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Jason Rosenhouse gets it half-right on Galileo

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Professor Jason Rosenhouse has written an unflattering review of Michael Ruse’s new book, Atheism: What Everyone Needs to Know, which also discusses the trial of Galileo. Rosenhouse gets one important point right about Galileo, while lambasting Ruse’s assertion that “much of the problem was brought on Galileo by himself.” (In the interests of fairness, I should mention that Ruse’s book has been highly praised by no less an authority than Harvard biologist E. O. Wilson.) For my own comments on the Galileo affair, see my earlier posts here and here [scroll down to #2]).

Rosenhouse writes (bolding in all passages below is mine – VJT):

The fact is that the Galileo story is exactly what Ruse’s “anti-religious zealots” say it is. It so perfectly expresses the conflict between science and religion that the most hard-core atheist could not have scripted it better. Galileo got into trouble not just because he advocated heliocentrism, but because he argued that scientific questions should be answered by science and not by scripture. That was anathema to The Church. Church authorities spent years lecturing Galileo on precisely what he was and was not allowed to say. They exercised near-total thought control over acceptable opinion at that time. What does Ruse think a conflict between science and religion looks like?

As we’ll see, Galileo did indeed argue for a much stronger degree of scientific autonomy than his ecclesiastical contemporaries: Rosenhouse is right on that point. However, it turns out that Galileo also held that science could only establish truths deductively, which means that he would have regarded modern scientific claims which rely on inductive logic as open to reasonable doubt. In other words, Galileo’s conception of which questions can be answered by science was much narrower than ours. Also, Galileo accepted the reality of publicly observable miracles – which puts him directly at odds with the modern conception of the scientific method.

What’s wrong with leaving scientific questions to scientists?

“Leave scientific questions to the scientists” sounds like common sense – but it isn’t. First of all, what counts as a “scientific question”? Is it a question which scientists can answer, or a question which scientists should answer? If “scientific question” denotes the former, then why should the scientific answer to a question take precedence over the religious answer to the same question? But if the term denotes the latter instead, then how do we know which questions scientists should answer, and which ones they shouldn’t?

A second problem with the slogan, “Leave scientific questions to the scientists,” is that it implicitly assumes the truth of metaphysical naturalism: basically, it says that we should answer questions about the world as if there were nothing outside it, or as if the only causes in operation were those which scientists can investigate. The will of the Creator (if there be one) is not directly amenable to scientific investigation, any more than the characters in a story are capable of knowing what the author will decide next. But if a supernatural Being exists, then our relationship to Him is like that of the characters in a story to the author, or like that of the characters in a video game to the games’s creator – the only difference being that the human characters in God’s cosmic drama have been endowed with libertarian free will by their Creator, making them capable of defying Him (but not, ultimately, capable of thwarting His purposes). What science does is study the world as if God’s will were time-invariant – which it might or might not be, if His choices are genuinely free – or as if God’s will were unimportant – which it certainly is not, if God is real.

A third problem with Rosenhouse’s slogan is that it fails to distinguish questions which can be answered by direct empirical observation with questions which can only be answered by formulating hypotheses, which need to be tested. It is one thing to declare that we should trust the evidence of our senses – or for that matter, our measuring instruments – without letting religious revelations over-rule it. It is quite another thing to say that religious revelations should never be allowed to trump our scientific hypotheses about a class of events, some of which take place in the distant past or future, making them incapable of being observed by us.

What Rosenhouse forgot to mention about Galileo

Galileo was no naturalist. It needs to be borne in mind that despite his belief in the autonomy of science, Galileo firmly believed in publicly verifiable miracles, such as Joshua’s commanding the sun to “stand still” (even though he explained this miracle in a different way from his geocentric contemporaries). Galileo also believed that God had personally designed the bones, veins, flesh and feathers of birds, in exquisite detail (which makes Galileo an Intelligent Design theorist), and he also affirmed that “the human mind is a work of God, and one of the most excellent” (which makes him a “mind creationist”). Galileo was also something of a mystic: he saw himself as the recipient of great truths that were previously known only to God, and he expressed his gratitude to God for being the first to experience these revelations. Finally, Galileo died on good terms with the Church: indeed, Pope Urban VIII sent his special blessing to Galileo as he lay dying. After his death, Galileo was interred not only in consecrated ground, but within the church of Santa Croce at Florence. (For further references, please see my post on the subject, here.)

What Rosenhouse got right about Galileo

Galileo facing the Roman Inquisition. Painting by Cristiano Banti, 1857. Image courtesy of Wikipedia.

Nevertheless, it needs to be acknowledged Galileo’s principles for Scriptural exegesis were quite radical, and this was one reason why he got into trouble with the Catholic Church. In a previous post of mine, I discussed Pope John Paul II’s 1992 address, Faith can never conflict with reason (L’Osservatore Romano N. 44 (1264) – 4 November 1992), which specifically addressed the Galileo controversy. I then went on to quote from an article by Dr. Gregory W. Dawes, titled, Could there be another Galileo case? Galileo, Augustine and Vatican II, in Journal of Religion and Society 4, 2002:

In his 1615 letter to the Grand Duchess Christina of Lorraine, Galileo argues for a “principle of limitation”: the authority of Scripture should not be invoked in scientific matters. In doing so, he claims to be following the example of St Augustine. But Augustine’s position would be better described as a “principle of differing purpose”: although the Scriptures were not written in order to reveal scientific truths, such matters may still be covered by biblical authority. The Roman Catholic Church has rejected Galileo’s principle, opting rather for Augustine’s, leaving open the possibility of future conflicts between scientists and Church authority…

Perhaps the clearest indication of Galileo’s desire to limit biblical authority is to be found in a third set of passages [in his letter to the Grand Duchess Christina, written in 1615 – VJT], where he discusses what should be done when the results of the natural sciences seem to come into conflict with the Bible. Galileo first adopts the traditional line — for which he also cites Augustine — that biblical authority should not be invoked in opposition to the firmly established results of natural enquiry (GA, 96, 105). But he then goes further in suggesting that biblical authority should not be invoked to oppose any claims that might be firmly established in the future…. It is not only matters which have been demonstrated with certainty which are — in practice — to be exempted from the authority of the Bible. It is also matters which are capable of being “demonstrated with certainty or known by sensory experience.”

… Cardinal Baronio’s remark [viz. that the Bible was meant to tell us how to get to Heaven, not how the heavens go – a remark which was subsequently quoted by Galileo in order to buttress his arguments – VJT] can be interpreted to mean no more than that Scripture and science have different purposes, a point made by Augustine in the fifth century and by Vatican II in the twentieth. It does not exclude the possibility that, in pursuing these differing goals, the two fields of knowledge may overlap. Indeed the Pope’s address [i.e. Pope John Paul II’s 1992 address, titled, “Faith can never conflict with reason” – VJT] implicitly acknowledges this fact when it speaks of the problem faced by the Church at the time of the Galileo affair. That problem, the Pope writes, was that of “knowing how to judge a new scientific datum when it seems to contradict the truths of faith.” In the end, of course, the Pope believes that such contradiction can be only apparent, but this is not because religion and science represent “non-overlapping magisteria.” On the contrary, if there were no overlap in what religion and science teach, there would be no possibility of even the apparent conflict of which he speaks. It follows that — in the Pope’s own words — “it is therefore not to be excluded that one day we shall find ourselves in a similar situation” to that which prevailed in Galileo’s day. It seems that Stephen Jay Gould is too quick to conclude that the Catholic Church embraces his NOMA principle (Gould 1999: 70–82). Despite some apparent indications to the contrary, and despite the fact that its impact on the sciences today would be relatively insignificant, the possibility of another Galileo case cannot be excluded.

