The God Particle
Back in December, 2008, I wrote a post called In the Beginning that discussed Creationism versus the Big Bang theory. The conclusion was, predictably, that Creation made more sense and besides, was a lot simpler. In that discussion, I described in some detail the Large Hadron Collider, a $9 billion monstrosity buried underground near the border between France and Switzerland. I won't repeat all that here. (If you're curious, check my archives for 18 December 2008.) Simply, the LHC was an attempt to "find" someting called the Higgs bosun, a subatomic particle that was supposed to explain mass and gravity, the rocks upon which various theories of the universe, specifically string theory, crash.
Mass, which begets gravitational attraction, is what essentially holds everything together, including atoms. It is the glue of the universe. For years it defied mathematical modeling. Then an English physicist, Peter Ware Higgs, in a flash of insight, imagined a new and unknown sub-atomic particle that "creates" mass, which in a fit of hubris he named the Higgs bosun, after himself. (Paradixically, a bosun itself is a massless particle.) The scientific world rejoiced and ran off hell-bent to discover this wondrous particle. The thought was that its existence heretofore had eluded researchers because they didn't smash atomic particles--specifically protons that are relatively easy to get and work with--hard enough, i.e. with sufficient energy. Hence the LHC that accelerates protons to 99.9% of the speed of light before colliding them.
Well, rejoice all you anti-creationists out there, according to a recent newspaper article, after 10 years of banging protons together, they have--"Eureka!"--found it. (If you read my 2008 post, you will note that I predicted that they would find it, because they had to.) Actually, they have found "indications" of its existence, whatever that means. The skeptics among you may quite understandably ask, "So what?" Good question. Let me tell you "what" from my perspective--full disclosure--as a practicing Christian.
Man is a proud and arrogant creature. Those characteristics are arguably at the root of most of our troubles, especially our interminable wars. Part of that arrogance is an aversion to acknowledging a being superior to ourselves. Thus, when Darwin published his Origin of Species the humanists jumped at it. From the Darwinian concept which required very long periods of time came the concept of the great age of the Earth and universe--billions of years. Up until that time, the Biblical age of the Earth, around 15 thousand years give or take, had been the accepted belief.
That opened up a raft of possibilities, leading eventually to the present "Big Bang Theory" (not the TV show!). Grossly oversimplified, the explosion of a tiny dot of infinite mass created gobs of vibrating strings, bidimensional membranes and 11 or so dimensions of which everything is made, along with time so you can't ask where that dot came from. This is in a nutshell "String Theory", or its latest incarnation, "The Theory of Everything." (You can't make this stuff up!) Problem was, all these vibrating strings and membranes didn't have any mass, and obviously, mass and its handmaiden gravity exist. Consequently, there was still a tiny opening for God.
However, the Higgs bosun, which someone perhaps facetiously nicknamed the "God Particle," a name that stuck, allows man to eliminate God from the picture. We don't need Him to explain the existence of everything. Man's arrogance is justified; he is indeed the eagle at the top of the totem pole.
I don't mean to imply that all scientists are atheists. Some ideas or beliefs tend to take on a life of their own. Great effort and resources have been expended to explain the world around us. We are able to function with the incompatible ambivalence of religious belief and science by conveniently stuffing religion into one hour on Sunday morning, or perhaps Saturday evening, and dedicating the rest of the week to science. This I call "magical thinking," for magical indeed it is.
So, how do I, the practicing 24-7 Christian, explain the "indicated" Higgs bosun? This takes a bit of credulity, but then that's what we mostly are talking about. Centuries ago, Galileo undertook to measure the diameter of the Earth. He made some instruments and used them to measure the height of a distant tower. By that means he came up with an expression for the curvature of the Earth and extrapolated that to its diameter. He was close, but not real close.
More recently, around 75 years ago. some college researchers undertook to duplicate Galileo's measurements. They faithfully reproduced his instrumentation from detailed descriptions and notes and replicated the experiment. Guess what. The result was extremely accurate, much more accurate than Galileo's figure. If we assume that he was not a klutz or a graduate of MPS, then why didn't he come up with a more accurate figure? Well, because our college students knew the answer beforehand. In other words, what we know or believe, or desperately desire to find, can influence the results of our research. You scoff, but I have seen personal evidence of this phenomenon.
Much of science today is concerned with various studies affecting the public. These studies are funded through grants from agents with an agenda. In other words, they have a preconceived idea of what they want the research to conclude. Thus, all smoking-related studies conclude that it is a terrible health hazard, including "second-hand" smoke. All coronary artery disease studies verify that cholesterol is the villian. All global warming studies conclude it is anthropomorphic (man-made). And the list goes on. Never is heard a dissenting word. The result is the corruption of true science by grant.
