This is the third post I've seen on Steemit connecting the spiritual with math/science, though yours is by far the most mind blowing. Those posts led me to write about whether there might be a mathematical basis for sin (just musings; I suck at math). I can't really follow your equations above, but I can relate to your conclusion. Is this all just algebra? I'm going to show this to my atheist, math major, programmer ex-husband to get his take. Just for fun. :) [upvoted and resteemed]
You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
Thanks for stopping by and reading. Yes, this was weird at the time, in a good way, I guess. Once you write your article I'd like to read it as well. And sure, show it to whoever you want. I thought what was the point of me sitting on it. I'll be happy if someone could use this for whatever need.
Thank you again
Cheers
This post is THREE YEARS OLD now but fresh as tomorrow. I love this: a realization of God based on an algebraic derivation. I often say math is god; math determines the universe, even life itself, taking into account the mathematics of the double helix and all those DNA strands. And the Periodic Table of the Elements, looking like Lego building blocks to me. So precise. So.... mathematical!!!! It may indeed be proof of a Creator, a God, but the God of the Bible just sounds like a man-made construct to me. (Not woman-made, for what that's worth.) Everything is geometric, algebraic, physics-based, with something perhaps more nebulous (dare I say spirit-like) swirling the helixes and making the electron spin and the atoms dance.... even a rock is a dance of atoms.... Mind Blown off to find a stupid cat video on you-tube to calm down now....@geke! Hello!
100% Bible, Coran, etc. ideological books. As one cardinal said: "If God didn't exist he had to be created." He certainly meant the God of the Bible. )))
We created the God of the Bible - always a fascinating concept, and a bit scary. What else might we concoct....
Tell me about it... )))
I'm doomed: my realization of God, to a great degree, is based on an algebraic derivation. Thus, to understand what I am talking about, you have to be, at least, superficially familiar with algebra.
My acquaintance with algebra ended with logrithms, cosecants and co-tangents.Whoa, wait, @geke, even you "can't really follow" those equations? (Did Jimmy?)