Articles of the year 2020

Contempt?
Published on May 20th, 2020

One of Albert Einstein's most famous quotes is, "God does not play dice with the universe."
The greatest minds of the 20th century were grappling with some of the obscure problems facing them in Quantum mechanics when trying to understand quantum entanglement at a distance.


Einstein famously remarked “God does not play dice.” This was because they could not understand this entanglement at a distance, and eventually they decided that the matter could not be proved physically but the mathematics was irrefutable. They eventually decided to leave it to faith.


Thus one could easily confirm the existence of God marking it to faith.
As in the “entanglement” where atoms can behave in conjunction even when at the other end of the universe, this would mean that the information was transmitted at a huge distance from one atom to the other instantaneously.


This meant that information travels this vast distance faster than the speed of light which according to Einstein Theory of Relativity was impossible. However it was undeniable, and therefore the greatest minds of that age and subsequently have acknowledged the fact but marked it down to faith.
Those of little faith admitting the reality marked it inescapable.


To laymen we understood, and reflected that it was indeed the presence of a supreme being who had ordained this program to cover all aspects of nature with all its complications. Everything seemed to work and did so without any fault.


Strangely enough man, God’s greatest creation is now beginning to grasp the basics of the rules governing the Micro and the Macro. The behaviour of atoms is being examined and confirmed by quantum physics which is only 60 years old as the head of the sciences.
On the other hand Newtonian physics examines and documents behaviour of the large ICE planets and stars.


It is not incredible that the engineers from the Earth can direct a rocket to land on a comet travelling through the solar system at an incredible speed of 30,000 miles per hour, tiny by comparison, send images back, take samples, takeoff and return to Earth with the data.