With respect to the God particle, recall that it is allegedly a sub-atomic particle, i.e. the result of breaking apart an atom. Consequently, it is invisible. Sub-atomic particles are usually detected indirectly by electric charge effects or collisions with other particles. No one will ever "see" the God particle. It will be identified by indirect means. I think that if 500 PhD's focus their minds on a single idea, they could move a mountain to say nothing of finding a sub-microscopic entity. As I said before, they will find it because they must. There is too much at stake.
This entire structure of the cosmos, strings, membranes, dimensions, Big Bang and Creation-without-God depends on this little fellow whom no one has seen or ever will see.
My attitude towards all this is based on plausibility. I find the theories of Big Bang and evolution to be implausible. Ask the DNA molecule that formed you or the developing baby in the womb, incredibly complex and precisely configured processes, whether they happened by accident. The wonderfully balanced world of nature defies definition due to its intricacy. The evidence of design, absolutely brilliant and--yes--miraculous design, is to me unmistakeable.
So, have your Bang, your strings, your God particle and your random mutations. I'll take Genesis.
We encourage your comments but will strive to remove discussion that contains personal attacks, racial slurs, profanity or other inappropriate material as outlined in our guidelines. We post-moderate comments on most content, but may choose to pre-moderate some comments so please be patient if you don't see yours appear right way. We also ask for your help by reporting comments you think are inappropriate.






92 Comments
Mucho - Jul 23, 2012 3:56 PM
That is a list of extinct animals. There are no transitions occurring there. the only one that came close in anyone's theory in recent history is Archaeopteryx (the one Al referred to once thought to be a "chicken/lizard transition". That was tossed out in 1984 by the very consortium of scientists that hold conventions specific to that fossil. They unanimously agreed to a resolution that it was "problematic" as proof of transition theory.
There is no fish/dog, snake/rat, frog/sparrow, salamander/weasel or Ape/Man in any fossil record. They are in the imaginations of frustrated men that resort to artists renderings to put in childrens textbooks so they can recruit more gullible intellectuals at an early age.
Mucho - Jul 23, 2012 3:57 PM
Easy - Adam and Eve did not have navels.
Victory is mine. - Prove me wrong.
WFB resident - Jul 23, 2012 4:02 PM
theory aspect . 2). The people who want Darwinism to be correct are not able to
prove it with out low brows like Garber to follow .
WFB resident - Jul 23, 2012 5:11 PM
MGarber - Jul 23, 2012 5:24 PM
From the wikipedia - "Since all species will always be subject to natural selection, the very term "transitional fossil" is essentially a misconception."
That means we (or your dog, or your cat) could very well be a transitional species.
"There is no fish/dog, snake/rat....."
Those would be called chimeras, whose existance would be an excellent DISproof(flasification) of evolution.
"Adam and Eve ..."
Who???
jman99 - Jul 23, 2012 5:35 PM
Easy - Adam and Eve did not have navels.
Victory is mine. - Prove me wrong."
Please provide the variety of the apple in question.
Please provide the exact GPS location of the "Garden of Eden".
Please porvide the variety of the snake in question.
If all of the above are true, proof will be easily found.
Skeletal remains tend to keep intact well in dry climates. Please provide the burial location of 1) Adam 2) Eve. they are less than 7000 years old, so evidence should be well preserved.
Please provide the name of Kane's wife.
bamaphd - Jul 23, 2012 6:03 PM
Use your head Al.
under controlled lab conditions it may take 20 to 30 generations to engineer a mouse that will display a certain characteristic.
Genetic drift also is involved when a variation of species comes about. Change is slow and gradual over geological time scales, so you don't see wholesale changes or the type of "grafting" that you imply. The longer lived the organism the longer the evolutionary time frame for change to occur.
If you look at this it will give you a clue:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inbreeding
If this much devastation occurs over such short time spans of human genetics, we should assume that over a brief period of 7000 years, humans would cease to exist if we were bred from just two parents.
And yet, populations have expanded over the past 100 years at a rate that is explosive.
But populations have shrunk in those societies that are inbred. One of the societies that has a large problem procreating is the strict Hebrew population which does not bring in "new blood" into the sect. This is one of the classic symptoms of an inbred society.
Think Al. Think.
WFB resident - Jul 23, 2012 7:50 PM
Please provide the variety of the apple in question. : edible ?
