Submitted by Himangsu Sekhar Pal on Wed, 02/08/2023 - 13:37
If there is a God, and if that God is omnipresent, then God being omnipresent will be present at each point of the universe at the same time. Let's assume for the sake of argument that the universe is infinite, so the distance from one end of the universe to its other end will also be infinite. But for God, this infinite distance will not remain an infinite distance, it will amount to zero distance, since God will be present at both ends of the universe at the same time. But to us human beings, this infinite distance will remain an infinite distance.
Submitted by Himangsu Sekhar Pal on Mon, 12/05/2022 - 13:31
Heisenberg’s time-energy uncertainty relation is given by the below equation:
Δt ΔE ≥ ℏ/2
While commenting in a blog by German physicist Sabine Hossenfelder, another physicist has written the following in one of his comments in the comment section:
“Small ΔE means long lifetime.”1
My starting point will be this: Small ΔE means long lifetime.
If small ΔE means long lifetime, then, what will have to be the lifetime if ΔE is to be zero?
We have already seen that Δt ΔE ≥ ℏ/2.
Submitted by Himangsu Sekhar Pal on Sat, 05/14/2022 - 06:38
Now, we all know that spacetime is not fundamental, because physicists are saying so. But, do we know the reason why spacetime cannot be fundamental?
This is a physics question as well as a philosophy question.
If we say that X is a fundamental ingredient of the universe, then we will have to admit that whatever will exist in it, will need X for its existence. Nothing can exist without it.
However, if there is something in the universe that does not need X for its existence, then X cannot be called a fundamental ingredient of the universe.
Submitted by Himangsu Sekhar Pal on Sat, 08/07/2021 - 09:23
Mystics who have claimed that they have a direct vision of God
have always described that God as spaceless and timeless. But mystical experiences have been discarded by secular-minded people as merely a hallucination.
Here is a Medical Definition of Hallucination: A profound distortion in a person's perception of reality, typically accompanied by a powerful sense of reality. A hallucination may be a sensory experience in which a person can see, hear, smell, taste, or feel something that is not there.
Submitted by Himangsu Sekhar Pal on Fri, 07/23/2021 - 12:10
In one YouTube comment thread, a person wrote the following:
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