Re: Quantum mechanics supports the Resurrection of Jesus Christ
Posted: Tue Mar 28, 2023 8:31 am
Brookside, every statement in your opening post is wildly false.
From Conservapedia.com > https://www.conservapedia.com/Quantum_mechanics
No it doesn't. Not by a longshot. The two are entirely unrelated.
No it doesn't. You may as well say that the logic of quantum mechanics predicts the reality of Gandalf's defeat of the Balrog.The logic of quantum mechanics predicts the reality of the Resurrection, akin to quantum tunneling.
From Conservapedia.com > https://www.conservapedia.com/Quantum_mechanics
IT ABSOLUTELY DOES NO SUCH THING! If you disagree, please cite the specific verse(s) where it explains "that the world was an abyss of chaos at the moment of creation."Conservapedia.com wrote:The order created by God is on a foundation of uncertainty. The Book of Genesis explains that the world was an abyss of chaos at the moment of creation.
There's no such things as "Biblical scientific foreknowledge."Quantum mechanics is predicted by Biblical scientific foreknowledge.
No it doesn't. It simply reaffirms the effects of random chance on superatomic structures, if anything.The Parable of the Sower (Matthew 13:1-9 ) also embodies the uncertainty of quantum mechanics.
No it doesn't.The Parable of the Weeds illustrates the ostensible uncertainty of nature as perceived by mankind, see Matthew 13:24-30.
No it doesn't. It simply retells a miracle that Jesus supposedly performed. If it did what you quote your source as saying, then anyone could calm a storm through observation.The Calming of the Storm demonstrates how observation tames chaos, see Matthew 8:23-27, Mark 4:35-41, and Luke 8:22-25.
None of those things "foreshadow the insight of quantum entanglement about paired photons having opposite spin." You may as well say that those parables in the Bible foreshadow the rivalry between Pepsi and Coca-Cola.Several parables in the Bible foreshadow the insight of quantum entanglement about paired photons having opposite spin, by contrasting two men in their relationship with God. The Prodigal Son contrasts two brothers, two churchgoers are contrasted in Luke 18:9–14 , and two brothers are further contrasted in Luke 21:28-31 ."