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Source: (consider it) Thread: I understand that the universe is big
Green Mario
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So until a few months ago my understanding of what science said was that the universe was very big but with a finite size - about 13 billion light years across with billions of galaxies all made up of billions of stars; and that the big bang meant it had to have a finite size and a finite existence in time. I pictured God as sitting outside of this and kicking it all off.

Then on a slow day at work when I allowed myself to get distracted by a number of Wikipedia articles on cosmology I caught up and realised that this is just the "observable universe" (which turns out not to be 13 billion light years across but a bit bigger) and there are good although slightly speculative reasons to believe that the "whole universe" is massively larger than "observable universe" and might well be infinite in size.

I've always had something going on where I have awestruck wonder at the same time as doubts about God stirred up when I contemplate the scale of the universe. Awestruck wonder at the scale; the doubts come because the incarnation seems to make us so much more important to God than the scale of humans and the earth warrants. I don't know even what to do with the possibility that the universe might even be infinite?

So what do others think when they contemplate this. Does what you believe about God make you more or less likely to think that the universe is literally infinite?

If scientists were able to demonstrate that the universe probably was infinite would it affect how you viewed God?

Can you reconcile the incarnation of God's only Son with our absolutely infinitesimal size relative to the cosmos?

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Beeswax Altar
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quote:
originally posted by Green Mario:
So what do others think when they contemplate this. Does what you believe about God make you more or less likely to think that the universe is literally infinite?

Neither

quote:
originally posted by Green Mario:
If scientists were able to demonstrate that the universe probably was infinite would it affect how you viewed God?

No

quote:
originally posted by Green Mario:
Can you reconcile the incarnation of God's only Son with our absolutely infinitesimal size relative to the cosmos?

What is there to reconcile? Christians already presuppose a God that is ultimately knowable only through revelation. Why God would desire a relationship with humans is already answered in scripture and tradition. The size of the universe has nothing to do with it.

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no prophet's flag is set so...

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The size of the universe informs me that our view and ability to form a view is finite, and that everything is grander that we imagine and can imagine.

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Amir Emrra
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The possibility of an infinite universe doesn't affect how I view God. If it were to though, then I'd probably, though simplistically, say that the bigger the cosmos, the more extravagant God's love for us appears to be!

As to the Incarnation, well God himself has 'infinite' attributes, e.g. goodness & mercy, so the size of Creation is almost irrelevant.

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Schroedinger's cat

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The thing is, the universe is effectively infinite - we could never experience anything outside it, in the physical world. So I am not sure that knowing it is more than that could impact my faith in God.

I suspect the universe is, as far as we can understand it, infinite. I have a suspicion that the edge of the universe that we postulate exists may be just a single point - that is, whatever direction we look, we are reaching the same single location. While that sounds strange, it is not unreasonable, given our current knowledge.

What this would mean is that the universe is infinite but bounded. That is critical from a perspective of understanding. It means that from our perspective, whatever direction we go in, we would continue forever - that is, we would interpret the universe as infinite. However, it is conceivable for there then to be somewhere "outside" the universe, not bound by our dimensions. It is then possible to conceive of something "external" to the universe, which can reflect where God may operate.

I always think that the multi-dimensional understanding of the universe that is emerging could give a place for the divine to occupy that is both outside our known universe, while being intimately involved in it.

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LeRoc

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quote:
Schroedinger's cat: I always think that the multi-dimensional understanding of the universe that is emerging could give a place for the divine to occupy that is both outside our known universe, while being intimately involved in it.
Hmm, I don't think I like this very much. "God is in dimension 7" is much too physical to me, I prefer to keep a bit of a Mystery to it.

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I know why God made the rhinoceros, it's because He couldn't see the rhinoceros, so He made the rhinoceros to be able to see it. (Clarice Lispector)

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Horseman Bree
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Arthur C. Clarke dealt with this topic almost 50 years ago in "The Star"

FWIW

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LeRoc

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quote:
Horseman Bree: Arthur C. Clarke dealt with this topic almost 50 years ago in "The Star"
I am familiar with this story. It's a good one.

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I know why God made the rhinoceros, it's because He couldn't see the rhinoceros, so He made the rhinoceros to be able to see it. (Clarice Lispector)

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quetzalcoatl
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quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
quote:
Schroedinger's cat: I always think that the multi-dimensional understanding of the universe that is emerging could give a place for the divine to occupy that is both outside our known universe, while being intimately involved in it.
Hmm, I don't think I like this very much. "God is in dimension 7" is much too physical to me, I prefer to keep a bit of a Mystery to it.
Yes, I am puzzled how something supernatural can occupy space. I suppose s/he could, if desired, but why would s/he?