In my post, I then identified monogenism – the belief that the entire human race is descended from a single pair of individuals, named Adam and Eve – as an example of an issue where the claims of science and religion might appear to contradict one another. I then added a few references for those who are interested in what science says about the possibility of a primal couple:

It has been argued that science has ruled out the possibility of monogenesis (see Dennis Venema’s article, Does Genetics Point to a Single Primal Couple? for a non-technical summary of the evidence); for a response, see Dr. Ann Gauger’s chapter,”The Science of Adam and Eve,” in Science and Human Origins, by Ann Gauger, Douglas Axe, and Casey Luskin (Seattle, WA: Discovery Institute Press, 2012), pp. 105-122, and see also Dr. Robert Carter’s online article, Does Genetics Point to a Single Primal Couple? A response to claims to the contrary from BioLogos. For an online response to Francisco J. Ayala’s 1995 article, The Myth of Eve: Molecular Biology and Human Origins (Science 270: 1930–6), see here, here and here, and also here. For a response to Li and Durbin’s 2011 paper, Inference of human population history from individual whole-genome sequences (Nature 475, 493–496 (28 July 2011), doi:10.1038/nature10231), see here. For a response to Blum and Jakobsson’s paper, Deep Divergences of Human Gene Trees and Models of Human Origins (Molecular Biology and Evolution (2011) 28(2): 889-898, doi: 10.1093/molbev/msq265), see here.

For those readers who are interested, Dr. Dennis Bonnette’s peer reviewed article, “The Rational Credibility of a Literal Adam and Eve,” has just been published in the Spanish Thomist journal, Espiritu 64, n. 150 (2015): 303-320. It is available in downloadable form here (click on Texto completo (pdf) to open the file).

Just how radical was Galileo, anyway?

Galileo’s views on the autonomy of science were quite radical for his day. Nevertheless, I believe it would be a mistake to construe him as arguing for a NOMA-style separation of science and religion, along the lines of the late Stephen Jay Gould. Professor Craig Boyd’s article, Using Galileo: A Developmental and Historical Approach (Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith, Volume 59, Number 4, December 2007, pp. 283-288), highlights an important reason why Galileo was far less radical in his views than Professor Rosenhouse makes him out to be: namely, that the modern scientific method employs a notion of demonstration that is strikingly different from that of Galileo (and before him, St. Augustine), who mention only two kinds of scientific demonstration in their writings:

(i) a “pure” mathematical notion, based on self-evident principles (i.e. Aristotle’s narrow notion of a demonstration); and

(ii) an empirical notion, based on “the facts of experience” (a notion which was also appealed to by Augustine).

Combining these two, we might add a third notion which Galileo would also have accepted:

(iii) a deductive demonstration which employs reasoning, based on certain facts which are confirmed by experience – in other words, the kind of demonstration that Sherlock Holmes might use when solving a murder case. The phrase, “knowledge acquired by unassailable arguments or proved by the evidence of experience,” which was used in St. Augustine’s writings, could include this third type of demonstration as well.

What all these notions have in common, however, is that they are either immediately evident or deductions from what is immediately evident. Writing in the early seventeenth century, Galileo likewise envisaged demonstration as proceeding deductively. In this respect, he did not depart from Aristotle’s thinking. Galileo’s major modification of the Aristotelian idea of a demonstration was that it should proceed on the basis of sensory observation, instead of Aristotle’s fixed essences. However, modern science proceeds inductively, as Professor Craig Boyd points out in his article:

The assumption Galileo makes here is that demonstration itself can “prove” the truth of his own perspective along the lines of a modified Aristotelian notion of demonstration wherein a major premise followed by a minor premise produced a conclusion, in a deductive manner. For Galileo “demonstration” included this idea but instead of appealing to Aristotelian essences in the reasoning process, he employed mathematics and sensory observation. Today we no longer accept this view of demonstration and therefore Galileo’s commitment to this method would ultimately undermine his own arguments since on this view neither truth nor “demonstration” are possible since “scientific method” proceeds inductively. (Op. cit., p. 285.)

If Galileo was unable to even prove his own heliocentric theory in a purely deductive manner, on the basis of sensory observations that would rule out alternative geocentric theories once and for all (such as scientific observations of stellar parallax and Foucault’s pendulum, which were not made until two centuries after Galileo’s death), how much less would he regard a hypothesis such as the neo-Darwinian theory of evolution (or for that matter, any other naturalistic theory of evolution) as being capable of scientific proof, since such a theory is forced to posit unobservable and non-replicable events, such as the origin of life and the relatively rapid and unrepeatable diversification of the various phyla of animals (the “Cambrian explosion”)? Galileo, with his strictly deductive notion of “proof,” would never have made the inferential leap to Darwinian evolution, as he would have regarded the question of origins as one which science can never settle.

In short: while Galileo might have agreed (in a qualified fashion) with Jason Rosenhouse’s catchy slogan that “scientific questions should be answered by science and not by scripture,” Galileo’s notion of what counts as a strictly scientific question was far narrower than our modern notion. To view him as a seventeenth-century advocate of the autonomy of science – as the term is understood today – is to commit an historical anachronism.

(Readers who would like to learn more about Galileo’s exegesis of Scripture, and how it differed from that of St. Augsutine and St. Thomas Aquinas, can find out more here.)

