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Professor wins prize for maths link to God

 
 
Zippo
 
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 09:30 am
Quote:
Professor wins prize for maths link to God

From The Times
March 13, 2008


A Polish priest and mathematician who was a friend of the late Pope John Paul II has won the world's richest academic prize for work that shows how maths can offer circumstantial evidence of God's existence.

Professor Michael Heller, 72, a pioneering cosmologist and philosopher specialising in mathematics and metaphysics, received the £820,000 prize yesterday in New York.

His theories do not so much offer proof of the existence of God as introduce doubt about the material existence of the world around us. He specialises in complex formulae that make it possible to explain everything, even chance, through mathematical calculation.

According to the Templeton Foundation, which has awarded its prize for Progress toward Research or Discoveries about Spiritual Realities for 35 years, Professor Heller's research has 'pushed at the metaphysical horizons of science'. The prize money is adjusted every year so that it remains greater than the amount given by the Nobel Foundation, which awards the Nobel prizes.

Professor Heller was nominated for the award by Professor Karol Musiol, Rector of the Jagiellonian University in Cracow, who said: 'His unique position as a creatively working scientist and reflective man of religion has brought to science a sense of transcendent mystery and to religion a view of the universe through the broadly open eyes of science.

'He has introduced a significant notion of theology of science. He has succeeded in showing that religion isolating itself from scientific insights is lame, and science failing to acknowledge other ways of understanding is blind.'

In a statement yesterday, Professor Heller, a professor in the philosophy faculty at the Pontifical Academy of Theology in Cracow, said: 'If we ask about the cause of the universe we should ask about the cause of mathematical laws. By doing so we are back in the great blueprint of God's thinking about the universe, the question on ultimate causality: why is there something rather than nothing?

'When asking this question, we are not asking about a cause like all other causes. We are asking about the root of all possible causes.

'Science is but a collective effort of the human mind to read the mind of God from question marks out of which we and the world around us seem to be made.'

When he was a boy, Professor Heller's family were sent to Siberia. His father had built new factories in Poland and joined a group that sabotaged a chemical plant in the south when the Nazis invaded at the start of the Second World War.

The family feld to Lvov and were sent from there to Siberia by the Russians, where Professor Heller went to primary school. By the time he entered secondary school, the war had ended and he and his family returned to Poland. His father was persecuted again when his son decided to enter a seminary.

In spite of the suppression of religion in Poland during much of his adult life, he went on to reach the top of his field academically, doing research in universities around the world including Oxford and Liège.

He worked with Pope John Paul II, when he was Archbishop of Cracow and was one of a number of academics and scientists invited each summer to Castel Gandolfo, the Pope's summer residence, to debate the latest research in their respective fields.

His greatest scientific influence has been the philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, who once wrote: 'When God calculates and thinks things through, the world is made.'

John Templeton, chair of the John Templeton Foundation and son of Sir John Templeton, who established the prize in 1973, said: 'Michael Heller's quest for deeper understanding has led to pioneering breakthroughs in religious concepts and knowledge as well as expanding the horizons of science.'

Professor Heller, who also worked with John Paul II when he was Archbishop of Cracow, said yesterday that he would donate his prize money to the development of the new Copernicus Centre in Cracow, an academy for research into science and theology.

The end of time?

' The work of Professor Heller, above, revolves around the search for a fundamental theory of creation. His research ranges beyond Einstein and into quantum mechanics, cosmology, physics and pure mathematics, including his own version of the Heisenberg equation, below. Although his theories do not prove the existence of God, they may provide circumstantial evidence that He exists

* So long as the Universe had a beginning, we can suppose it had a creator, he says. But if the Universe is really completely self-contained, having no boundary or edge, it would have neither beginning nor end: it would simply be. What place, then, for a creator?

* Professor Heller argues against the Newtonian concept of creation, that is, against the idea of an absolute space and an absolute time and of God creating energy and matter at certain times

* He suggests modern theologians should go back to the traditional doctrine that the creation of the Universe was an act that occurred outside space and time

Source: Times Datatbase

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article3540989.ece


Maybe someone good at maths can try to explain who maths can be linked with god? Moreover, how is our dear President going to understand the maths behind this. He can hardly speak. Very Happy
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Debacle
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 10:41 am
The famed encylopedist Denis Diderot was once invited to visit the Russian Court by the empress, Catherine the Great. To the embarrassment of his host and the rest of the court, he promptly launched into an animated defense of atheism.

