a) t=0 revisited
Given the speculative status of quantum cosmology, some
scholars have kept the theological conversation focused on the standard Big
Bang model. Others,
though, have asked what effects quantum cosmology might have on their theology
of creation.
John Lucas has defended the temporality of God against the
difficulties raised by special relativity and quantum cosmology.Ted Peters recognizes the anti-theological implications to his project by
Hawkings quantum cosmology, but draws on Chris Ishams argument that even
without an initial singularlity, God is present to and active in all events in
the universe. Wim Drees
has argued that the challenge from special relativity to those arguing for
Gods involvement in flowing time is much more severe than anything raised by
the lack of t=0 in quantum cosmology.I have suggested that the Hawking/Hartle model reminds us that the concept of
finitude need not entail a boundary, leading to new ways to describe the
universe as Gods creation. It may well be that the finitude of the past of our
universe at least, and not its also having an absolute beginning, will
illuminate the real meaning of ontological contingency within the doctrine of creatio
ex nihilo. I would also emphasize that the nothing (i.e., the superspace)
out of which our universe arises in the Hartle/Hawking scenario is more like
Platonic me on (relative nothing) than it is like Platonic ouk on
(absolute nothing). Thus our universes arises out of a relative nothing
including, in some sense at least, quantum fields governed by the laws of
physics (both of which are needed to give a scientific account of the
quantum creation of the universe). But the Christian view of creatio ex
nihilo relies predominantly (i.e., for Tillich)
if not entirely (as most theologians insist) on the meaning of nothingness as
ouk on. In essence, neither the Hartle/Hawking creation scenario, or any
other I know of, can claim to be scientific and at the same time limit itself
strictly to ouk on.A very similar argument has been developed in detail by Joseph M Zycinski.
Hawking, too, seems to draw on the ontological argument. In
his Introduction to Hawkings A Brief History of Time, Carl Sagan writes
about the absence of God in his book, even if the word God fills these
pages. Hawking may seek to know the mind of God, Sagan admits, but if there
is no t=0 --- and Hawking himself has done away with it --- then there is nothing
for a Creator to do.My response, of course, is that Sagan is attacking Enlightenment deism, not
Christian theism. At times in the book Hawking seems to agree with Sagan,but not at the end, for he also writes: even if there is only one possible unified
theory, it is just a set of rules and equations. What is it that breathes fire
into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe? The usual
approach of science ... cannot answer the question of why there should be a
universe for the model to describe.
It is also possible to see, in the debates over approaches
to quantum cosmology, the striking presence of extra-scientific factors. A
fascinating example occurs in comparing proposals by Roger Penrose and
Hawking/Hartle. In Penroses view, our universe arises as an arbitrary quantum
fluctuation in a homogeneous background superspace filled with quantum fields.
But why should any point in superspace be singled out as creating a universe
like ours; why isnt there an infinity of universes varying in all ways
possible --- which there is not. As Chris Isham puts it, the problem was
pre-empted by Augustines response to the question of what God was doing
before God made the universe. Augustines answer was that God did not create
the universe in time, since the decision as to which point in time to create it
would be arbitrary and would imply that Gods will is mutable. Instead
Augustine claimed that God created time along with the creation of the
universe. But as Isham points out, the same reasoning leads us to reject
Penroses approach: it is thoroughly arbitrary to pick a creation point in
superspace. The Hawking/Hartle model, on the other hand, circumvents the need
for such a point. Thus it is singularly striking that, sixteen centuries later,
theoretical physicists have considered precisely the same subterfuge to avoid
questions like before creation.I think this is a striking example of the potentially positive role theology
could play in stimulating new insights and directions of inquiry within the
natural sciences.
In short, then, inflation and quantum cosmology can point to
the grandeur and mystery of Gods creativity and undercut our anthropocentrism
by stressing a creation far beyond anything we could ever observe, one in which
God relishes and delights in its sheer diversity. Still none of the scientific
cosmologies explains why the Universe exists as such, leading us once again
to the recognition of God as the ground of being.
Contributed by: Dr. Robert Russell
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