Comments
daveS, I don't care what the orbital period is. I only care that Einstein says I can choose to make the earth center of the universe if I want and that it violates no principle within general relativity. You saying I can't do so when he said I can do so is like a bug hitting a windshield. And even that example is probably giving you way too much credit, since you, compared to Einstein, won't even leave a smudge of bug juice when you splatter challenging his authority. Of related note: At the 13:55 minute mark of the following video, Max Tegmark, an atheist, finally admits, post Planck, that the CMBR data does indeed line up with the earth and solar system
"Thoughtcrime: The Conspiracy to Stop The Principle" - video https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=0eVUSDy_rO0#t=832
bornagain
November 18, 2015
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Tell you what, sleep on it and tell me what the orbital period is tomorrow.daveS
November 18, 2015
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“Can we formulate physical laws so that they are valid for all CS [coordinate systems], not only those moving uniformly, but also those moving quite arbitrarily, relative to each other? […] The struggle, so violent in the early days of science, between the views of Ptolemy and Copernicus would then be quite meaningless. Either CS could be used with equal justification. The two sentences: “the sun is at rest and the earth moves” or “the sun moves and the earth is at rest” would simply mean two different conventions concerning two different CS.” Einstein, A. and Infeld, L. (1938) The Evolution of Physics, p.212 (p.248 in original 1938 ed.); Fred Hoyle, discoverer of stellar nucleosynthesis, weighs in here: “The relation of the two pictures [geocentrism and geokineticism] is reduced to a mere coordinate transformation and it is the main tenet of the Einstein theory that any two ways of looking at the world which are related to each other by a coordinate transformation are entirely equivalent from a physical point of view…. Today we cannot say that the Copernican theory is ‘right’ and the Ptolemaic theory ‘wrong’ in any meaningful physical sense.” Hoyle, Fred. Nicolaus Copernicus. London: Heinemann Educational Books Ltd., 1973. George Ellis, who, along with Roger Penrose and Stephen Hawking, helped extend General Relativity to show that not only energy and matter had a definite beginning in the Big Bang but that space and time also had a definite beginning in the Big Bang, weighs in here: “People need to be aware that there is a range of models that could explain the observations… For instance, I can construct you a spherically symmetrical universe with Earth at its center, and you cannot disprove it based on observations… You can only exclude it on philosophical grounds… What I want to bring into the open is the fact that we are using philosophical criteria in choosing our models. A lot of cosmology tries to hide that.” – George Ellis – W. Wayt Gibbs, “Profile: George F. R. Ellis,” Scientific American, October 1995, Vol. 273, No.4, p. 55 In addition, Max Born wrote: “…Thus we may return to Ptolemy’s point of view of a ‘motionless earth’… One has to show that the transformed metric can be regarded as produced according to Einstein’s field equations, by distant rotating masses. This has been done by Thirring. He calculated a field due to a rotating, hollow, thick-walled sphere and proved that inside the cavity it behaved as though there were centrifugal and other inertial forces usually attributed to absolute space. Thus from Einstein’s point of view, Ptolemy and Copernicus are equally right.” Born, Max. “Einstein’s Theory of Relativity”,Dover Publications,1962, pgs 344 & 345: How Einstein Revealed the Universe’s Strange “Nonlocality” – George Musser | Oct 20, 2015 Excerpt: Under most circumstances, we can ignore this nonlocality. You can designate some available chunk of matter as a reference point and use it to anchor a coordinate grid. You can, to the chagrin of Santa Barbarans, take Los Angeles as the center of the universe and define every other place with respect to it. In this framework, you can go about your business in blissful ignorance of space’s fundamental inability to demarcate locations.,, In short, Einstein’s theory is nonlocal in a more subtle and insidious way than Newton’s theory of gravity was. Newtonian gravity acted at a distance, but at least it operated within a framework of absolute space. Einsteinian gravity has no such element of wizardry; its effects ripple through the universe at the speed of light. Yet it demolishes the framework, violating locality in what was, for Einstein, its most basic sense: the stipulation that all things have a location. General relativity confounds our intuitive picture of space as a kind of container in which material objects reside and forces us to search for an entirely new conception of place. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-einstein-revealed-the-universe-s-strange-nonlocality/
Let's see an atheist troll on a blog says I can't say the earth is the center of the universe but Einstein, Hoyle, Ellis, Born and Musser say I can. Who to listen to? An atheist troll or the Geniuses? Gosh, that's such a hard choice. I guess I'm really going to have to think that choice over for a while. :)bornagain
November 18, 2015
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daveS I ignored your gravity example, for what seems like the 50th time, since if I want to make a ping pong ball the center of the entire universe, according to Einstein and company, I can.
And you're calling me hard-headed? In the second scenario with the asteroid (and observer) rotating, what would you say the orbital period of the rock is? I honestly would like to know.daveS
November 18, 2015
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daveS I ignored your gravity example, for what seems like the 50th time, since if I want to make a ping pong ball the center of the entire universe, according to Einstein and company, I can. I have violated, according to Einstein and company, no principle within general relativity by arbitrarily choosing the ping pong ball as the still center of the universe from where I choose to make measurements. Argue with Einstein and company. They are the ones who are saying I can choose wherever I want to be the still center of the universe. Nothing you can say or do, especially appealing to gravity to try to counter what Einstein himself said, will ever change what they said can be done in regards to general relativity. Again, you are arguing with them, the giants of science who literally wrote the book on General Relativity, not me (or with my hand). It really is amazing how hard headed atheists can be. Apparently even Einstein himself is not good enough to correct an atheist on a point about gravity especially if the atheist is determined not to believe that point about gravity since it might lead to a Theistic inference.bornagain
November 18, 2015
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Correction to 4th from last sentence:
In fact, say the rock is now in an almost asteroid-synchronous orbit, revolving 1 degree per day faster than the asteroid rotates.
daveS
November 18, 2015
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If I choose to make the ping pong ball the still center of the entire universe then, according to Einstein and company, I have violated no principle within general relativity. i.e. No laws of physics within general relativity are broken if I choose to do so!
Have you ever heard of Kepler's Third Law? There are formulas which give the orbital period of a small body about a much larger body, if you know the mass of the larger body and the separation. If you assume the 100-meter diameter asteroid has density 3 g/cm^3, and that the small rock is 1 km away, traveling in a circular orbit, then this formula gives us an orbital period of about 7 days. That's according to classical mechanics, which will give you results almost indistinguishable from GR. Let's now assume the asteroid is spinning on its axis, relative to an inertial frame, perpendicular to the plane of the rock, and in the same direction. In fact, say the rock is now in an almost asteroid-synchronous orbit, rotating at 1 degree per day slower than the rock revolves. If we declare the asteroid to be the still, non-rotating center of the universe, now the rock takes about a year to complete one period. Which contradicts Kepler's Law. Do you see the problem?daveS
November 18, 2015
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of note:
"Thoughtcrime: The Conspiracy to Stop The Principle" - video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eVUSDy_rO0
bornagain
November 18, 2015
