Source:
The Quantum God - An Investigation.pdf
This topic explores the emerging God-concept derived from quantum science and its potential to bridge the long-standing gap between science and religion. The author utilizes a multivalued approach, a logic specifically designed to handle the uncertainty and probability inherent in subatomic physics, to synthesize various mystical and theological interpretations of scientific data. By examining core principles like nonlocal coherence and wave-particle duality, the text argues that the universe is underpinned by a transcendent field of consciousness or "in-formation" that functions as an intelligent, self-organizing whole. This "Quantum God" is presented not as a distant clockmaker, but as a participatory force that mirrors many traditional religious attributes, such as omnipresence and immanence. Ultimately, the work suggests that this new physics paradigm offers a "re-enchantment" of reality, providing a modern framework for understanding divine action and the profound interconnectedness of all existence.
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For centuries, the Western mind has been confined within the cold, predictable gears of a "clockwork universe." Under the reign of Newtonian logic, reality was reduced to an indifferent machine, a silent assembly of matter that left no room for the sacred. This disenchantment did not merely distance us from the divine; it relegated the numinous to the dusty corners of subjective feeling, labeling the spiritual as an empirical ghost.