Let the earth bring forth creatures …' And it was so" to imply the easy way of doing things: Lions and tigers and bears, for example, just popped into existence. Essentially, this viewpoint has God saying a word or so, and the universe promptly responding to this command.
The hard method of creation is quite different, and involves mathematics. If you dislike math, please persevere; I promise not to use any equations!
Cosmic Math
Why mathematics? The reason is simple: The universe is nothing but relationships, and
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