So he believes in aliens and all-creating gravity, but not in God?
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Stephen Hawking
al666940-3 — 15 years ago(October 02, 2010 11:57 AM)
To me that's as contradictory as "Get your goverment hand off my Medicare!".
1.- What's the evidence for aliens AGAIN? About the same one as for God's existence (common sense, right?). Anyone who is willing to take a leap of faith to believe in aliens yet ridicules believers for doing the exact same thing is a hypocrite.
2.- How exactly can gravity create matter out of nothing exactly? Hopefully CNN misquoted him, because what I've read there only quotes him saying "Gravity can explain everything, it's the reason the universe created itself out of thin air" more or less.
I mean, d5b4oesn't gravity require MATTER to begin with? Or energy (that would turn into matter)? In the absence of none, how can gravity exist?
About as stupid as solving the chicken-egg problem by saying the chicken can create itself out of an egg.
3.- Is it me, or is he sounding off bitter? I guess anyone in such conditions would turn to atheism as getting back at a God who allowed them to suffer like that. Like abused kids saying "I never had a father".
Oh well, I had much more respect for him when he was more unbiased. -
al666940-3 — 15 years ago(October 02, 2010 04:28 PM)
Dude, he's NEVER questioned the premise that they existed, his statements have always been under the assumption that they do exist, please correct me if I'm mistaken.
Unlike whenever he refers to God these days
I'm just saying, be consistent.
And what about the gravity thing, what do you think about that? That's even more spaced out, considering THAT is his area of expertise.
I'm an engineer myself, so I do know enough physics and science to realize what he said makes no freaking sense. -
al666940-3 — 15 years ago(October 02, 2010 05:58 PM)
"I've never read anything where he's said "E.T. absolutely without question does exist." "
He's never questioned their existence either whenever he refers to them.
That casts his comments in an unbiased light to say the least.
"It makes no sense to you. That doesn't mean you understand what he's talking about"
Dude, read the articles, even his colleagues are startled by that comment. It's one thing to say that a previously collapsed universe gave form to this one thanks to gravity (makes sense), and quite another to say that out of nothingness gravity somehow created matter.
You don't need to be a doctor to grasp that. Heck, 5b4Einstein's theories (relativity) can be understood by most common lay people, so don't use the "you misunderstood" defense, for if most people misunderstand you, perhaps the problem is YOU not most people.
What's next, "2 + 2 = 5" doesn't make sense to me because I just can;t understand it? "Tax cuts for the rich increase revenue" economic theory makes more sense than that.
At best you're going the Nietzsche route, always bitching about no one understanding his dithyrambs-composed philosophy, yet having the balls to say Christ should've explained his parables better to skeptics like him
Try saying CNN misquoted him, you'll get more mileage out of that one (I really hope he was misquoted, otherwise he's losing his marbles or just making s#$% up to sell his book).
"Hawking's latest rant was strategically placed to get people all riled up and buy his book (and it worked). If you look into it a little more, you'll see that he doesn't precisely say that GR proves the absence of a god, but that the Laws of Physics as he knows them are able to model the observable universe as an automaton with no important role for a creator."
Where do I complain about that? That makes sense from a scientific point of view (but also from religious point of view, for God is not supposed to do what natural laws can do, meaning he won't create men out of clay since women can5b4 give birth to them already, and so on).
My point is the gravity quote, that somehow by itself it could account for the Big Bang (Universe coming together out of nothing, a literal creation). Try to explain it to me then if you think it makes sense.
I mean, it's quoted right here:
http://www.smartplanet.com/business/blog/smart-takes/stephen-hawking-god-did-not-create-universe/10402/ -
al666940-3 — 15 years ago(October 02, 2010 07:15 PM)
"In fact, most people don't understand Einsteinian Relativity all that well"
The basics sure they do.
"Thus, all particle production is in matched pairs of particles with their antiparticles. "
Aha, you forgot something: since opposite-charged particles ATTRACT each other to destroy each other, the universe would have NEVER become (at the Big Bang, all matter was prety close to each other). Yet here it is. So where is all this matching "antimatter"? Dark matter? That's just one of several theories, and not even a convincing one.
And just remember that GR has several implications that simply do not make sense, like time traveling and alternate universes, which are far more contradictory and absurd than the idea of a creator. So GR is clearly an incomplete theory, like Newton's theory was at his time (groundbreaking, yet incomplete).