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daveS, what part of 'talk to the hand' do you not understand? You falsely accuse me of 'doubling down' as if you had a case to make in the first place. You don't! Moreover, you are the one countering Einstein, Hoyle, Ellis, and Born not me. Thus it is you that is doubling down, tripling down, and quadrupling down, not me. For you to even have a coherent argument at this point, you need to show where those great men of science were wrong in their claim that general relativity allows you to, once again, consider the earth may be central in the universe. Einstein, Hoyle, Ellis, and Born all state that the point of reference one chooses to make measurements from in general relativity, i.e. chooses to make 'central' in general relativity, is arbitrary. I agree with them since they are great men of science and disagree with you since you are, even though you are made in the image of God, basically just an atheist troll on a blog. as to this statement you made: "you observed an asteroid with diameter 100 meters orbiting a rock the size of a ping-pong ball at 10 revolutions per second, wouldn’t you be surprised? If the asteroid and rock had approximately the same density, wouldn’t you begin to suspect you were witnessing a violation of the laws of physics?" In the preceding statement in which you asked me to consider different points of observation in the universe, you used the words 'observed' and "witnessing". That was Einstein and company's entire point. The reference frame you choose to make measurements from in general relativity, to 'observe' from, is entirely up to you. If I choose to make the ping pong ball the still center of the entire universe then, according to Einstein and company, I have violated no principle within general relativity. i.e. No laws of physics within general relativity are broken if I choose to do so! Like I said, your argument is with them, not with me. Of final note as to 'violation of the laws of physics', Do you not consider it a huge violation of the laws of physics that, according to quantum mechanics, the universe does not even exist until it is 'measured', i.e. until it is consciously observed? Or do supposed violations of the laws of physics only count when you are trying to argue against a Theistic universe? Due to advances in quantum mechanics, the argument for God from consciousness can now be framed like this:
1. Consciousness either preceded all of material reality or is a 'epi-phenomena' of material reality. 2. If consciousness is a 'epi-phenomena' of material reality then consciousness will be found to have no special position within material reality. Whereas conversely, if consciousness precedes material reality then consciousness will be found to have a special position within material reality. 3. Consciousness is found to have a special, even central, position within material reality. 4. Therefore, consciousness is found to precede material reality. Four intersecting lines of experimental evidence from quantum mechanics that shows that consciousness precedes material reality (Wigner’s Quantum Symmetries, Wheeler’s Delayed Choice, Leggett’s Inequalities, Quantum Zeno effect): A Short Survey Of Quantum Mechanics and Consciousness https://docs.google.com/document/d/1uLcJUgLm1vwFyjwcbwuYP0bK6k8mXy-of990HudzduI/edit
Verse:
Colossians 1:17 And he is before all things, and by him all things consist.
bornagain
November 18, 2015
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bornagain, I didn't expect you to double down on this point. If you were a space traveler moving through a region far away from any very large bodies, and you observed an asteroid with diameter 100 meters orbiting a rock the size of a ping-pong ball at 10 revolutions per second, wouldn't you be surprised? If the asteroid and rock had approximately the same density, wouldn't you begin to suspect you were witnessing a violation of the laws of physics? Edit: Anyway, why don't you and/or your colleagues write up some physical examples showing how all this works. Instead of relying on quotes from famous physicists, give us some actual numbers and calculations. Prove that, even in light of our modern knowledge of the solar system, a coordinate transformation can make Mercury *actually* orbit a stationary Earth.daveS
November 18, 2015
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daveS, I asked you to 'please address the hand'. When you can't even get that simple instruction right, what am I to think about you? you state:
My point is that Ptolemy asserted that the Earth is the orbital center of the universe. Ptolemy was wrong about this. However, you insist he (Ptolemy) was right here:
Actually, it is not 'me' insisting Ptolemy was right. It is me insisting that Einstein, Hoyle, Ellis, and Born are right in their support of Ptolemy's initial hunch.
“Can we formulate physical laws so that they are valid for all CS [coordinate systems], not only those moving uniformly, but also those moving quite arbitrarily, relative to each other? […] The struggle, so violent in the early days of science, between the views of Ptolemy and Copernicus would then be quite meaningless. Either CS could be used with equal justification. The two sentences: “the sun is at rest and the earth moves” or “the sun moves and the earth is at rest” would simply mean two different conventions concerning two different CS.” Einstein, A. and Infeld, L. (1938) The Evolution of Physics, p.212 (p.248 in original 1938 ed.); Fred Hoyle, discoverer of stellar nucleosynthesis, weighs in here: “The relation of the two pictures [geocentrism and geokineticism] is reduced to a mere coordinate transformation and it is the main tenet of the Einstein theory that any two ways of looking at the world which are related to each other by a coordinate transformation are entirely equivalent from a physical point of view…. Today we cannot say that the Copernican theory is ‘right’ and the Ptolemaic theory ‘wrong’ in any meaningful physical sense.” Hoyle, Fred. Nicolaus Copernicus. London: Heinemann Educational Books Ltd., 1973. George Ellis, who, along with Roger Penrose and Stephen Hawking, helped extend General Relativity to show that not only energy and matter had a definite beginning in the Big Bang but that space and time also had a definite beginning in the Big Bang, weighs in here: “People need to be aware that there is a range of models that could explain the observations… For instance, I can construct you a spherically symmetrical universe with Earth at its center, and you cannot disprove it based on observations… You can only exclude it on philosophical grounds… What I want to bring into the open is the fact that we are using philosophical criteria in choosing our models. A lot of cosmology tries to hide that.” – George Ellis – W. Wayt Gibbs, “Profile: George F. R. Ellis,” Scientific American, October 1995, Vol. 273, No.4, p. 55 In addition, Max Born wrote: “…Thus we may return to Ptolemy’s point of view of a ‘motionless earth’… One has to show that the transformed metric can be regarded as produced according to Einstein’s field equations, by distant rotating masses. This has been done by Thirring. He calculated a field due to a rotating, hollow, thick-walled sphere and proved that inside the cavity it behaved as though there were centrifugal and other inertial forces usually attributed to absolute space. Thus from Einstein’s point of view, Ptolemy and Copernicus are equally right.” Born, Max. “Einstein’s Theory of Relativity”,Dover Publications,1962, pgs 344 & 345:
Your argument is not with me (or my hand), your argument is with those men. And since those great men of science say I can disregard gravity in my formulation of geometric centrality in the universe, I will. And I will only consider what the CMBR data and Quantum Mechanics say. i.e. Which happens to be evidence that is very friendly to overturning the Copernican principlebornagain
November 18, 2015
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And, in his ignorance of gravity, he asserted an Earth centered universe. So your point is exactly what about Ptolemy?
My point is that Ptolemy asserted that the Earth is the orbital center of the universe. Ptolemy was wrong about this. However, you insist he was right here:
I am free to say that the Earth (or any other point in the universe I may choose to pick) stays still and everything in the universe revolves around it.
That is, you are saying that we can regard the Earth as the stationary orbital center of the universe. But I get the impression that you do understand that such a universe, with the Earth at its orbital center, is contrary to the laws of physics. It's clear that the Andromeda galaxy orbiting the Earth once per day is totally implausible. Here's a simpler thought experiment. Suppose a tiny, 1-gram meteoroid is in a geosynchronous orbit around the earth. The meteoroid is rotating at 5 rotations per second around an axis perpendicular to the plane in which the orbit lies. Now look at the situation from a reference frame where the meteoroid is stationary. From that perspective, the Earth is orbiting the fixed meteoroid 5 times a second. This is clearly impossible. Hence the meteoroid cannot be the orbital center of the Earth-meteoroid system. Hence we are not free to say that the Earth (or the meteoroid) is stationary and everything in the universe revolves around it. You can use whatever coordinate system you want, but that's a different issue. I won't get out a speeding ticket if I tell the cop who clocked me going 80 mph that I prefer to use a coordinate system in which my car is at rest.daveS
