Posted on 07/10/2012 7:06:30 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
I love Dennis; great piece. I think he just summarized Ecclesiastes.
I’ve been doing a little personal research on the implications of the Higgs Boson just for curiosity’s sake.
I found this site that gives a pretty decent explanation of the standard model of particle physics. It’s a pretty good presentation for non-physicists, although it takes awhile to get through:
http://www.particleadventure.org/eternal-questions.html
Not sure how significant the Higgs Boson will be in terms of practical use, but if they ever find evidence of the existance of a graviton, that might be interesting.
There’s an episode of “The Universe” where they talk about God and the universe. Happily they included clergymen but what I liked most was one of the astrophysicists who says the universe is too mathematically perfect to be chance event.
She says that not one sub atomic particle could have been out of place for the creation of our universe to happen they way they believe it did. Add the fact that every other sub atomic particle also had to be exactly where they were and doing exactly what they were doing and the odds become so astronomically vast that it defies reason.
Sad to see Prager buy into the myth of the atheist scientist.
We NOW KNOW that the discovery of DNA rates a 10 on the impact on human lives scale, but for many decades after the discovery it was of little importance - while the Higgs boson may NOW rate a 2 (or less) - who knows what it might rate in a hundred years?
That’s because everything happens according to God’s plan.
Ping
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8916982/
About two-thirds of scientists believe in God.
http://religions.pewforum.org/reports/
Around 16% of the general public are atheist, agnostic, or “nothing in particular”.
Is it the end of discovery? Hardly.
Determining how it functions and properties can tell us a lot. We could learn how certain cancers work, and how to attack them, or remake a severed limb, or new materials that are lighter, stronger than what we have now.
And here's the kicker. They have circumstantial evidence it exists, nothing definitive.
No. The probability they've not discovered the particle is 1 in 3 million. See the combined curve in black. Particles that show up above the background are real particles, not "circumstantials".
There is a great commentary about this by nuclear chemist Jay Wile at his blog site:
The God Particle Is A Stupid Name
http://blog.drwile.com/?p=7966
Posted by jlwile on July 5, 2012
The lines between these two charged particles represent the electric field that they produce. (Click for credit)
The media is abuzz with the announcement that two separate groups have discovered evidence for the existence of the Higgs boson, which has been called the God particle. Thats an unfortunate name, because the Higgs boson has nothing more to do with God than any other particle in His creation. Now dont get me wrong. Its not that the Higgs boson is unimportant. Indeed, it is very important, and if the results announced really do indicate the existence of the Higgs boson, it is a major victory for the Standard Model of physics. It just has nothing special to do with God.
To understand what the Higgs boson is, think of something that is probably a little more familiar to you: the electromagnetic force. When two particles are charged, they affect one another through the electromagnetic force. If they are oppositely charged, they will attract one another, and if they both carry the same charge, they will repel one another. We can represent this interaction with a series of field lines, such as those given in the illustration above. Those lines show you the electric field, which causes the charged particles to interact with one another.
But how do these particles interact? How does one charged particle know that there is another charged particle out there, and how does it know whether to be attracted to it or repelled by it? The answer is that the charged particles exchange photons (particles of light). This exchange allows the electromagnetic force to work. If it werent for the exchange of photons, the two charged particles could not affect one another, so without the exchange of photons, there would be no electromagnetic force. In physics speak, we say that photons mediate the electromagnetic field.
The Higgs boson is, like the photon, a mediator. It is supposed to mediate the Higgs field, which is what the Standard Model of physics says determines the mass of every particle in the universe.
Now wait a minute. Doesnt the amount of stuff in a particle determine its mass? After all, consider two books. They are both made using the same kinds of cover and paper, but one book has 100 pages, while the other book has 1,000 pages. The latter book is the heavier one, right? It has more mass because it has more pages. Isnt that how particle mass is determined as well? Not really. Consider the electron, for example. Modern physics calls it a point particle. That means it is infinitely small. In other words, it has no volume. How can something with no volume have any stuff in it at all?
