Saturday, April 19, 2014

You Can't Know

Chapter 7
You Can't Know
            Quantum Mechanics was the bane of Einstein’s existence. As stated in chapter two, Einstein could not reconcile the supposed disorder of quantum mechanics to his theory of Relativity. No matter how many recalculations Einstein made, the results were the same. It seemed as though the quantum level operated with a different set of rules than the universal physical world. In the quantum level there is no way to determine the position and direction of an object at the same time. You can’t pin anything down in the quantum world. There is no up, down, left, right, or even before and after. All these 3 dimensional representations of reality disappear.
            As talked about a little bit in the second chapter, Quantum was developed when it was noticed that the electron acted differently purely based on whether or not you were observing it. It was almost as if the electron, and any subatomic particle for that matter, had a brain of its own and knew when we were observing it. In a normal, double slit experiment, the photon acted like we would expect, a wave. It produced an interference pattern of a wave. However, when scientists decided to see if they could find out which slit the electron actually went through they discovered something that blew their minds. When they found the exact location of the photon, it produced an interference pattern as though it was a particle, with no wave properties at all. This was ridiculous, and rejected by many scientists. How could one piece of matter be two different things in the exact same experiment?

This really is the most significant piece of information that we have obtained from quantum mechanics. The very act of observing changes the way the universe operates. This revolutionized science. No longer could experiments be taken at their face value. In fact, reality itself can no longer be taken at face value. The very act of observing our surroundings changes how they actually act. Does this sound a little like magic to you? If it doesn’t you probably don’t get it yet. The old question, “If a tree falls in the forest, and no one is there to hear it, does it make any sound?” is actually a legitimate question. In fact, it can be taken one step further, “If a tree falls in the forest, and no one is there to see it, did it actually happen?” The answer is no. According to many scientists today, nothing exists until it is observed. We change what “exists” and doesn’t just by existing and observing what is around us.
These experiments showed that it is impossible to obtain exact experimental data. This provides astounding implications for the entire universe, not just the electrons, but for all things that contain matter. All data must be taken as relative to the observer. There is no reason to believe that what is observed could not behave differently. We literally can only study what is inside our reality, and bringing anything into that reality changes the way in which it behaves. Not only that, but no electron can be calculated because it could be anywhere or everywhere at one time. It is impossible to know the location of any subatomic particle.
If we lived in a Quantum world, there would be no way to know if we were here, or over there, or in both places at once. In fact, we would not even be able to know the time at which we arrived at a certain destination. Did, we arrive just now, or have we not yet arrived at our destination and will be there in a few seconds, or did we arrive before we arrived? Quantum mechanics explains much more than just the electron and subatomic particles. It holds implications for real life as well. It explains what actually happens in our world.
In quantum mechanics, there is a chance that anything can happen. We can’t know for certain the outcome of a certain experiment. We can only calculate the probability of the outcome occurring. For instance, according to the quantum theory, it is completely possible to walk straight through a solid brick wall, because at some point in time, all our molecules would randomly line up in a precise way with the molecules of the wall, which would allow us to step straight through it. The only problem is that it would take you nearly an eternity to do so. This theory is so accurate that Quantum mechanics has never contradicted an experiment, but neither has relativity, and yet they were so completely opposed to each other. One makes the assumption that everything in the universe is understand able and obeys the speed of light. It is a very organized world and very rule oriented and non-contradictory. Quantum mechanics on the other hand is totally different, everything is changing, the rules of the natural world don’t apply, reality begins to break down, and nothing is solid and known. Both cannot both be right, because both theories require the other one to be false.
You can see why Einstein made his statement, “God does not play dice!” Einstein refused to believe that a God of order would create something disorderly. Einstein was not overly religious, do not extract from my writing that Einstein was a religious man, he was not, but he had at least a basic belief in a God. This basic belief however, was Einstein’s undoing. Who is Einstein to say what God does or doesn’t do? He limited his understanding because of his basic belief in what God could or couldn’t do. It is extremely important that we recognize how much greater God is, for that one belief shapes every belief that comes after it. Niels Bohr responded to Einstein’s rash statement by saying, “Einstein! Stop telling God what to do!”[1]
It was clear that to reconcile these two theories that have been tested hundreds of thousands of times, every time both being confirmed, there had to be a larger theory that encompassed both. For example, black holes follow both Quantum and Relativity. Black holes are so immensely small that they do not follow the laws of the General Theory of Relativity, but yet their density is so large, that their gravitation impact does not obey the laws of Quantum either. Both Theories must be used to explain the behavior of black holes. Einstein was right about one thing, not that Quantum was wrong, but that the universe should have a logical explanation. Everything in our universe up to now has operated by following logical laws that fit in with mathematical observations. This does not mean that there will never be something that we cannot understand; it simply means that we can expect that there should be and we should study and experiment until we find it.
This persistence to find a unifying theory that mathematically unifies Quantum with Relativity led to a new theory, the Theory of Everything; String Theory. String Theory is extremely complex, and I will not be explaining it in detail, for the simple reason that I do not understand it. I will speak of only the implications of the theory; I will not be going into the actual math of the theory.
As scientists worked feverishly to find a theory to unify Quantum Mechanics and Relativity, they began to see that what the math was describing was pieces of energy so small that it is just as impossible to imagine them as it is to imagine the vastness of our universe. These particles of energy were found to be massless, pure energy termed strings. According to the math, these strings could vibrate, and move in any direction. Strings were found to be a billion billion times smaller than the atom. It was theorized that these vibrating strings make up everything in the universe. All matter is composed of these vibrating strings. The way the “string” of energy vibrates or moves determines the properties of the matter it makes up. This theory provided a viable description of gravity on the quantum level. Also known as the Graviton Particle, strings carry with them pieces of spacetime. Indeed, these particles, are the frame work of which spacetime is made.
As these particles interact with each other, they make up the 

