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The Creation of Man
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<blockquote data-quote="Harte" data-source="post: 16963" data-attributes="member: 443"><p><strong>Re: The Creation of Man</strong></p><p></p><p><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(\"Dmitri\")</div></p><p> </p><p>Dmitri,</p><p> </p><p>That to me is a problem. I don't think there is any getting away from the origination factor. That doesn't mean that I think life <strong><em>must</em></strong> have originated gradually from molecules though. I have an open mind and I am aware that evolution has problems. But I believe that there must be a cause for every effect. In this case that means that I believe that there was a cause for the origination of life. What that cause is is open to question as far as I'm concerned. After all, the Big Bang bears an eerie resemblance to "Let there be light."</p><p> </p><p>As far as parallel worlds, there is a sizeable number of physicists that at least entertain the idea that multiple universes can explain many of the extremely weird things that have been discovered in quantum physics. A parallel universe is said to exist for every quantum possibility, meaning for every possible quantum state of every particle in existance at any particular point in time.</p><p> </p><p>I think that any time traveling into the past would result in the traveler arriving in a different universe than he left, for various reasons including the following:</p><p> </p><p>1. The traveler has entered the past but he left a future in which he had not entered the past.</p><p> </p><p>2. If the traveler entered the past in his own universe, he is subject to the grandfather paradox. The parallel worlds theory takes care of this.</p><p> </p><p>3.Some quantum physicists believe that there exist multiple universes, likely an infinite number, that differ only very slightly from our own. If the idea is not too outlandish for those guys, who am I to snub it when it so easily rids us of the paradox in #2?</p><p> </p><p>What I am calling parallel worlds is actually called the "Many Universes" theory by the quantum guys. Use Google to find out more about this theory.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Harte, post: 16963, member: 443"] [b]Re: The Creation of Man[/b] <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(\"Dmitri\")</div> Dmitri, That to me is a problem. I don't think there is any getting away from the origination factor. That doesn't mean that I think life [b][i]must[/i][/b] have originated gradually from molecules though. I have an open mind and I am aware that evolution has problems. But I believe that there must be a cause for every effect. In this case that means that I believe that there was a cause for the origination of life. What that cause is is open to question as far as I'm concerned. After all, the Big Bang bears an eerie resemblance to "Let there be light." As far as parallel worlds, there is a sizeable number of physicists that at least entertain the idea that multiple universes can explain many of the extremely weird things that have been discovered in quantum physics. A parallel universe is said to exist for every quantum possibility, meaning for every possible quantum state of every particle in existance at any particular point in time. I think that any time traveling into the past would result in the traveler arriving in a different universe than he left, for various reasons including the following: 1. The traveler has entered the past but he left a future in which he had not entered the past. 2. If the traveler entered the past in his own universe, he is subject to the grandfather paradox. The parallel worlds theory takes care of this. 3.Some quantum physicists believe that there exist multiple universes, likely an infinite number, that differ only very slightly from our own. If the idea is not too outlandish for those guys, who am I to snub it when it so easily rids us of the paradox in #2? What I am calling parallel worlds is actually called the "Many Universes" theory by the quantum guys. Use Google to find out more about this theory. [/QUOTE]
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