Wednesday, July 10, 2013

数学で攻撃無神論/Sūgaku de kōgeki mushinron/Attack atheism in mathematics

Who are we, and what are we are all philosophical questions and many of these questions are best resolved by an idea, that we exist and we are human. It's not just something that we do everyday and yet when the time calls we should defend our faith with math, logic, premises and how to use math in it. Of course morality uses math too. Everything uses math whether it is the age of the earth, but let's go on to why I believe in God with mathematics. In fact mathematics seems to dictate this entire world regardless if we note it or not. This is weird because actually, we don't realize that math dictates this world. Think of all these integration laws we have and it can't seem to be made by accident.

I really think there needs to be deeper meaning in mathematics and in life. Lets take a verse in the bible, even though there is harsh criticism. For in those days there will be tribulation, such as has not been since the beginning of the creation which God created until this time, nor ever shall be (Mark Chapter 13, verse 19). Now this verse may look like there is no math, but let's take a look at the second part first. such as has not been since the beginning of the creation which God created until this time, nor ever shall be. Mark here uses some intense words to try to keep up, well Jesus does at least. I feel that in here "beginning of creation" I think there are these set rules or tribulations to keep us safe from harm, not just from the anti-Christ but the numbers of calculus to preserve us and all these laws of physics that we know. There are all these rules and in one day all those rules will be understood and we can get to know God and understand why. There are more laws that tell us how to eat in the bible, reading it can really help.

A quote by Galileo Galilei: 
“Mathematics is the language with which God has written the universe.” And I think this quote is very well written and this is because it is true. I feel that God really has put numbers all over the bible and we seem to think that numbers can't prove God. In fact I have seen numbers prove God time in time again. For by Him all things were created that are in heaven ad that are on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or power. All things were created through Him and for Him. Colossians 1: 16 KJV (this is because this is my only bible). And math is nothing different. God wants us to walk with him and he wants us to understand him not just through the bible, but "I will walk among you and be your God, and you shall be My people" (Leviticus 26:12) and he wants us for that. In fact God wrote mathematics to show his schematics, and he implicitly shows how the bible connects with mathematics.

In fact if we think about it, math is used a lot in this world, and if it was really by random chance, par-say we had a lottery where you were guaranteed death. The way out is to get a black ball in a machine full of white balls. There is one black ball, but the machine is loaded with a billion white balls. What's the odds of pulling the white ball. It's almost impossible! It's like saying "Hey can we get the black ball when there's all these white balls?" For a "life permitting universe" there must be exact amounts of light, heat, and oxygen and all of these mathematical impossibilities. We need to have an exact amount of heat in the air, the world required an exact tuning and I seriously doubt if in a place that is hostile to us, trying to kill us, would just randomly and accidentally appear by chance. For a human to think of not dying in math with 1 in a billion chance, what are the odds? We are important and numbers make up Christ. In fact numbers like 3, 40, 7 are all very special numbers. But I'm here to attack atheism with numbers.

Ok, so to attack atheism and defend God with math, I'm going to expand the Cosmological Argument by my favorite mathematician Gottfried Leibniz. The argument breaks into 5 ideas.
1) Anything that exists has an explanation of its existence, either in the necessity of its own nature or in an external cause.
2) If the universe has an explanation of its existence, that explanation is God.
3) The universe exists.
4) Therefore, the universe has an explanation of its existence (from 1, 3)
5) Therefore, the explanation of the existence of the universe is God (from 2, 4).
Think about this for a moment. It makes sense, but yet people still dispute it by saying "Where did God come from?" This logic would generally be refuted by one line. Because God is the best explanation of anything, does it make sense to question the best? It would be an illogical inconsistency to ask why something is the best and then question it. It doesn't make sense. The other hole is "If the universe was infinite we win." Nope, try again. If something is infinite, we can't generally see it, imagine it and we can't think of it. An actual infinity would still have a point of "genesis" like an origin otherwise it's not infinite. I also note that if something was infinite, there needs to be a consistent amount of matter and because it's infinite, we can't count it. God is uncaused because he is necessary for the existence in the world, it makes sense for something needed to be there, otherwise it's illogical.

Just think about it first...





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