In the Standard Model, the mass of a particle is not measured by how much stuff the particle has in it. Instead, mass is considered a property, like charge. A particle doesnt have to hold any stuff to have charge, and in the Standard Model, it also doesnt have to hold any stuff to have mass. So in the end, the Standard Model needs something to give particles (like electrons) their mass. Thats what the Higgs field is supposed to do. The Higgs field permeates the entire universe, and the way a particle interacts with the Higgs field determines its mass. Photons dont interact with the Higgs field at all, for example, so they have no mass. Electrons have mass because they interact with the Higgs field, and the amount of mass they have depends on the strength of that interaction.
The Higgs boson, of course, is what mediates the Higgs field. In other words, it provides a way for particles to interact with the field. We can never see the field, but if the field is real, we should be able to see the particle that mediates it. Thats why scientists have been searching for the Higgs boson. If we find the particle that mediates the field, we know the field is real. If we know the field is real, we know the mechanism by which particles have mass.
Why has the Higgs boson been called the God Particle? Well, some physicists say that without it, particles would have no mass, therefore there would be no gravity, therefore there would be no stars, no planets, and no people. So the Higgs boson is the reason we all exist. However, thats rather foolish. I could just as easily say that without electrical charge there would be no people, because the chemistry that runs our bodies depends on the existence of electrical charge. In that case, then, the photon is the God Particle, since it mediates the electromagnetic field. Others have suggested that because the Higgs field permeates all of space, it is like God, who is omnipresent. But space permeates all space as well. Is space like God? Of course not.
So the Higgs boson has nothing more to do with God than any other particle in His creation. It is a very important part of the Standard model of physics, and although I havent been able to look at their data yet, the scientists at CERN really think they have found it. If that turns out to be true, its great news for the Standard Model, but it really has nothing to do with God!
I did not make up the numbers - the results are from a Pew Survey - it is what it is...
“The majority of American scientists are people of faith in God.”
Source?
No ax to grind, just wondering.
"And pointlessness is the point. The discovery of the Higgs boson brings us no closer to understanding why there is a universe, not to mention whether life has meaning. In fact, no scientific discovery ever made will ever explain why there is existence. Nor will it render good and evil anything more than subjective opinion, or explain why human beings have consciousness or anything else that truly matters."
It may very well be a step on the path to understanding why there is existence. Time will tell. Whether life has meaning is a subjective question, but scientific discoveries can enlighten certain ways people mean that term. And who says consciousness is unexplainable? Just because he can't explain it doesn't mean it can't be done. There are very good explanations of consciousness.
That kicker applies to a lot of things...that’s why we have leaps of faith.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8916982/
They relied on a study from Rice University. Here is some info Rice put out about that.
http://www.rice.edu/sallyport/2006/winter/sallyport/scientists.html
The majority of scientists in the USA are people of faith in God. Science is not a bastion of atheism, and science education doesn't turn people away from God. There does seem to be some selection bias of those who are not religious towards the biological sciences - but if you go in as a nonbeliever you will go away as a nonbeliever educated in biology, and if you go in as a believer you will go away as a believer educated in biology.
Believers think science will help them understand God's creation. Nonbelievers think science will help them understand atheism I guess.
The heavens DO proclaim the glory of God - to those that believe. To nonbelievers they proclaim nothing in particular I guess; I wouldn't know - I am a scientist AND a believer - as have been the majority of the scientists I have been mentored by.
There is a selection bias among those who form groups to try to influence public policy that makes taking their views as representative of the entire group problematic.
The views of members of the NAACP are not representative of all Americans of African descent.
The views of Union leaders are not representative of the rank and file union members - let alone all American workers.
The views of members of the American Medical Association are not representative of all Physicians.
That may help to explain the wide discrepancy between the numbers you cite and the numbers I am citing - if you are actually interested in an explanation.
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