The idea that something is not created by anything, that it
comes out of nothing, is very different from the idea that it creates
itself. It is strange therefore to find some scientists speaking about
them as if they are one and the same thing. It is not only Davies who
confused these two notions as we can see in the quotation just cited, but
others also. Taylor
tells us that electrons can create themselves out of nothing in the manner
Baron Munchausen saved himself from sinking into a bog by pulling himself up by
his bootstraps.
It is as if these particles special particles are able to
pull themselves up by their own bootstraps (which in their case are the forces
between them) to create themselves from nothing as Baron Munchausen saves
himself without visible means of support...This bootstrapping has been proposed
as a scientifically respectable scenario for creating a highly specialized
Universe from nothing. (Taylor ,
46)
Is it science or science fiction that we are being told
here? Taylor
knows and says that Munchausen’s is only a story; what he claimed to have done
is in fact something that is physically impossible to do. In spite of
this, Taylor wants to explain by his idea something that is not only real, but
is of the utmost importance, and thus ends up saying something that is more
absurd than Munchausen’s fictitious story of saving himself by pulling up his
bootstrap. At least Munchausen was talking about things that were already
in existence. But Taylor ’s
special particles act even before they are created! They “pull themselves
by their own bootstraps... to create themselves from nothing.”!
False Gods
The third alternative to attributing the creation of things
to the true God, is to attribute them to false gods. Thus many atheists
try to attribute the creation of temporal things to other things which are
themselves temporal (as we said before). Davies says:
The idea of a physical system containing an explanation of
itself might seem paradoxical to the layman but it is an idea that has some
precedence in physics. While one may concede, (ignoring quantum effects)
that every event is contingent, and depends for its explanation on some other
event, it need not follow that this series either continues endlessly, or ends
in God. It may be closed into a loop. For example, four events, or
objects, or systems, E1, E2, E3, E4, may have the following dependence on each
other: (Davies, 47)
But this is a clear example of a very vicious circle.
Take any one of these supposed events or objects or systems. Let it be
E1, and ask how it came about . The answer is: it was caused by E4, which
preceded it; but what is the cause of E4? It is E3; and the cause of E3
is E2, and of E2 is E1. So the cause of E4 is E1 because it is the cause
of its causes. Therefore E4 is the cause of E1 and E1 is the cause of E4
which means that each one of them precedes and is preceded by the other.
Does that make any sense? If these events, etc. are actual
existents, then their coming into being could not have been caused by them the
way Davies supposes it to be. Their ultimate cause must lie outside this
vicious circle.
And the philosopher Passmore advises us to:
Compare the following:
(1) every event has a cause;
(2) to know that an event has happened one must know
how it came about.
The first simply tells us that if we are interested in the
cause of an event, there will always be such a cause for us to discover.
But it leaves us free to start and stop at any point we choose in the search
for causes; we can, if we want to, go on to look for the cause of the cause and
so on ad infinitum , but we need not do so; if we have found a cause, we have
found a cause, whatever its cause may be. The second assertion, however,
would never allow us to assert that we know that an event has happened
... For if we cannot know that an event has taken place unless we know
the event that is its cause, then equally we cannot know that the cause-event
has taken place unless we know its cause, and so on ad infinitum. In
short, if the theory is to fulfill its promise, the series must stop somewhere,
and yet the theory is such that the series cannot stop anywhere – unless, that
is, a claim of privilege is sustained for a certain kind of event, e.g. the
creation of the Universe. (Pasture, 29)
If you think about it, there is no real difference between
these two series as Ibn Taymiyyah clearly explained a long time ago (Ibn
Taymiyyah, 436-83). One can put the first series like this: for an event
to happen, its cause must happen. Now if the cause is itself caused, then
the event will not happen unless its cause event happens, and so on, ad
infinitum. We will not therefore have a series of events that actually
happened, but a series of no events. And because we know that there are
events, we conclude that their real ultimate cause could not have been any
temporal thing or series of temporal things whether finite or infinite.
The ultimate cause must be of a nature that is different from that of temporal
things; it must be eternal. Why do I say ‘ultimate’? Because, as I
said earlier, events can be viewed as real causes of other events, so long as
we acknowledge them to be the incomplete and dependent causes they are, and as
such not the causes that explain the coming into being of something in any
absolute sense, which is to say that they cannot take the place of God.