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Schroedinger's cat

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I suppose all I really meant was it could offer a mechanism whereby something outside our universe could also be engaged with it.

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Alan Cresswell

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Just because it needs quoting ...
quote:
Space is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.
Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

There is a theological danger to a universe that is vast but finite. A step towards that (IMO) dangerous position is
quote:
Originally posted by Green Mario:
I pictured God as sitting outside of this and kicking it all off.

The theologically dodgy ground is the God who "lit the blue touchpaper and retired", who sits outside space-time and observes passively, basically forms of Deism.

As we gain greater understanding of the true vastness of the universe, the possibility of a multiverse, that "you may think space is big, but that's just peanuts to the universe", then we are forced away from that sort of image of God. Of course, atheism would be one option. Or, a reacquisition of theism, the God who is not just transcendent outside the universe but immanent at each point in the universe sustaining it with his all powerful word.

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LeRoc

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quote:
Schroedinger's cat: I suppose all I really meant was it could offer a mechanism whereby something outside our universe could also be engaged with it.
As a way of providing a metaphor? I could live with that.

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I know why God made the rhinoceros, it's because He couldn't see the rhinoceros, so He made the rhinoceros to be able to see it. (Clarice Lispector)

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Lamb Chopped
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Yet again I prove myself a dinosaur. I don't make the connection between "our physical size is like, really, really tiny" and "therefore we are unimportant" (or important, whichever, take your pick). Physical size has nothing to do with value. There's a logical disconnect here.

There's also a disconnect between us being important and God choosing the human race as a setting for the Incarnation. He could have chosen us for a zillion other reasons--we might be the only creatures daft enough to fall into sin and need a Savior at all, for example; or maybe there's some strategic (in the military sense) value to starting out with us. Doesn't mean we're important. Doesn't mean we're unimportant. You just can't get to that conclusion from those premises.

The weird thing is, I think (please correct me) that previous ages didn't fall into this particular logic trap. They knew perfectly well that the universe was huge and we infinitesimally tiny, but though it awed them, they don't seem to have concluded anything about God or the likelihood of the Incarnation. Nor did they make the mistake of considering the human race the center of universal attention (over others, I mean). Lewis summed up the Dantean worldview this way: "Man was a surburban creature."

There's probably something wrong with me.

[Frown]

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Oh, that you would rend the heavens and come down!

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HCH
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I agree with the comment about "effectively infinite."

I remember that a science fiction author suggested that Christ might visit each world inhabited by intelligent beings once. C.S.Lewis seemed to take "made in God's image' literally, so one visit, as a human being, was enough. (This seems like species jingoism to me.)

A way to get around some of this is that if only our planet, out of all the universe, has life or at any rate has intelligent life, then this is the only planet which needs Christ's attention. Few people like this notion.

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no prophet's flag is set so...

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Or that our understanding is limited.

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\_(ツ)_/

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Lamb Chopped
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quote:
Originally posted by HCH:
I agree with the comment about "effectively infinite."

I remember that a science fiction author suggested that Christ might visit each world inhabited by intelligent beings once. C.S.Lewis seemed to take "made in God's image' literally, so one visit, as a human being, was enough. (This seems like species jingoism to me.)

I remember the bit you're refererencing, but Lewis didn't mean the image was literal (his space novels should disprove this if nothing else). Rather he meant that God could (and in his speculation did) choose a single species to do a once-for-everything-and-everybody action--in this case, the Incarnation--and that that single instance covered the whole of creation by God's choice. There was no species jingoism behind it--if anything, Lewis' reasoning behind a single Incarnation was that God is too great an artist to repeat himself. The fact that the Incarnation happened among us (humanity) is at best an accident (probably not) and at worse a note in our disfavor, highlighting our sin as it does. It is certainly not a compliment to our species!

--------------------
Er, this is what I've been up to (book).
Oh, that you would rend the heavens and come down!

