God Particle is Really God’s Particle by
Gary DeMar
Physicists say they
may have found the so-called God Particle that they claim made stars, planets,
and eventually humans. The Higgs Boson
particle and field is named for British physicist Peter Higgs “who predicted
their existence 50 years ago.” Here’s my
question: “What is the source of the Higgs Boson particle and field?” More
fundamental is this question: “Where did the necessary organized information
come from that guided the evolution of everything evolutionists claim evolved
from it?”
It’s not enough to
have matter and space; you’ve got to have intelligent matter to make it work.
Not only is the alphabet necessary, but there needs to be an intelligence to
organize the letters to make words and sentences that communicate something.
Not even a trillion God Particles typing for 13.7 billion years on a million
cosmic typewriters will ever get us the works of Shakespeare.
Start
with nothing . . . absolutely nothing. No air. No matter . . . not even
an atom. No energy. No space. No thought. No time. Just a long dead silence.
This is the evolutionist’s reality before the dawn of something becoming
everything. At some infinitesimal moment in time all the stuff that makes up
our world came into being.
Even the discovery of the Higgs Boson God Particle can’t
save the evolutionary theorists since it’s something rather than nothing.
How did the Particle get here? Why does it act the way it does?
In 2010, the
darling of everything materialistic, Stephen W. Hawking, argued that the laws
of physics allow for the universe to have created itself . . . from nothing. In his book, The Grand Design,
Hawking states:
“Because
there is a law such as gravity, the Universe can and will create itself from
nothing. Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather than
nothing, why the Universe exists, why we exist.”
The
first thing a budding scientist learns is that spontaneous generation does not
happen. That’s like third-grade science stuff.
Hawking is theorizing. But because he is a
noted scientist whose speculations fit what atheists want and need to believe
in order to make their theoretical worldview work, many people are willing to believe him over against what they know to
be true in everyday life. “Stephen Hawking said it; I believe him; that settles
it.”
The religious
component is evident when you listen carefully to the high priests of the
system. Stanley Fish observed something remarkable in the way Richard Dawkins
explained how scientists do science:
“[W]hen
we accept the conclusions of scientific investigation we necessarily do so on
trust (how many of us have done or could replicate the experiments?) and are
thus not so different from religious believers, Dawkins and [Steven] Pinker[
asserted that the trust we place in scientific researchers, as opposed to
religious pronouncements, has been earned by their record of achievement and by
the public rigor of their procedures. In short, our
trust is justified, theirs is blind.”
It was at this
point that Dawkins said something that’s not often admitted publicly. “[I]n the
arena of science you can invoke Professor So-and-So’s study published in 2008,
‘you can actually cite chapter and verse." An odd choice of
words: “chapter and verse.” Scientism is
a religion with its own inspired books and scientific authorities.
It
doesn’t matter if there isn’t any empirical science behind anything what
Hawking says on the subject, as long as they hear him say, via a voice
synthesizer designed and created by someone, “I think Science can explain the
Universe without the need for God.” Even some liberals
aren’t buying what Stephen is hawking:
“In
saying this, Hawking doesn’t speak like a scientist: he speaks like a
(speculative) philosopher. . . . To say that [the
universe created itself] spontaneously is not an answer: it’s an excuse for an
answer. When Hawking says that the spontaneous self-creation of the
universe “out of nothing” is evidence that a creator was not involved, he is
not speaking as a scientist. He is not making a scientific statement. His statement is pure theology — of the negative kind
typical of atheists.
Higgs Boson isn’t “The God Particle”; it’s God’s particle
that can’t do anything on its own.
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