apodman wrote:'The Preacher' (in [i]Ecclesiastes[/i]) also wrote:What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun.
=apodman = If you apply that quote to astrophysics or to theories, you can make it say a lot of things it doesn't say and never did. Bible verses apply to science like the ideal gas law to a solid.
Actually, Apodman, I was slightly in error although in the long run it's just an issue of semantics.
Hawking says we have three choices in explaining the universe: (Page 134 of A Briefer History of Time)
1. There is a complete unified theory (or a collection of overlapping formulations). which we will someday discover if we are smart enough.
2. There is no ultimate theory of the universe, just an infinite sequence of theories that describe the universe more and more accurately but are never exact.
3. There is no theory of the universe: events cannot be predicted beyond a certain extent but occur in a random and arbitrary manner."
The answer of the choices being Number 3 because God has set (chance) in the 'equation'. I won't discuss how the verse applies beyond the inclusion of chance, meaning that while God may not throw dice, man's existence does .. but the verse definitely applies to physics as it shows 'chance' to be a definite reality .. and what is a reality cannot help applying to physics which is also reality. Thanks for the scripture, Apodman, but your quote from Ecclesiastes precedes the new thing which was done in Christ, and which was prophesied in scripture which foretold, "A new thing will I do, which you will not believe though a man declare it unto you." (Of course God did not mean you, personally won't believe it, Apodman .. just those to whom the prophet spoke.)
If man were made to fly he wouldn't need alcohol .. lots and lots and lots of alcohol to get through the furors while maintaining the fervors.