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Ikkyu
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Imagine someone who took his first 6 years of
religion in a Catholic School (Until 6th grade).
Then he goes to a secular school. Not much later he watches the original Cosmos series by Carl Sagan and he also reads the book.
The traditional Genesis story paled by comparison.
He was aware that you did not necessarily have to take Genesis literally but still, what we knew even in the 1980's about the Universe made the Bible stories look quaint and clearly man made.
That person was me. Fast-forward to the present.
Of course there is a lot that we still don't know.
But what we know about the Universe on the large scale. (Very probably infinite)
And on a sub atomic scale. (Quantum weirdness etc.) Has only increased that first impression,
I find the creation Myths of a lot of other cultures a lot more creative and interesting than the ones in the Bible.

Of course more sophisticated theology than that taught in grammar school would have probably
withstood the test a bit better. But this did not destroy my faith at that time. (That honor goes to the problem of Evil.) But it did weaken my faith quite a bit.

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cliffdweller
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quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
quote:
Schroedinger's cat: I always think that the multi-dimensional understanding of the universe that is emerging could give a place for the divine to occupy that is both outside our known universe, while being intimately involved in it.
Hmm, I don't think I like this very much. "God is in dimension 7" is much too physical to me, I prefer to keep a bit of a Mystery to it.
Yes, I am puzzled how something supernatural can occupy space. I suppose s/he could, if desired, but why would s/he?
Well, he did, of course, in the incarnation. So I would suppose for very similar reasons-- in order to interact and engage and be present with a finite and embodied creation.

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"Here is the world. Beautiful and terrible things will happen. Don't be afraid." -Frederick Buechner

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Belle Ringer
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quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
I am puzzled how something supernatural can occupy space. I suppose s/he could, if desired, but why would s/he?

Well, he did, of course, in the incarnation. So I would suppose for very similar reasons-- in order to interact and engage and be present with a finite and embodied creation.
Humans and other material objects and beings occupy space in an exclusive sense - the space I am occupying you cannot simultaneously occupy, you have to move me out of it first. Spiritual beings can occupy space non-exclusively. That's my answer to how many angels can dance on the head of a pin - all of them.

As to the size of space, when I was a kid I don't remember how big it was, but some finite measurement. I asked what is beyond that, if space is X miles long what is at X+1 miles. There is no such thing as X+1 miles, was the answer. I couldn't wrap my head around that, and gave up trying, now I just enjoy the pictures. I like the idea on infinite space - endless beauty to explore!

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W Hyatt
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quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
There's also a disconnect between us being important and God choosing the human race as a setting for the Incarnation. He could have chosen us for a zillion other reasons--we might be the only creatures daft enough to fall into sin and need a Savior at all, for example; or maybe there's some strategic (in the military sense) value to starting out with us. Doesn't mean we're important. Doesn't mean we're unimportant. You just can't get to that conclusion from those premises.

Yes, exactly. The Incarnation wasn't to bestow honor on us, it was to save us: he chose us because we needed it.

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A new church and a new earth, with Spiritual Insights for Everyday Life.

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Schroedinger's cat

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Yes as a metaphor if you are happier with that. And a way of avoiding Alans Deism complaint, that God is outside and uninvolved. I want to understand how he can be outside, and yet involved.

I am NOT saying that this is How It Works. I am merely trying to find a way that does not require an abuse of Physics that could offer an explanation. For me, that sort of idea is helpful. If it isn't for you then ignore it, but don't then posit theories that are far more fanciful (not that you have, but some do. To say "We cannot explain how God works" and then explain exactly what he does to help you makes no sense)

So I see it as a way of grappling with God an the universe. Accepting an infinite but bounded universe I have no problems with. Then working out Gods place and role in it I need to think harder about.

--------------------
Blog
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Lord may all my hard times be healing times
take out this broken heart and renew my mind.

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quetzalcoatl
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quote:
Originally posted by cliffdweller:
quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
quote:
Schroedinger's cat: I always think that the multi-dimensional understanding of the universe that is emerging could give a place for the divine to occupy that is both outside our known universe, while being intimately involved in it.
Hmm, I don't think I like this very much. "God is in dimension 7" is much too physical to me, I prefer to keep a bit of a Mystery to it.
Yes, I am puzzled how something supernatural can occupy space. I suppose s/he could, if desired, but why would s/he?
Well, he did, of course, in the incarnation. So I would suppose for very similar reasons-- in order to interact and engage and be present with a finite and embodied creation.
You mean God might hang out in Alpha Centauri, so that he's available in an emergency? Hmm, I guess my image of God is rather different from that, but then they are all guesses, I suppose.

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Philip Charles

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Excuse me while I try to be logical.

