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Comment by Anthony Jones on July 6, 2012 at 12:37am Although I can agree with the desire for the universe to maintain some of its mystery, which it definitely still holds, the only way we are to see the end of theism as an alternative to science (as obviously some theists and all creationists still hold to) is to discover the cause.
We may never be truly without the question, "why?", as this question still holds the attention of so many people on earth, but we can at least chip away at the idea that theistic creationism holds up AT ALL against evolutionary theory. And the only way to do this is through discovery of new and wonderful information comfirming what we already believe. So I must agree with Matt-Lukin
Comment by Matt--Lukin on July 5, 2012 at 11:53am You know that the original location for the LHC being in the U.S.A., but in a conference, when a physicist was asked the key question by a congressman, "We will find God with the super collider?" The physicist's response was, "We're going to discover the Higs Boson." Jaws dropped and it was cancelled. It would've been 3x bigger than the current LHC. Kaku said that he would've answered that question like this:
"God, by whatever signs or symbols we ascribe to the deity, this machine will take us as close as humanly possible to his greatest creation: Genesis. This is a genesis machine. It's a machine designed to probe the greatest event of the history of the universe, it's birth."
Now, this is just Kaku, if you're familiar with his work, just pleasing the crowd there to get a project like that going using such words as "deity." I sensed a kind of contradiction in your post in that you don't want mystery to disappear, yet the mystery is what keeps theists pouring the "God of the Gaps" into those unlit areas. Kaku explains that the ultimate goal of these particle accelerators would be to solve String Theory or M-Theory or to finish what he called "Einstein's unfinished work."
Comment by Alan Perlman on July 5, 2012 at 10:45am Very edifying. It's always very effective when atheists bring their fields of expertise to bear on questions of religion and belief (mine is linguistics, which reveals the truth about the "holy texts").
Believers will slide their BS in anywhere they can find an opening. I remember hearing a lot about the "God gene." Was that supposed to mean that some people's brains are predisposed to accept fantasy?
That believers still find God in the gaps shows the poverty of their thinking.
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