November 18, 2015
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"Again, I’ve made no assertions about gravity. You are the one who keeps bringing it up. Remember who didn’t know about universal gravitation? Ptolemy, that’s who." And, in his ignorance of gravity, he asserted an Earth centered universe. So your point is exactly what about Ptolemy? "At (t)his point I will bring up gravity." Again, a major part of my paper was dedicated to pointing out that gravity is useless for determining true geometric centrality in the universe. So again your point with gravity in trying to overturn an earth centered model for the universe is what exactly? to repeat,
"The only way you can counter this ‘demotion of gravity’ in regards to trying to determine true centrality in the universe is by, as you have been trying to do, sneaking gravity back into the discussion"
And lo and behold that is exactly what you have done. As well, it seems you are having a very hard time understanding 'talk to the hand' So again, please address further comments to 'the hand'
Any further comments from you regarding you saying gravity plays any part in determining true centrality in the universe can be addressed to my trusty secretary. i.e. ‘the hand’ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_O-QqC9yM28
bornagain
November 18, 2015
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bornagain,
The only way you can counter this ‘demotion of gravity’ in regards to trying to determine true centrality in the universe is by, as you have been trying to do, sneaking gravity back into the discussion and saying that Mercury orbits the sun, not the Earth, due to gravity.
Again, I've made no assertions about gravity. You are the one who keeps bringing it up. Remember who didn't know about universal gravitation? Ptolemy, that's who.
Since gravity is useless for determining true centrality in the universe, then I am free to say that the Earth (or any other point in the universe I may choose to pick) stays still and everything in the universe revolves around it.
You can say anything you want, of course. That doesn't make it true. At his point I will bring up gravity. Have you worked through the consequences, assuming the Earth truly is the orbital center of the universe? The Andromeda galaxy would be orbiting Earth once per day! Do you know what sorts of forces would be required to cause an entire galaxy 2.5 million light years away to accelerate at such a rate? And that's one of our nearest neighbors! Edit: Anyway, I'm quite sure that if a "Darwinist" stated that the rest of the universe orbits a stationary Earth, there would be a callout thread within minutes.daveS
November 18, 2015
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daveS, you still are (purposely?) failling to pick up the subtle distinction that even Einstein himself made. Since gravity is useless for determining true centrality in the universe, then I am free to say that the Earth (or any other point in the universe I may choose to pick) stays still and everything in the universe revolves around it. As Einstein put it in regards to General Relativity:
“the sun moves and the earth is at rest” would simply mean two different conventions concerning two different CS.” Einstein
The only way you can counter this 'demotion of gravity' in regards to trying to determine true centrality in the universe is by, as you have been trying to do, sneaking gravity back into the discussion and saying that Mercury orbits the sun, not the Earth, due to gravity. So what!!! I don't care! My point is exactly the fact that Einstein himself made. Namely, that gravity is useless for determining true centrality in the universe. Thus, I am free to disregard gravity and use the other evidences from the CMBR and quantum mechanics that I cited to establish true centrality in the universe. To emphasize the uselessness of Gravity in determining true centrality in the universe, here is a recent article on the subject:
How Einstein Revealed the Universe’s Strange “Nonlocality” – George Musser | Oct 20, 2015 Excerpt: Under most circumstances, we can ignore this nonlocality. You can designate some available chunk of matter as a reference point and use it to anchor a coordinate grid. You can, to the chagrin of Santa Barbarans, take Los Angeles as the center of the universe and define every other place with respect to it. In this framework, you can go about your business in blissful ignorance of space’s fundamental inability to demarcate locations.,, In short, Einstein’s theory is nonlocal in a more subtle and insidious way than Newton’s theory of gravity was. Newtonian gravity acted at a distance, but at least it operated within a framework of absolute space. Einsteinian gravity has no such element of wizardry; its effects ripple through the universe at the speed of light. Yet it demolishes the framework, violating locality in what was, for Einstein, its most basic sense: the stipulation that all things have a location. General relativity confounds our intuitive picture of space as a kind of container in which material objects reside and forces us to search for an entirely new conception of place. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-einstein-revealed-the-universe-s-strange-nonlocality/
I really don't know how to make this point any clearer for you so that you can understand it, (if you truly don't understand the point instead of just being purposely obstinate in your atheism), so I will leave the discussion here and let you have the last word. Any further comments from you regarding you saying gravity plays any part in determining true centrality in the universe can be addressed to my trusty secretary. i.e. 'the hand' https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_O-QqC9yM28bornagain
November 18, 2015
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Is that a "True" or a "False"? If the answer is "False", why did you write "and yet" at the beginning of your post #18, as if my statement about Einstein was untrue?daveS
November 18, 2015
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daveS, I claimed that gravity is, as Einstein himself admitted, useless for determining centrality in the universe. That both the Earth and Mercury orbit the sun in the solar system due to the greater gravity of the sun is therefore moot and void for determining true centrality in the universe. I made this point clear several times now and yet you keep repeating the fact that planets, particularly Mercury, orbits the sun due to the greater gravity of the sun as if that refutes the point I am making in regards to determining true centrality in the universe. It is said that Einstein also said "Insanity is repeating the same mistakes and expecting different results." In this present discussion you qualify for that distinction of insanity. https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/ac/0c/49/ac0c496cae1c3f53705c7f998e022c56.jpgbornagain
November 18, 2015
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bornagain, None of that has anything to do with whether Mercury orbits the Earth, as Ptolemy asserted. I challenge you to answer the following question.
True or False: The planet Mercury does orbit the Earth.
daveS
November 18, 2015
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Matzke:
We use well-tested technological instruments — stratigraphy, isochron dating, carbon dating, DNA sequencing, alignment, phylogenetics, etc. — to infer the ancientness of events, to infer the detailed history of common ancestry, etc.
Except there isn't any detailed history of common ancestry. Thanks to you and yours we don't even know what makes an organism what it is and that means common ancestry is an untestable concept.Virgil Cain
November 18, 2015
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"Einstein would agree with that." and yet
“Can we formulate physical laws so that they are valid for all CS [coordinate systems], not only those moving uniformly, but also those moving quite arbitrarily, relative to each other? […] The struggle, so violent in the early days of science, between the views of Ptolemy and Copernicus would then be quite meaningless. Either CS could be used with equal justification. The two sentences: “the sun is at rest and the earth moves” or “the sun moves and the earth is at rest” would simply mean two different conventions concerning two different CS.” Einstein, A. and Infeld, L. (1938) The Evolution of Physics, p.212 (p.248 in original 1938 ed.);
go figure! http://funlava.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/albert-einstein-quotes-sayings-stupid-difference-genius.jpgbornagain
November 18, 2015
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bornagain,
daveS, perhaps you should actually read my posts before making comments that do not follow?
Perhaps you should read my post. Does it even mention gravity, or any assumption that centrality in the universe is determined by gravity? That would be interesting, in view of the fact that Ptolemy was working roughly 1500 years before Newton. Ptolemy observed that orbits exist. He didn't explain them in terms of gravity. He posited that the Earth is the orbital center of the universe. As the planet Mercury shows, this is false, so Ptolemy was wrong in this respect. Even Einstein would agree with that.daveS
