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Yahweh
Philadiddle,
We could toy around with the idea of something creating the universe, but those kinds of hypothesizations dont mean much, because they are largely unfalsifyable. In science, if something is unfalsifyable, then no amount of studying it will produce any information that you didnt already know, nor produce any new information - thats why unfalsifyable hypotheses are meaningless.
But, for what its worth, allowing for generous speculation for just a moment, I should say that we can only study supernatural events if they affect the real world. But, because we dont know what rules non-physical objects operate by, even if we could conclusively show that supernatural events occur, we could never distinguish which of any competing supernatural actually occurred (i.e. "invisible gnomes" hypothesis is just as likely as "unconscious telekinesis" which is just as likely as "God"). There is no good reason why any particular supernatural explanation should be favored about any other supernatural explanation, so you easily find yourself in a situation where you can add no more knowledge to the world beyond the words "I've ruled out known natural explanations".
So far, we've never been able to observe the "supernatural", nor been able to define what it precisely means.philadiddle said:Is science set up so that if God did create the universe science could arrive at that conclusion? I'm not distinguishing old/new earth. It just seems that science only deals with the natural world, and doesn't involve the supernatural. So, if in fact the supernatural is involved it will never be scientific. Scientists will always seek a different explanation. It's like explaining how a car was made, but only talking about the car. You can't explain a car's creation without talking about the designer who planned it out and the factory it was made in.
We could toy around with the idea of something creating the universe, but those kinds of hypothesizations dont mean much, because they are largely unfalsifyable. In science, if something is unfalsifyable, then no amount of studying it will produce any information that you didnt already know, nor produce any new information - thats why unfalsifyable hypotheses are meaningless.
But, for what its worth, allowing for generous speculation for just a moment, I should say that we can only study supernatural events if they affect the real world. But, because we dont know what rules non-physical objects operate by, even if we could conclusively show that supernatural events occur, we could never distinguish which of any competing supernatural actually occurred (i.e. "invisible gnomes" hypothesis is just as likely as "unconscious telekinesis" which is just as likely as "God"). There is no good reason why any particular supernatural explanation should be favored about any other supernatural explanation, so you easily find yourself in a situation where you can add no more knowledge to the world beyond the words "I've ruled out known natural explanations".
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