Reason/logic is a function of the human mind not a property of the creation - following Chomsky.
What descriptions scientists develop about the cosmos are descriptions of the creation.
God the creator/sustainer is separate from what s/he has created.

So nothing has really changed, God is no more or no less mysterious than 2000 years ago.

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There are 10 kinds of people. Those who understand binary and those who don't.

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mousethief

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quote:
Originally posted by Schroedinger's cat:
So I see it as a way of grappling with God an the universe. Accepting an infinite but bounded universe I have no problems with. Then working out Gods place and role in it I need to think harder about.

I wouldn't say God has a place in the universe. I'd say the universe has a place in God.

quote:
Originally posted by Philip Charles:
Reason/logic is a function of the human mind not a property of the creation - following Chomsky.

Following Kant.

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LeRoc

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quote:
Philip Charles: Reason/logic is a function of the human mind not a property of the creation - following Chomsky.
What descriptions scientists develop about the cosmos are descriptions of the creation.
God the creator/sustainer is separate from what s/he has created.

I agree with the thrust of your reasoning, but I differ on some details.

Yes, logic is a function of the mind. It's our way to try to make sense of the Universe. But the Universe is such that at least in a functional sense it can be understood by logic / mathematics. That's by no means a given.

I'm something of a panentheist, so I don't believe that God is separate from creation. But your basic argument that there is a Mystery about God that lies without the realm of logic still holds.

[ 09. September 2014, 13:38: Message edited by: LeRoc ]

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I know why God made the rhinoceros, it's because He couldn't see the rhinoceros, so He made the rhinoceros to be able to see it. (Clarice Lispector)

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Dal Segno

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quote:
Originally posted by Green Mario:
Can you reconcile the incarnation of God's only Son with our absolutely infinitesimal size relative to the cosmos?

God is Himself so huge that He is able to contemplate the detailed lives of all 7+ billion people on the planet at once. He is so far beyond the abilities of human beings that it is almost impossible to wrap your head around. For example, God is able to keep track of the minutiae of your life and the things that worry you on a minute-by-minute basis, while simultaneously contemplating the major disasters that are happening round the world and their impact on millions of people. A normal person cannot do that, hence the question I've heard several times "Why do you expect God to listen to your prayers when there is so much trouble in the world."

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tessaB
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Does 'once and for all' imply for the whole universe, or just for our little bit of it? Do we actually know that God has not incarnated on another world. Maybe in this infinite universe there is a world where he still walks with the people in the cool of the evening?

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que sais-je
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quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
Rather he meant that God could (and in his speculation did) choose a single species to do a once-for-everything-and-everybody action--in this case, the Incarnation--and that that single instance covered the whole of creation by God's choice.

Interestingly the same view is held by the Zqb of planet Sqxg in the Andromeda and by a billion other life forms in our Observable Universe (OU). And unsurprisingly by an infinite number of others throughout the infinite universe (IU). An infinite number of them assumes they are the species, and an infinite number assume they are not. A further infinite number assume ... and so on (infinitely maybe - depends on your sort of infinity).

quote:
Originally posted by Lamb Chopped:
The fact that the Incarnation happened among us (humanity) is at best an accident (probably not) and at worse a note in our disfavor, highlighting our sin as it does. It is certainly not a compliment to our species!

Given an infinite universe, doesn't a sort of reverse Argument from Design become rather tempting? Even if we are the only life in the OU then surely it is reasonable to suppose there are infinitely many life forms in the IU. At infinitely many points in the IU one can define an OU around it disjunct from all others. The alternative is to believe God created a universe with only an infinitesimal pin point of it ever discernible by his creation.

Thus if we assume we are uniquely sinful we are not so just within a finite number of species but within an infinite number. What the chance that, of an infinite number of species, we just happen to be the most sinful? And here we are talking about it? It far more unlikely than that the OU just happened to have conditions for the emergence of life.

If we were chosen as a mark of disfavour, we were set up!

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"controversies, disputes, and argumentations, both in philosophy and in divinity, if they meet with discreet and peaceable natures, do not infringe the laws of charity" (Thomas Browne)

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LeRoc

Famous Dutch pirate
# 3216

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quote:
sais-je: At infinitely many points in the IU one can define an OU around it disjunct from all others.
The OU's don't need to be disjunct. They can overlap.