November 18, 2015
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daveS, perhaps you should actually read my posts before making comments that do not follow?
The Copernican Principle Has Been Overturned: https://docs.google.com/document/d/14RdDQoXhbteijyNb_1srr6Kfu-qXv7SN7Tm58ZPhqkQ/edit
It really does not reflect well on your honesty (or intelligence) to state a point that I spent a large part of my post refuting. Namely, the discredited notion underlying the Copernican principle that gravity determines centrality in the universe. Gravity, contrary to your naive Mercury not revolving around the earth quip, does not determine centrality in the universe. If it helps you get through your mental block, please note that I said centrality in the universe, not centrality in the solar system. In other words, General Relativity has shown gravity to be useless for determining centrality in the universe. It certainly does not seem like that difficult of a concept to grab, but apparently you, despite being corrected a few times now, fail to grasp this fairly simple concept. Hopefully, with a bit of thoughtful reflection on your part, you can see your elementary failure in logic of trying to use gravity to determine centrality in the universe.bornagain
November 18, 2015
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Let's be clear that the Ptolemaic model, which posits a fixed, non-rotating Earth, has been falsified. We know that because Mercury does not orbit the Earth.daveS
November 18, 2015
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In addition, Max Born wrote:
“...Thus we may return to Ptolemy’s point of view of a ‘motionless earth’... One has to show that the transformed metric can be regarded as produced according to Einstein’s field equations, by distant rotating masses. This has been done by Thirring. He calculated a field due to a rotating, hollow, thick-walled sphere and proved that inside the cavity it behaved as though there were centrifugal and other inertial forces usually attributed to absolute space. Thus from Einstein’s point of view, Ptolemy and Copernicus are equally right.” Born, Max. “Einstein’s Theory of Relativity”,Dover Publications,1962, pgs 344 & 345:
bornagain
November 18, 2015
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Permalink to 10 and 11: The Copernican Principle Has Been Overturned: https://docs.google.com/document/d/14RdDQoXhbteijyNb_1srr6Kfu-qXv7SN7Tm58ZPhqkQ/editbornagain
November 18, 2015
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Thought control? i was banned from this Rosenhouse blog thing long ago. It was boring anyways. The church did not lecture Gally on science. it lectured on conclusions about nature. Don't teach the wrong conclusions. Just like they say today in schools in banning creationism. No differing difference. The roam catholic church was enforcing conclusions and wrong ones and this is why there was a protestant reformation. Worse the church was enforcing conclusions from pagan greeks long ago. Yet it was a catholic problem and not a Christian one. The bible didn't talk about any things related to physics save in general ways. Its the right of Christiandom to enforce Christian conclusions. Yet we live in contract with each other to be frere in drawing any conclusions. This contract is broken by the present censorship from the state however. Modern enemies of Christianity use the case of Gally to not overcome Christian resistane in institutions or any science place BUT instead to censor christian conclusions from getting rebuttal or equal time. They use it also to say Christianity was wrong but it was just Catholic Catholic faith in pagan Athens. Yup they blew it but physicians heal thyself. STOP USING GALLY TO SAY CREATIONISM IS INTERFERING WITH TRUE SCIENCE RESEARCH. Its stupid desperation. .Robert Byers
November 17, 2015
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Moreover, not only is the Cosmic Background Radiation found to align with the solar system, and with Earth’s rotational periodicity, but the CMBR is also now found to be set up for intelligent life like human life to discover it:
The Fine-Tuning for Discoverability – Robin Collins – March 22, 2014 Excerpt: Examples of fine – tuning for discoverability. The most dramatic confirmation of the discoverability/livability optimality thesis (DLO) is the dependence of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMB) on the baryon to photon ratio.,,, …the intensity of CMB depends on the photon to baryon ratio, (??b), which is the ratio of the average number of photons per unit volume of space to the average number of baryons (protons plus neutrons) per unit volume. At present this ratio is approximately a billion to one (10^9) , but it could be anywhere from one to infinity; it traces back to the degree of asymmetry in matter and anti – matter right after the beginning of the universe – for approximately every billion particles of antimatter, there was a billion and one particles of matter.,,, The only livability effect this ratio has is on whether or not galaxies can form that have near – optimally livability zones. As long as this condition is met, the value of this ratio has no further effects on livability. Hence, the DLO predicts that within this range, the value of this ratio will be such as to maximize the intensity of the CMB as observed by typical observers. According to my calculations – which have been verified by three other physicists — to within the margin of error of the experimentally determined parameters (~20%), the value of the photon to baryon ratio is such that it maximizes the CMB. This is shown in Figure 1 below. (pg. 13) It is easy to see that this prediction could have been disconfirmed. In fact, when I first made the calculations in the fall of 2011, I made a mistake and thought I had refuted this thesis since those calculations showed the intensity of the CMB maximizes at a value different than the photon – baryon ratio in our universe. So, not only does the DLO lead us to expect this ratio, but it provides an ultimate explanation for why it has this value,,, This is a case of a teleological thesis serving both a predictive and an ultimate explanatory role.,,, http://home.messiah.edu/~rcollins/Fine-tuning/Greer-Heard%20Forum%20paper%20draft%20for%20posting.pdf
In fact, contrary to the generalized form of the Copernican principle which holds that ‘humans are not privileged observers of the universe’, the ‘observer’ is, in fact, given a special frame of reference in Einstein’s relativity equations (given a special frame of reference in both special and general relativity):
Introduction to special relativity Excerpt: Einstein’s approach was based on thought experiments, calculations, and the principle of relativity, which is the notion that all physical laws should appear the same (that is, take the same basic form) to all inertial observers.,,, Each observer has a distinct “frame of reference” in which velocities are measured,,,, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introduction_to_special_relativity Albert Einstein’s Theory of Relativity (privileged frame of reference for the observer) – video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ev9zrt__lec
Actually, both of Einstein’s breakthrough insights for Special Relativity and for General Relativity came from Einstein giving the ‘observer’ a distinct frame of reference. For example, the ‘happiest thought’ of Einstein’s life was when he envisioned ‘an observer freely falling from the roof of a house’. Which happens to be the thought experiment which gave Einstein his breakthrough insight into General Relativity:
The happiest thought of my life. Excerpt: In 1920 Einstein commented that a thought came into his mind when writing the above-mentioned paper he called it “the happiest thought of my life”: “The gravitational field has only a relative existence… Because for an observer freely falling from the roof of a house – at least in his immediate surroundings – there exists no gravitational field.” http://physics.ucr.edu/~wudka/Physics7/Notes_www/node85.html
And in special relativity, an 'observer' moving away from the face of a clock at the speed of light happens to be the ‘thought experiment’ that gave Einstein his breakthrough insight into into special relativity.
Albert Einstein – Special Relativity – Insight into Eternity – ‘thought experiment’ – video (55 second mark) http://www.history.com/topics/albert-einstein/videos/einstein-einsteins-miracle-year
As well, in Quantum Mechanics it is the 'observer' that is found to have the 'privileged' position in the universe.
Reality doesn’t exist until we measure it, (Delayed Choice) quantum experiment confirms – Mind = blown. – FIONA MACDONALD – 1 JUN 2015 Excerpt: “It proves that measurement is everything. At the quantum level, reality does not exist if you are not looking at it,” lead researcher and physicist Andrew Truscott said in a press release. http://www.sciencealert.com/reality-doesn-t-exist-until-we-measure-it-quantum-experiment-confirms