observable universe. We are all made up of these strings in theory. Trillions and trillions of them. This explains gravity, because each string is a piece of spacetime itself, and thus the more that come together, in other words, the more dense an object is, the more spacetime it contains, and the more effect it has on spacetime around itself. The most dramatic example of this would be a black hole, which contains so much spacetime that not even light can escape its curvature of reality. Our sun is anther example; the sun contains so much space-time that it bends the space around itself and puts the planets in a continual orbit around itself. I won’t go into this any farther to spare myself sounding like a fool who doesn’t know what He is talking about, because in truth, I do not. However, there are a few more things to consider that I think are worth our time. 
String theory predicts multiple dimensions in every point of space-time because in order for these oscillating strings to be stable, they require the existence of at least 10 other dimensions. You see, there are two different kinds of strings, open-ended strings that are held in place to this realty, and closed ring strings that are not. The closed ring would be our force of gravity that can project in all dimensions. Each string that is tied down to this particular space-time membrane is composed of multiple dimensions. We exist on just one of these alternate space-time dimensions.     The only difference between the extra dimensions of our dimension is their shape.
According to string theory, shape is everything. A string vibrates in different ways thus making up all the different particles in the universe. Thus our reality is just one vibration of the multiple ways in which these strings could vibrate. So we live in a world in which certain things happened because of the way things vibrate. It could be that in the next reality over, a very different set of circumstances are observed. Everything that could happen at a certain point in space-time, does happen, just not in the same reality.
What does this say about our ability to make our own decisions? Do we live in a fixed universe that is unchanging? Is our reality predetermined? My suggestion is that this is not the case. What if God has given us the ability to exist in which ever of these dimensions we choose? In other words, our very actions alter space-time itself and determine which reality we happen to exist in. Something completely different may be happening in the reality next to you because of a decision you made differently in the past. I will explore this idea a little further in the next section of this book, but just as a spoiler alert, what if God allows all realities and possibilities to play out in which he does every alternative possible to give you the chance to choose life. Thus in heaven, if we have a question about how our life would have turned out if such and such hadn’t have happened, God will be able to show you the entire spread of time and show you that no matter which circumstances you face, you ended up making the exact same decision. Or perhaps God will bring all realities into one single reality, in which you remember yourself, every different scenario that could have happened in your life, and yet you choose Christ in every single one. The God I believe in will not let anyone be lost who, if circumstances were different, would have been saved. Everyone that would be saved will be saved.
This is possible precisely because of quantum mechanics. Because our particles can exist in any place at any time, and cannot be calculated in any way, our brain can choose anything at any time without being determined. In fact, it is impossible for us to be determined, because God has created the universe without the ability of calculation. An electron can be everywhere at once, and nowhere at the same time, thus it is possible that our intellect that makes up every decision we make can go anywhere at any time. To my knowledge, creatures with an intellect are the only things that can control any aspect of space-time around them. We literally bend reality to our will. Doesn’t this idea strike you as amazing, that God would give us such power over the universe? If this God is real, He is great indeed. Even our own free will has a reason, and is a created thing. Our very reality, free will, time, space, and existence itself, is all created. Everything has a cause, and a reason, and that cause and reason could be nothing but an infinite creator, above all, and of none. He was in the beginning, and before Him there is nothing.
So my last question for you is this, if string theory really is the theory of everything, describing every known observation in the universe, and it appears to be self-existent, doesn’t it explain away the need for God? Many seem to think so. There is only one problem with this, that is, what started these strings of energy vibrating in the first place? Even more disturbing is that these strings can actually decay. Space-time is decaying as we speak. That means that time is not eternal. You understand what that means!? Time itself is decaying. Bit by bit, piece by piece, these strings can decay taking with them both the space, and time they occupy. In order for the universe to continue, a power greater than the string must sustain it.
String theory also predicts a universe that works like a clock. The properties of these strings, that is to say, the way in which they vibrate, make up all the forces in the universe. All the constants we have in the universe, the speed of light, the electromagnetic force, and gravity, all these forces are determined by the careful balancing of the these vibrations of the strings. The universe balances on the edge of a knife, if even one of these constant forces were changed just slightly, the entire universe would break apart.
The 10 dimensions cause these forces to equal out, and help determine the constants of nature. We live in such an irreducibly complex universe. String theory does not negate the need for God; to the contrary, it shows a universe that requires Him to exist. Quite literally, if God ceased to exist, the entire universe would go to ruin. I believe, that if God ceased to exist, so would all of space-time, because the universe is an extension of the mind of God. Yet even if my theory were not true, without the clock maker to wind the clock and carefully balance its gears, the clock (this universe) would, without a doubt, end.




[1] http://www.davinciinstitute.com/2012/03/07/niels-bohr-and-albert-einstein/

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