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I know why God made the rhinoceros, it's because He couldn't see the rhinoceros, so He made the rhinoceros to be able to see it. (Clarice Lispector)

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quetzalcoatl
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# 16740

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Does this mean that there an infinite number of deities? Thus in a very large number of worlds (maybe an infinite number), Zeus himself is worshiped as the instance of the divine.

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que sais-je
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# 17185

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quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
The OU's don't need to be disjunct. They can overlap.

True.

quetzalcoatl: No, see Thomas Aquinas or Ingob. The Christian/Jewish/Islamic God is the God of Gods - your individual ones are demiurges. Though that does raise other questions.

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"controversies, disputes, and argumentations, both in philosophy and in divinity, if they meet with discreet and peaceable natures, do not infringe the laws of charity" (Thomas Browne)

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Green Mario
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# 18090

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quote:
Does 'once and for all' imply for the whole universe, or just for our little bit of it? Do we actually know that God has not incarnated on another world. Maybe in this infinite universe there is a world where he still walks with the people in the cool of the evening?
The New Testament says that Jesus is God's only Son and part of the significance of the ascension is that Jesus remains human.

If these two statements are true God can't have incarnated on another planet in a similar way to on Earth.

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quetzalcoatl
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# 16740

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quote:
Originally posted by que sais-je:
quote:
Originally posted by LeRoc:
The OU's don't need to be disjunct. They can overlap.

True.

quetzalcoatl: No, see Thomas Aquinas or Ingob. The Christian/Jewish/Islamic God is the God of Gods - your individual ones are demiurges. Though that does raise other questions.

But I was assured that quetzalcoatl is the refinement of divine chocolate, garnished with peacocks' tongues, since he stole the chocolate tree from the heavens. Are you seriously telling me you have another, and superior, deity in mind?

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I can't talk to you today; I talked to two people yesterday.

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sharkshooter

Not your average shark
# 1589

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quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
quote:
Originally posted by Schroedinger's cat:
So I see it as a way of grappling with God an the universe. Accepting an infinite but bounded universe I have no problems with. Then working out Gods place and role in it I need to think harder about.

I wouldn't say God has a place in the universe. I'd say the universe has a place in God.
...

The universe is physical; God is not. So God does not have, nor need, a place (in the physical sense) anywhere in the universe, but through the incarnation of His Son, and then only for a time.

The universe exists because God willed it into existence. Whether it is finite or infinite is irrelevant. I cannot possibly understand how any physical thing could be infinite, but since most of the known universe is nothing, the existence of a limit to it is really just a point, or a line, or a plane, beyond which nothing (no matter) exists. With that I have no problem.

Since the planets, stars, etc. are physical, in some sense they are countable, and therefore the number of them is less than infinity. Therefore, it must follow that they are contained in some space which is also less than infinite in size.

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Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight, O LORD, my strength, and my redeemer. [Psalm 19:14]

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itsarumdo
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# 18174

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This is all very fine, but it's hard enough imagining 100 miles, let alone a light year or billions of light years. Similarly with God - it's easy to say the word, but I don't think many people have really accessed an even vaguely close sense of what that really means. We are like ants in a small patch of grass on a vast mountain overlooking a vast and varied landscape lying on a planet inside a stellar nursery. We see grass and maybe a few centimeters where the grass is thinner, and all the rest is so big that it's invisible.

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"Iti sapis potanda tinone" Lycophron

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Martin60
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# 368

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God cannot think anything outside Himself.

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Love wins

Posts: 17586 | From: Never Dobunni after all. Corieltauvi after all. Just moved to the capital. | Registered: Jun 2001  |  IP: Logged
mousethief

Ship's Thieving Rodent
# 953

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quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
Since the planets, stars, etc. are physical, in some sense they are countable,

Why? How does that follow? If there is infinite matter, this would be no problem.

quote:
and therefore the number of them is less than infinity.
You do realize that "countable" is one way of saying "the size of the smallest infinite set"? The positive whole numbers, to take one example, are countable, by definition -- you use them to count, and you can keep counting for as long as you please. Give me any number, and I can give you the next one. There is no last one. There is an infinite number of them.

quote:
Therefore, it must follow that they are contained in some space which is also less than infinite in size.
Even granting a finite number of stars (which I haven't agreed to), this doesn't follow. Why can't you have a finite number of stars in an infinite space? Just with lots and lots and lots of blank room around the edges.

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ChastMastr
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I was going to post, but stopped
For 'twas summed up well by Lamb Chopped.