Richard Conn Henry, Professor of Physics at John Hopkins University, puts the situation between quantum mechanics and the Copernican principle as such:
Quantum Enigma:Physics Encounters Consciousness – Richard Conn Henry – Professor of Physics – John Hopkins University Excerpt: It is more than 80 years since the discovery of quantum mechanics gave us the most fundamental insight ever into our nature: the overturning of the Copernican Revolution, and the restoration of us human beings to centrality in the Universe. And yet, have you ever before read a sentence having meaning similar to that of my preceding sentence? Likely you have not, and the reason you have not is, in my opinion, that physicists are in a state of denial… https://uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/the-quantum-enigma-of-consciousness-and-the-identity-of-the-designer/
Thus, apparently while an incomplete understanding of the universe and science led to the Copernican principle, and the demotion of man and earth to fairly low significance in the universe, it turns out that the two most powerful scientific theories of our day, both Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity, as well as perhaps the most important scientific discovery of all time, i.e. the CMBR, all powerfully turn the Copernican principle on its head and restore the Earth, and man, back to their rightful place in God's grand scheme of things. I think Galileo and Copernicus would both be very happy to find that out. Verse and Music:
Isaiah 45:18-19 For thus says the Lord, who created the heavens, who is God, who formed the earth and made it, who established it, who did not create it in vain, who formed it to be inhabited: “I am the Lord, and there is no other. I have not spoken in secret, in a dark place of the earth; I did not say to the seed of Jacob, ‘seek me in vain’; I, the Lord speak righteousness, I declare things that are right.” Jeremy Camp - †THERE WILL BE A DAY† - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=le-TG4sRRiQ
bornagain
November 17, 2015
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As to heliocentrism in general, and the Copernican principle, which was derived from heliocentrism, in particular: A Christian, who holds a PhD in molecular biology, stated the following in regards to geocentrism:
“Is it not obvious that Christians were right to alter their interpretation of biblical verses suggesting geocentrism, such as Psalm 104:5, Joshua 10:12-13 and Ecclesiastes 1:5? The answer, of course, is “yes.” And for most such a modification was not difficult since it was doctrinally inconsequential.”
Actually, contrary to what is popularly believed apparently even among educated Christians, the answer, due to advances in science, is NOT obviously “yes.” Here are the specific verses in question that he cited:
Psalm 104:5 He set the earth on its foundations; it can never be moved. Joshua 10:12-13 Then Joshua spoke to the LORD in the day when the LORD delivered up the Amorites before the sons of Israel, and he said in the sight of Israel, “O sun, stand still at Gibeon, And O moon in the valley of Aijalon.” So the sun stood still, and the moon stopped, Until the nation avenged themselves of their enemies. Is it not written in the book of Jashar? And the sun stopped in the middle of the sky and did not hasten to go down for about a whole day. Ecclesiastes 1:5 The sun rises and the sun sets, and hurries back to where it rises.
Supposedly the Copernican Principle rendered such verses in the Bible as now being merely nice little poetic verses instead of factual verses that speak about reality. The banishment of those verses to poetic nether-land has been, much like Twain’s death, greatly exaggerated. The Copernican Principle is stated as such:
Copernican principle Excerpt: In physical cosmology, the Copernican principle, named after Nicolaus Copernicus, is a working assumption that arises from a modified cosmological extension of Copernicus’ sun-centered heliocentric universe. The Copernican principle assumes that neither the Sun nor the Earth are in a central, specially favored position in the universe.[1] More recently, the principle has been generalized to the relativistic concept that humans are not privileged observers of the universe.[2] In this sense, it is equivalent to the mediocrity principle, with important implications for the philosophy of science. per wikipedia
In direct contradiction to the Copernican/Mediocrity Principle, there have now been recent discoveries in science, specifically concerning the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) and quantum mechanics, which directly challenges the Copernican principle’s conclusion of ‘mediocrity’ for the earth in the universe, and even overturns it for humans in particular. Since seeing is believing, in the following video one can actually see the ‘centrality’ of the earth in the universe in relation to the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation
The Known Universe by AMNH – video – (please note the ‘ centrality’ of the Earth in the universe at the 3:36 minute mark in the video) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17jymDn0W6U
Here is a still shot of the image at the 3:36 minute mark of the preceding video which highlights the centrality of the earth in the universe in relation to the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation:
Picture of Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) http://new-universe.org/zenphoto/albums/Chapter4/Illustrations/Abrams47.jpg
The following video, which shows the mapping of the CMBR by the Planck satellite, is also very good for getting this centrality of the earth in the universe’ across:
Planck Cruise to L2 (mapping CMBR) – video https://youtu.be/piYn0nbbJcs?t=16
Robert Wilson, Arno Penzias, and George Smoot are all on record as stating that the CMBR lines up with what was predicted in the bible thousands of years before the CMBR was discovered
“Certainly there was something that set it all off,,, I can’t think of a better theory of the origin of the universe to match Genesis” Robert Wilson – Nobel laureate – co-discover Cosmic Background Radiation The best data we have [concerning the Big Bang] are exactly what I would have predicted, had I nothing to go on but the five books of Moses, the Psalms, the bible as a whole. Dr. Arno Penzias, Nobel Laureate in Physics – co-discoverer of the Cosmic Background Radiation – as stated to the New York Times on March 12, 1978 “If you’re religious, it’s like seeing God,” George Smoot – Nobel laureate in 2006 for his work on COBE – stated at 1992 News conference announcing the finding and mapping of tiny temperature fluctuations in the CMB
Here are a couple of Bible verses that, in dramatic fashion, back up Wilson, Penzias, and Smoot's contention that the CMBR matches what we would expect from the bible:
Proverbs 8:26-27 While as yet He had not made the earth or the fields, or the primeval dust of the world. When He prepared the heavens, I was there, when He drew a circle on the face of the deep, Job 26:10 He has inscribed a circle on the face of the waters at the boundary between light and darkness.
Ross Andersen puts the implication of the CMBR like this:
In The Beginning – Ross Andersen – 12 May 2015 Excerpt: As I walked out of Steinhardt’s office for the last time, it occurred to me that our cosmos is once again a sphere. Our Earth has been demoted in recent centuries. It no longer enjoys its former status as the still centre of all that is. But it does sit in the middle of our observable cosmos, the sphere of light that we can detect with our telescopes. Gaze into this sphere’s reaches from any point on Earth’s surface, and you can see light coming toward you in layers, from stars and the planets that circle them, from the billions of galaxies beyond, and the final layer of light, the afterglow of the Big Bang. http://aeon.co/magazine/science/has-cosmology-run-into-a-creative-crisis/
As well, it is important to note that gravity, although it may establish centrality in the solar system and in the galaxy, does not establish centrality in the universe. In fact, there is no privileged frame of reference in General Relativity whatsoever so as to be able to say whether one place is more central than another place in the universe is. Even Einstein himself stated as such:
“Can we formulate physical laws so that they are valid for all CS [coordinate systems], not only those moving uniformly, but also those moving quite arbitrarily, relative to each other? […] The struggle, so violent in the early days of science, between the views of Ptolemy and Copernicus would then be quite meaningless. Either CS could be used with equal justification. The two sentences: “the sun is at rest and the earth moves” or “the sun moves and the earth is at rest” would simply mean two different conventions concerning two different CS.” Einstein, A. and Infeld, L. (1938) The Evolution of Physics, p.212 (p.248 in original 1938 ed.);
Fred Hoyle, discoverer of stellar nucleosynthesis, weighs in here:
“The relation of the two pictures [geocentrism and geokineticism] is reduced to a mere coordinate transformation and it is the main tenet of the Einstein theory that any two ways of looking at the world which are related to each other by a coordinate transformation are entirely equivalent from a physical point of view…. Today we cannot say that the Copernican theory is ‘right’ and the Ptolemaic theory ‘wrong’ in any meaningful physical sense.” Hoyle, Fred. Nicolaus Copernicus. London: Heinemann Educational Books Ltd., 1973.
George Ellis, who, along with Roger Penrose and Stephen Hawking, helped extend General Relativity to show that not only energy and matter had a definite beginning in the Big Bang but that space and time also had a definite beginning in the Big Bang, weighs in here:
“People need to be aware that there is a range of models that could explain the observations… For instance, I can construct you a spherically symmetrical universe with Earth at its center, and you cannot disprove it based on observations… You can only exclude it on philosophical grounds… What I want to bring into the open is the fact that we are using philosophical criteria in choosing our models. A lot of cosmology tries to hide that.” – George Ellis – W. Wayt Gibbs, “Profile: George F. R. Ellis,” Scientific American, October 1995, Vol. 273, No.4, p. 55
In fact, in General Relativity there is a fundamental inability to demarcate locations in the first place so as to even be able to say 'where' centrality may be in the universe.
How Einstein Revealed the Universe's Strange "Nonlocality" - George Musser | Oct 20, 2015 Excerpt: Under most circumstances, we can ignore this nonlocality. You can designate some available chunk of matter as a reference point and use it to anchor a coordinate grid. You can, to the chagrin of Santa Barbarans, take Los Angeles as the center of the universe and define every other place with respect to it. In this framework, you can go about your business in blissful ignorance of space's fundamental inability to demarcate locations.,, In short, Einstein's theory is nonlocal in a more subtle and insidious way than Newton's theory of gravity was. Newtonian gravity acted at a distance, but at least it operated within a framework of absolute space. Einsteinian gravity has no such element of wizardry; its effects ripple through the universe at the speed of light. Yet it demolishes the framework, violating locality in what was, for Einstein, its most basic sense: the stipulation that all things have a location. General relativity confounds our intuitive picture of space as a kind of container in which material objects reside and forces us to search for an entirely new conception of place. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-einstein-revealed-the-universe-s-strange-nonlocality/
Thus the presumption that gravity determines centrality in the universe, and which was the presumption, due to heleocentrism, behind the acceptance of the the Copernican principle, is no longer a valid presumption to make. In other words, the rationale that was originally behind the Copernican principle, of using gravity to determine centrality, is no longer a valid argument to make against the earth being considered central in the universe. With all that in mind, it is now interesting to point out that an ‘anomaly’ in the CMBR data lines up with the solar system:
Why is the solar system cosmically aligned? BY Dragan Huterer – 2007 The solar system seems to line up with the largest cosmic features. Is this mere coincidence or a signpost to deeper insights? Caption under figure on page 43: ODD ALIGNMENTS hide within the multipoles of the cosmic microwave background. In this combination of the quadrupole and octopole, a plane bisects the sphere between the largest warm and cool lobes. The ecliptic — the plane of Earth’s orbit projected onto the celestial sphere — is aligned parallel to the plane between the lobes. http://www-personal.umich.edu/~huterer/PRESS/CMB_Huterer.pdf Here is the actual graph of the solar system’s alignment with the CMBR from Huterer’s 2007 paper. As they say, the picture is worth a thousand words: http://i44.servimg.com/u/f44/16/14/18/96/axis_o10.jpg
Of note: The preceding article by Huterer was written before the Planck data (it was written with WMPA & COBE data), but the multipoles observed were actually verified by the more robust Planck data in 2013.
Planck reveals an almost perfect Universe (Disconfirms inflationary models) – video Quote at 2:00 minute mark: “What’s surprising in Planck’s latest findings and is inconsistent with prevailing theories, is the presence of unexpected large scale anomalies in the sky. Including a large cold region. Stronger fluctuations in one half of the sky than the other. And less light signals than expected across the entire sky.” Planck spokesman: “When we look at only the large features on this (CMBR) map you find that our find that our best fitting theory (inflation) has a problem fitting the data.” “Planck launched in 2009,, is the 3rd mission to study the Cosmic Microwave Background to date. While these unusual features in the sky were hinted at the two previous US missions, COBE and WMAP, Planck’s ability to measure the tiniest of fluctuations in the Cosmic Microwave Background has made these so called anomalies impossible to ignore.” Planck spokesman: “Because of these features that we are finding in the sky, people really are in a situation now where they cannot ignore them any more. ,,, We’ve established them (the anomalies) as fact!”. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2CWaLU6eMI
Moreover, besides the solar system, the earth’s rotation is also found to uniquely line up with “anisotropies in the sky distributions of powerful extended quasars and some other sub-classes of radio galaxies”. Particularly as they relate to a plane passing through the two equinoxes and the north celestial pole.
Is there a violation of the Copernican principle in radio sky? – Ashok K. Singal – May 17, 2013 Abstract: Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) observations from the WMAP satellite have shown some unexpected anisotropies (directionally dependent observations), which surprisingly seem to be aligned with the eclipticcite {20,16,15}. The latest data from the Planck satellite have confirmed the presence of these anisotropiescite {17}. Here we report even larger anisotropies in the sky distributions of powerful extended quasars and some other sub-classes of radio galaxies in the 3CRR catalogue, one of the oldest and most intensively studies sample of strong radio sourcescite{21,22,3}. The anisotropies lie about a plane passing through the two equinoxes and the north celestial pole (NCP). We can rule out at a 99.995% confidence level the hypothesis that these asymmetries are merely due to statistical fluctuations. Further, even the distribution of observed radio sizes of quasars and radio galaxies show large systematic differences between these two sky regions. The redshift distribution appear to be very similar in both regions of sky for all sources, which rules out any local effects to be the cause of these anomalies. Two pertinent questions then arise. First, why should there be such large anisotropies present in the sky distribution of some of the most distant discrete sources implying inhomogeneities in the universe at very large scales (covering a fraction of the universe)? What is intriguing even further is why such anisotropies should lie about a great circle decided purely by the orientation of earth’s rotation axis and/or the axis of its revolution around the sun? It looks as if these axes have a preferential placement in the larger scheme of things, implying an apparent breakdown of the Copernican principle or its more generalization, cosmological principle, upon which all modern cosmological theories are based upon. http://arxiv.org/pdf/1305.4134.pdf
bornagain
November 17, 2015
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Hi Nick, Have you figured out what a sequence space is yet? Is your book on macro-evolution coming out soon?Mung
November 17, 2015
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Hi Nick Matzke, Thank you for your post. I am of course perfectly well aware that descriptions of how scientific measuring instruments work are theory-laden. In Galileo's own day, there were some people who didn't trust the observations that had been made via his telescope. But when we're talking events about which take place in the distant past or future, we're making certain background assumptions, not just about how our instruments work, but how the world at large works, and we run into the well-known problem of induction. To be sure, we can formulate scientific hypotheses about the past and the future, and we can test them and amass evidence for them. But that way of testing hypotheses cannot possibly address the intentions of the Author of the universe. Science tells me that the Sun is a G-type star which won't die for another 5 billion years. But science can say nothing in response to the view (held by some religious people) that God will bring the universe to an end some time within the next few hundred years. We just don't know.vjtorley
November 17, 2015
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