- {A brief explanation of the two: Classical Mechanics, as best as I know, are the studies of how “parts” move and work together - thermodynamics, astrophysics, energy conservation, gravitational laws, electricity, hydraulics, hydrodynamic pressure, electromagnetic induction, biomechanics, accoustics, etc. Think Leonardo DaVinci, Isaac Newton, Galileo, Michael Faraday, Daniel Bernoulli, Rudolf Clausius.... Quantum Mechanics are, again as best as I know, are how the parts of the “parts” move and work together - special relativity, particle physics, nuclear physics, condensed matter physics, quantum statistical mechanics, string theory, - even nanotechnology. Think Albert Einstein, Steven Hawking, John Dalton. To dumb-it waaaay down it’s like comparing the Industrial Age of 100 years ago with the Technological Age of today: though one is more advanced than the other, you still need the industrial to explain the technological.}
Both ways are used to explain the world we live in, but take very different approaches. There is currently little, if anything, that connects the two approaches into a Grand Unified Theory, but both have their place in the world and are necessary. For the sake of the analogy, Quantum Mechanics takes Classical Mechanics to another completely different level. It’s like the difference between being able to explain what happens on Earth vs. being able to explain what happens with anything anywhere. If there happens to be a particle physicist reading this, I apologize for my simplistic take to complex things....all that to say that it’s probably typical for us not to “get” God. My little brain is not capable of understanding all that God is about. When He tells me to do something, he sees what that will lead to 1,000 decisions later, whereas I have difficulty seeing the second outcome, if I’m lucky! The good news is that I don’t have to know everything about God to know that He loves me and made me for a reason.
- {If I knew anything about physics I’d break into how Light can behave as though it’s made up of particles, but can also behave as though it’s made up of waves - though they seem to conflict each other, both can be used to describe what Light is. Make your own analogy here: }
To put it yet another way (in more familiar terms to me) God is theoretical probability and I’m experimental (actual) probability. If I toss a coin 100 times, I should, in theory, get “tails” 50 times. Now if I actually take a coin and toss it 100 times, I’m likely to get other amounts of tails like 46, 51, 39, 59 or 48. Even if I try this experiment 10 more times, it’s a lot more likely that I’ll get amounts other than 50. But even if once and awhile I actually get 50 tails, the total sum of my coin tosses probably isn’t 50% tails. But here’s the really cool part: theoretical probablilty and experimental probability can only be related to each other if you do something abstract that is mathematically impossible!. . . .(excited yet?) Meaning, the experimental probability and the theoretical probability will end up agreeing (or being the same) if you toss the coin infinity times! (You can try it, but...) It’s called the Law of Large Numbers. The only way God and I are going to be on the same page is if a miracle happens - and that miracle is Jesus. He is that abstract idea (both God and man) that did the impossible (died for MY sins for Love’s sake) and tied together two things that were never going to meet (me and God). There. I just casually proved that Jesus = infinity. Haha!
2 comments:
I like this post. Sometime I think about things like this... about God's metaphors riddled throughout the world of academia... but I love that you actually took the time to write it down and share and prove that Jesus is infinity! I certainly agree :) also, nice Valentine's post.
I didn't really prove it...
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