... though I think that I shall take a pause
To quote C.S. Lewis, just because.


quote:
'You see, the real objection goes far deeper. The whole picture of the universe which science has given us makes it such rot to believe that the Power at the back of it all could be interested in us tiny little creatures crawling about on an unimportant planet! It was all so obviously invented by people who believed in a flat earth with the stars only a mile or two away.'

'When did people believe that?'

'Why, all those old Christian chaps you're always telling me about did. I mean Boethius and Augustine and Thomas Aquinas and Dante.'

'Sorry,' said I, 'but this is one of the few subjects I do know something about.'

I reached out my had to a bookshelf. ‘You see this book’, I said, ‘Ptolemy’s Almagest. You know what it is?’

'Yes,' said he. 'It's the standard astronomical handbook used all through the Middle Ages.'

'Well, just read that,' I said, pointing to Book I, chapter 5.

'The earth,' read out my friend, hesitating a bit as he translated the latin, 'the earth, in relation to the distance of the fixed stars, has no appreciable size and must be treated as a mathematical point!'

There was a moment’s silence.

'Did they really know that THEN?' said my friend.

--"Religion and Science," C.S. Lewis

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My essays on comics continuity: http://chastmastr.tumblr.com/tagged/continuity

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que sais-je
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# 17185

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quote:
Originally posted by quetzalcoatl:
Are you seriously telling me you have another, and superior, deity in mind?

If there isn't one, from whom did you steal the chocolate tree?

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"controversies, disputes, and argumentations, both in philosophy and in divinity, if they meet with discreet and peaceable natures, do not infringe the laws of charity" (Thomas Browne)

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que sais-je
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# 17185

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quote:
Originally posted by Green Mario:
The New Testament says that Jesus is God's only Son and part of the significance of the ascension is that Jesus remains human.

Is it conceivable that, when God inspired that verse, the interpreter was unaware of the possibility of multiverses and infinite universes outside the observable one? Or maybe God thought that a complete course in modern physics would be a bit confusing and provided only as much as was necessary for understanding?

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"controversies, disputes, and argumentations, both in philosophy and in divinity, if they meet with discreet and peaceable natures, do not infringe the laws of charity" (Thomas Browne)

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ChastMastr
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quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
but through the incarnation of His Son, and then only for a time.

Only starting at one time; He's still got His resurrected body, as I understand it.

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My essays on comics continuity: http://chastmastr.tumblr.com/tagged/continuity

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shamwari
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# 15556

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Originally posted by Green Mario:
The New Testament says that Jesus is God's only Son and part of the significance of the ascension is that Jesus remains human

Not really. What it means that our humanity has been taken up and become part of the life of God. God assumed our human nature in Christ.

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Schroedinger's cat

Ship's cool cat
# 64

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quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
Since the planets, stars, etc. are physical, in some sense they are countable, and therefore the number of them is less than infinity. Therefore, it must follow that they are contained in some space which is also less than infinite in size.

this is fundamentally wrong. The argument I had above provides for an infinite but bounded universe, that is, however far you go in any direction, you will never find an end - but it is possible to have something "outside" the universe.

The number of "things" in the universe is not necessarily countable. In particular, because we can only engage with a certain portion of the extant universe at one time, we cannot possibly "count" everything in the universe, so they are not countable.

It is a little bit like counting sheet who are in a large field - counting them is difficult, because they keep moving, changing. All we can say is a few things about the part of the universe we can observe, and extrapolate the rest.

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Blog
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Lord may all my hard times be healing times
take out this broken heart and renew my mind.

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sharkshooter

Not your average shark
# 1589

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quote:
Originally posted by Schroedinger's cat:
... The argument I had above provides for an infinite but bounded universe, that is, however far you go in any direction, you will never find an end - but it is possible to have something "outside" the universe.

I don't buy that. If it is infinite, there can be no boundary. My argument is that, if there is a boundary, we cannot call it infinite - very large, certainly.

quote:
Originally posted by Schroedinger's cat:
The number of "things" in the universe is not necessarily countable. In particular, because we can only engage with a certain portion of the extant universe at one time, we cannot possibly "count" everything in the universe, so they are not countable.

...

We cannot count the grains of sand on the beach. That doesn't mean there are an infinite number of them.