Please provide the exact GPS location of the "Garden of Eden". : o:oo;oo:oo,oo.
Please porvide the variety of the snake in question. The most deadly (PDLS union
member)!!
If all of the above are true, proof will be easily found. It was !!
Skeletal remains tend to keep intact well in dry climates. Please provide the burial
location of 1) Adam 2) Eve. they are less than 7000 years old, so evidence should be
well preserved. You know very well that Earth had no coordinates then ! Plus why
do you conclude dryness in eden ? Is your belief eden was hell ?
Please provide the name of Kane's wife. Wife number 1 ! He was nice to her ,for
he thought he would get his rib back .
MGarber - Jul 23, 2012 9:59 PM
Tom Bal being a pantload Jul 22, 2012 11:50 AM doesnt mean you have to stoop to that level.
WFB resident - Jul 24, 2012 1:04 AM
Darwinism ! lol... All they can do is say that a religion is based on faith ! lol... Yet
they still can not defend theirs .
MGarber - Jul 24, 2012 8:21 AM
WFB resident - Jul 24, 2012 9:22 AM
Mucho - Jul 24, 2012 2:19 PM
Recently, that status has been changed and then reinstated. http://blog.f1000.com/2011/12/19/when-is-a-bird-not-a-bird%E2%80%A6-and-then-a-bird-again/
It is humorous because some of the so-called predecessors of Archaeopteryx are known to have existed 10-50 million years after Arch with none found before. If you fossilized every living thing alive today and gave the fossils to a group of paleontologists, they would create a timeline of 40 million years showing how an iguana evolved into a bald eagle over a timespan that does not exist.
Makes for a good story but as noted English paleontoligist Colin Patterson said "such stories are not a part of science" (when referring to Archaeopteryx as a definitive transitionary species.)
MGarber - Jul 24, 2012 3:29 PM
Since he clearly is an evolutionist, will you continue to refer to him as a "noted English paleontoligist"??
WFB resident - Jul 24, 2012 4:35 PM
Mucho - Jul 24, 2012 5:46 PM
Like many religions, the evolutionists argue about that wihich can neither be seen nor proven. That is my point. Thousands of hypothesis, little evidence, yet unwavering faith in the general belief.
I am not saying they are wrong just that there is a obvious double standard. Genesis is wrong until proven correct, evolution is correct until proven wrong in their minds. The role of "intelligence" in the design is what every evolutionist's path to prove a hypothesis dead ends at.
The Archaeopteryx debate is a microcosm of the entire evolutionist theory. Some believe it came from the water, some the land, some think it learned to fly by running and jumping others argue that it ran down rocky cliffs or jumped from trees. All experts, all with proof they are right, all in conflict with each other. Sounds a little like the Jews, Muslims, Budhists, Christians and Atheists.
One thing the evolutionists and paleontoligists can agree on is that if you make your fossil look really cool with a lively palette, it gets more attention. The whole theory is only confined by imagination and on artists' renderings. (really awesome artists renderings)
http://www.livescience.com/15246-flap-flop-earth-bird-bird.html
http://www.artoflegendindia.com/archaeopteryx-p-5577.html
http://www.arthursclipart.org/prehistoriclife/life/archaeopteryx.gif
MGarber - Jul 24, 2012 8:05 PM
About relative minor points (did you even read the link I gave?) while looking at real data (fossils, dna), while religions argue about whole different cosmologies based on mythological texts.
When Darwin proposed natural seletion, the only evidence he had was the intuition gleaned from studying geographically isolated bird populations. The fossil record was almost nil, and its being slowly fleshed out, but all it takes is ONE fossilized homosapien, rabbit, dog, bumblbee to falsify it all. If all these fossils I pointed you to are extinct species (and you're right, BTW, of course they are), where are the fossils for those species that are still here today??? "Microevolution" has been obvserved which is really just evolution on a shorter timescale, and therefore, scope. And DNA accounts for it all perfectly and allows for testable predictions that have been verified.
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/section1.html
"Genesis is wrong until proven correct...."
No. Genesis is wrong because it doesnt match the real, measurable, touchable geologic, biological and astronomical data. Evolution is equally falsifiable. Go ahead. Do it. Glean a prediction out of Genesis and test for it.
Look... I dont care what you believe. Honest.
The whole issue here is I dont want anybody's unsubstantiated mythology taught as science in the schools. Our ranking in science education is pitiful right now as it is.
What you tell your kids is your business; what teachers, paid with my taxes, teach to the kids that'll run this country someday and compete against the rest of the world, is every citizen's business.