"Hawking is premature in having this much confidence, since the GR equations are notoriously hard to solve exactly"
He's simply past his prime.
Remember that most geniouses who do their groundbreaking work at a young age spent their adult lives chasing pipe dreams:- Newton: after gravity he chased alquimy.
- Einstein: after GR, he chased unified theory.
- Tesla: after AC he chased death rays and who knows what else.
- John Nash: after game theory he chased aliens and his own lost sanity.
Need more?
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al666940-3 — 15 years ago(October 03, 2010 05:16 AM)
Oh and I forgot to inc5b4lude John Nash, who after his game theory work he spent his life chasing aliens and hallucinations. Will add it above for other people.
"I already said it's possible to know basics"
Then it's possible to know the basics of Hawking's new idea. Yet even that doesn't make sense (gravity being the all-creating law).
"I know it's a big mystery why there's a deficit. With or without the deficit energy is still conserved, and in GR can sum up to zero. That's what I'm helping you to understand"
Now YOU are preaching to the choir, for thermodynamics (and thus energy conservation) were part of my engineering courses.
Yet you keep dodging the point: does gravity as all creating law make sense to you? It sure doesn't to me for there cannot exist gravity without matter (just like time cannot exist without change, for it NOTHING at all changed then the concept of time would become meaningless). -
Reema2688 — 10 years ago(August 10, 2015 10:34 PM)
Aha, you forgot something: since opposite-charged particles ATTRACT each other to destroy each other, the universe would have NEVER become (at the Big Bang, all matter was prety close to each other). Yet here it is. So where is all this matching "antimatter"? Dark matter? That's just one of several theories, and not even a convincing one.
Funny how science works right! What was elusive and incomprehensible once, is pretty much on the verge of validation.
Maybe that is why great minds are so far ahead of commoners like us, and generally get recognition for their greatness posthumously.
The problem with social media - Idiots now got a voice -
al666940-3 — 15 years ago(October 03, 2010 04:16 PM)
"Historically speaking, atheists believe in ET while theists don't"
Aha, so we all believe in stuf5b4f we cannot prove in any case, right? We can surely say common sense is on our side (too big a place, everything needs designer), but that's it.
That's how I see it. I just don't like an alien believer to pretend I'm a self-deluded fool while, by his own logic, he's engaging in the exact same practice.
"When people cease to believe in God, the danger is not that they'll believe in nothing but that they'll believe in anything. G. K. Chesterton "
So true. In Mexico we have a similar saying: he who doesn't believe in God will kneel to any monkey/idol (for example all those presidents like Reagan and Miterrand who were not practicioners yet were surrounded by astrologers and even witch doctors). To bad it doesn't translate very well. -
greg-233 — 15 years ago(October 04, 2010 04:35 PM)
Whatever Stephen Hawking may think, I don't feel it's hypocritical to believe in aliens but not God. Some people might believe in both. Why should it be one or the other?
Olaf Stapledon's 1937 novel
Star Maker
deals with the premise of an all-powerful "intelligence" that was responsible for the creation of the universe. And not just
this
universe - countless others as well. Stapledon was a huge influence on Arthur C. Clarke. -
greg-233 — 15 years ago(October 05, 2010 04:13 PM)
"111c;Greg-233, you don't believe in God yet you do believe in ET, even though there's no evidence for such. What's the difference?"
I haven't stated that aliens definitely exist. Not in the same way theists say God exists. I certainly don't think we've ever been visited by any aliens.
Aliens are a bit easier to believe in than a God. It's not that much of a leap of faith to imagine that there is another form of life elsewhere in the universe that evolved over the aeons, just as we did here on Earth. In fact, there was another Earth-like planet discovered just recently. I think they said it was about 10 light years away, I can't remember exactly, and that it could support life.
Obviously, aliens wouldn't be endowed with supernatural powers, the way a God would be. But if their technology is far in advance of ours, it might be easy to
mistake
them for gods. Arthur C. Clarke stated that any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic - Michael Shermer extended this by saying any sufficiently advanced species is indistinguishable from God.
Maybe if I'd had a religious upbringing, I would want a specific type of God (e.g. Yahweh) to exist, but I didn't. I've never once spent a Sunday morning at church.