Large numbers of objects can be counted - at least if we have the time and ability to do so. This is fundamentally different than saying that the set of whole numbers is infinite and therefore cannot be counted. The reason the set of numbers is infinite is because, first, they are not physical, but a construct. They are only infinite because we simply define the next one, there is no need to create it. Matter is not the same - once we get to the last one, there is no next one.

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Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight, O LORD, my strength, and my redeemer. [Psalm 19:14]

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sharkshooter

Not your average shark
# 1589

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quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
God cannot think anything outside Himself.

There is no such place or thing which you can call outside of God. Since God is not physical, the concept makes no sense.

--------------------
Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight, O LORD, my strength, and my redeemer. [Psalm 19:14]

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sharkshooter

Not your average shark
# 1589

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quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
... If there is infinite matter, this would be no problem.

...

That is the question. How could there possibly be infinite matter?

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Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight, O LORD, my strength, and my redeemer. [Psalm 19:14]

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mousethief

Ship's Thieving Rodent
# 953

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quote:
Originally posted by Schroedinger's cat:
The number of "things" in the universe is not necessarily countable. In particular, because we can only engage with a certain portion of the extant universe at one time, we cannot possibly "count" everything in the universe, so they are not countable.

You are equivocating on "countable." Yes it can mean, "countable by us in practical terms." I do not think that's what it means in this context. Mathematically speaking, "countable" means roughly "having the same cardinality as the integers." Of which there is no end.

quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
If it is infinite, there can be no boundary.

You err because you do not understand mathematics.

quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:
Originally posted by mousethief:
... If there is infinite matter, this would be no problem....

That is the question. How could there possibly be infinite matter?
You say this as if it is intuitively obvious that matter must be finite. Do you have some reason in mind for why matter must be finite? I do not see that we have any reason to come down on either side of the question, before scientific investigation and theorizing. Whence does your intuition that matter is finite come from?

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This is the last sig I'll ever write for you...

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itsarumdo
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# 18174

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I think if there was infinite matter in the singularity before the big bang, and it all came out, then intuitively, that would have resulted in an infinite CBMR

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"Iti sapis potanda tinone" Lycophron

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SusanDoris

Incurable Optimist
# 12618

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quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
quote:
Originally posted by Martin PC not & Ship's Biohazard:
God cannot think anything outside Himself.

There is no such place or thing which you can call outside of God. Since God is not physical, the concept makes no sense.
That's interesting. As an atheist, I wonder how do you imagine God to be?

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I know that you believe that you understood what you think I said, but I am not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.

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Schroedinger's cat

Ship's cool cat
# 64

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quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
I don't buy that. If it is infinite, there can be no boundary. My argument is that, if there is a boundary, we cannot call it infinite - very large, certainly.

No - that is a mistake. That is one of the crucial findings of cosmology and other stuff, that the universe can be infinite but bounded. That is quite possible, as I described above. Yes, hard to get ones head around, but not physically impossible.

quote:
Originally posted by sharkshooter:
We cannot count the grains of sand on the beach. That doesn't mean there are an infinite number of them.

But I could put together a way of counting them. I am not saying it would be easy, but it would be conceivable. It would involve gathering all of the sand into a counting machine, and letting it do its job. We would probably then have to add the new sand that has been created since this started.

The problem with the universe is that we cannot engage with even the other side of our galaxy at the current time. There are parts of the universe that are inaccessible to us, so we cannot count the objects in them. We can (in theory) count how many object exist at some point (either in the distant past or distant future), but not relate that to how many objects there are now.

In essence, it is the problem of the sand being created all of the time. If we are counting by hand, the number is irrelevant, because more sand has been created, and some sand might have been taken away in the time it takes us to count it. It doesn't mean there is an infinite amount of sand - it means it is uncountable by those methods. We cannot get access to all of the sand and count it at one point.

Similarly, but to a much more significant scale, we cannot get access to everything in the universe at one point to count it. There are, potentially, objects that are fundamentally outside our knowledge. So they are not countable - which doesn't mean they are infinite, of course.

Except in an infinite universe, they could be. I think. My mind starts to go peculiar at this point. But the constant re-creation means that at every point we stand there could be a different set of items. The number of objects is infinite because there are always new ones arriving and old ones vanishing. Our perception of the universe if finite and limited, but in an infinite universe, there can always be more.

If the universe is infinite in the time direction - as I suspect it is - then there is always time for more objects to be created.

The problem is, we cannot

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Blog
Music for your enjoyment
Lord may all my hard times be healing times
take out this broken heart and renew my mind.

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