What is the relevance of this talk about chains after all?
There might have been some excuse for it before the advent of the Big
Bang, but it should have been clear to Davies in particular that there is no
place for it at all in the world-view of a person who believes that the
universe had an absolute beginning.
The fact that every thing around us is temporal and that it
could not have been created except by an eternal Creator has been known to
human beings since the dawn of their creation, and it is still the belief of
the overwhelming majority of people all over the world.[1] It
would, therefore, be a mistake to get from this paper the impression that it
hinges the existence of God upon the truth of the Big Bang theory. That
certainly is not my belief; neither was it the purpose of this paper. The
main thrust of the paper has rather been that if an atheist believes in the big
bang theory, then he cannot avoid admitting that the Universe was created by
God. This, in fact, is what some scientists frankly admitted, and what
others hesitantly intimated to.
There is no ground for supposing that matter and energy
existed before and was suddenly galvanized into action. For what could
distinguish that moment from all other moments in eternity? ... It is
simpler to postulate creation ex nihilo, Divine will constituting nature from nothingness.
(Jastro,122)
As to the first cause of the universe in the context of
expansion, that is left to the reader to insert, but our picture is incomplete
without Him. (Jasrow,122)
This means that the initial state of the universe must have
been very carefully chosen indeed if the hot big bang model was correct right
back to the beginning of time. It would be very difficult to explain why
the universe should have begun in just this way except as the act of a God who
intended to create beings like us. (Hawking,127)
References
Al Ghazali, Abu Hamid, Tahafut al Falasifa, edited by
Sulayman Dunya, Dar al Ma'arif, Cairo, 1374 (1955)
Berman, David, A History of Atheism in Britain , London
and New York ,
Routledge, 1990.
Boslough, John, Stephen Hawking's Universe: an
Introduction to the most remarkable Scientist of our Time, Avon Books, New York , 1985.
Bunge, Mario, Causality: The Place of the Causal
Principle in Modern Science, The world publication Co.
New York ,
1963
Carter, Stephen L. The Culture of Disbelief: How
American Law and Politics Trivialize Religious Devotion. Basic Books, Harper
Collins, 1993.
Concise Science Dictionary, Oxford University
Press, Oxford ,
1984
Davies, Paul, (1) The Cosmic Blueprint: New Discoveries
in Nature's Creative Ability to Order the Universe, Simon & Schuster Inc, London , 1989. (2)God
& The New Physics, The Touchstone Book, New York , 1983.
Fritzsch, Harald, The Creation of Matter: The Universe
From Beginning to End, Basic Books Inc Publishers, New York , 1984.
Ibn Rushd, al Qadi Abu al Walid Muhammad Ibn Rush, Tahafut
at-Tahafut, edited by Sulayman Dunya, Dar al Ma'arif , Cairo, 1388
(1968.)
Ibn Taymiya, Abu al Abbas Taqiyuddin Ahmad Ibn Abd al
Halim, Minhaj al Sunna al Nabawiya , edited by Dr. Rashad Salim, Imam
Muhammad Ibn Saud Islamic University, Riyad, AH 1406 (1986)
Jastrow, Robert, God And The Astronomers, Warner Books,
New York ,
1978.
Hawking, Stephen, A Brief History of Time,
Hoyle, Fred, The Nature of the Universe, Mentor Books, New
York , 1955.
Kirkpatrick, Larry D. and Wheeler, Gerald F. Physics, A
World View, New York , Saunders College
Publishing, 1992.
Newton, Sir Isaac, Optics, Dover Publications Inc. New York , 1952.
Pasture, J. A, Philosophical Reasoning, New York , 1961.
Taylor, John, When the Clock Struck Zero: Science's
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1993
Footnotes:
[1] “…the first published avowal of
speculative atheism appeared in 1770 on the Continent, and in 1782 in Britain .”
(Russell, Atheism. 3).
“The most recent Gallop data indicate that 96 per cent of
Americans say they believe in God... “ , (Carter, Culture, 278). The
percentage must surely be greater in the non Western world.
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