Dear Enki,
You seem fixated on the idea of God, so here is another wonder regarding God.
All electrons are exactly, precisely the same, they do say that God is in the detail or is that the devil
Gonnagle.
Hi Gonners,
A very happy and healthy new year to you.
Well, if I am fixated on the idea of God, as you put it(in a thread, incidentally, entitled 'Searching for God'), then may I refer you to the very first sentence of your post to which I originally replied, when you said:
That's a very confident sentence, just wondering if that is a mark of atheism, a confidence in science.
Also, in your post, to which I am now replying, you bring in God at the beginning when you refer to "another wonder regarding God" and at the end when you say that "they do say that God is in the detail, or is that the devil".
So, I suggest that if anybody is fixated on the God aspect here, it would be rather you than me.
The truth is I couldn't care less about the supposed involvement of any god. I was simply expressing the idea that it is quite possible to experience wonder and fascination of the natural world without bringing in any idea of God at all.
Now to your very interesting and fascinating description of the quantum world of sub atomic particles which actually make up the water molecules and dust which lead to the formation of snowflakes. The chances of two snowflakes being exactly the same is vanishingly small for as they form they are dependent for their individuality on their random movement, the varying temperatures and the amount of moisture that they travel through.
I would like to know the source of your quote however because it purports to deal with the quantum world of atomic and subatomic particles.
One thing(and there are many) that fascinates me as regards quantum mechanics is the relationship of the world of quantum to the macroscopic world of classical physics. Why does quantum coherence(the wave function integral to the quantum world) so easily break down when a molecule is formed, for instance? And how is the robin or photosynthesis actually able to utilise quantum mechanisms with seeming impunity?
You will notice, no doubt, that my interest and fascination with such ideas has everything to do with curiosity, seeking rational explanations, questioning. To bring God into all this, for me, seems a dead end. For me, it is no kind of explanation. I quite accept that for others, they may find that the idea of God is satisfying and helpful, and, as long as personal belief isn't allowed to distort knowledge then fine, in this context I have no quarrel with it.
That is why I genuinely find it puzzling that you think that I am 'fixated' on God at all.