No Exceptions to the Natural Order
There do not seem to be any
exceptions to this natural order, any miracles. I have the impression that these days most theologians are
embarrassed by talk of miracles, but the great monotheistic faiths are founded
on miracle stories - the burning bush, the empty tomb, an angel dictating the
Koran to Mohammed - and some of these faiths teach that miracles continue at
the present day. The evidence for all
these miracles seems to me to be considerably weaker than the evidence for cold
fusion, and I don't believe in cold fusion.
Above all, today we understand that even human beings are the result of
natural selection acting over millions of years of breedings and eatings.
I'd guess that if we were to
see the hand of the designer anywhere, it would be in the fundamental
principles, the final laws of nature, the book of rules that govern all natural
phenomena. We don't know the final laws
yet, but as far as we have been able to see, they are utterly impersonal, and
quite without any special role for life.
Henri Bergson and Obi-Wan Kenobi are wrong: there is no life force. As Richard Feynman has said, when you look
at the universe and understand its laws, the theory that it is all arranged as
a stage for God to watch man's struggle for good and evil seems inadequate.
True, when quantum mechanics
was new, some physicists thought that it put humans back into the picture,
because the principles of quantum mechanics describe what observers would find under various conditions. But, starting with the work of Hugh Everett
40 years ago, there has been a reinterpretation of quantum mechanics as the
objective (and deterministic) unfolding of a wave function that describes the
observer as well as the system being observed.
This work is not completed, so I can't say that we have a satisfactory
completely objective formulation of quantum mechanics, but I think we will
have.
Contributed by: Dr. Steven Weinberg
|