Reluctant to muzzle her guest directly, Catherine hatched a cunning plan. Diderot was informed that a learned mathematician had discovered an algebraical demonstration of the existence of God and would present it before the Court, if he wished to hear it. Diderot naturally consented.

The mathematician Leonhard Euler duly appeared and gravely declared: "Monsieur,
(a + bn)/n = x, therefore God exists!"

The upshot? Diderot, entirely unschooled in algebra, was rendered speechless; peals of laughter erupted around the room; Diderot, greatly embarassed, asked for permission to return to France; and Catherine gratefully bid him adieu.
0 Replies
 
neologist
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 10:56 am
Re: Professor wins prize for maths link to God
Zippo wrote:
. . . Maybe someone good at maths can try to explain who maths can be linked with god? Moreover, how is our dear President going to understand the maths behind this. He can hardly speak. Very Happy
I taught algebra and geometry for a while and am fairly accomplished in English composition. However, I must say I am completely unable to understand the above quoted sentence.

With regard to the quoted article, circumstantial proof is just that, circumstantial. Each must prove to himself the existence of God
0 Replies
 
neologist
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 11:02 am
Debacle wrote:
The famed encylopedist Denis Diderot was once invited to visit the Russian Court by the empress, Catherine the Great. To the embarrassment of his host and the rest of the court, he promptly launched into an animated defense of atheism.

Reluctant to muzzle her guest directly, Catherine hatched a cunning plan. Diderot was informed that a learned mathematician had discovered an algebraical demonstration of the existence of God and would present it before the Court, if he wished to hear it. Diderot naturally consented.

The mathematician Leonhard Euler duly appeared and gravely declared: "Monsieur,
(a + bn)/n = x, therefore God exists!"

The upshot? Diderot, entirely unschooled in algebra, was rendered speechless; peals of laughter erupted around the room; Diderot, greatly embarassed, asked for permission to return to France; and Catherine gratefully bid him adieu.
Thanks for that story, Deb. It fairly well represents the depth of arguments (from both sides) I have seen on this forum.
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 11:02 am
Re: Professor wins prize for maths link to God
neologist wrote:
Each must prove to himself the existence of God


Or not . . .
0 Replies
 
neologist
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 11:04 am
Re: Professor wins prize for maths link to God
Setanta wrote:
neologist wrote:
Each must prove to himself the existence of God


Or not . . .
Exactly.

But we've been over this before, boss.

Coffee's cold.

Cola?
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 11:06 am
Yeah, that would be nice . . . thank you.
0 Replies
 
neologist
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 11:10 am
I miss your posts on this board, Set. You should come by more often.
0 Replies
 
Zippo
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 11:16 am
Re: Professor wins prize for maths link to God
neologist wrote:
Zippo wrote:
. . . Maybe someone good at maths can try to explain who (how) maths can be linked with god? Moreover, how is our dear President going to understand the maths behind this. He can hardly speak. Very Happy


I taught algebra and geometry for a while and am fairly accomplished in English composition. However, I must say I am completely unable to understand the above quoted sentence.


And i betcha, your sh!t doesn't smell either? Laughing

Just one typo 'who' should have been 'how'. Try again.
0 Replies
 
Debacle
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 02:32 pm
neologist wrote:
Thanks for that story, Deb. It fairly well represents the depth of arguments (from both sides) I have seen on this forum.


I can credit that, neo. Unlike the wino philosopher who claims the secret to happiness lies in keeping your mind full and your bowels empty, I choose to follow the path pointed out by my very first employer.

"Debacle, shut up!" he explained. "Opinions are like a$$holes, everybody's got one."

Oh, but he was a grand master. The most opinionated blighter I never had the fortunate to run over, and the elements were so mix'd in him that Nature might stand up and say to all the world, "This was an A$$HOLE!"

May he R.I.P.
0 Replies
 
neologist
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 04:21 pm
Sorry, Zip. It wasn't the who/how typo that got me. It is my inexperience in the variety of maths. Though, to be fair, Wikipedia allows the expression as a colloquialism. Now I wonder: how many maths are there?
0 Replies
 
Chai
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 06:03 pm
They call math, maths in England.

this was on the UK site.

glad I could be of assistance.
0 Replies
 
littlek
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 06:31 pm
What I am interested in is the foundation that gives the award - where is it coming from? One blogger says that while the old boss wanted religious people to understand science and link the two, the new boss (his son) is a neocon who wants to sort of enslave science to religion. Anyone know anything about the foundation?
0 Replies
 
Debacle
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Mar, 2008 06:49 pm
littlek wrote:
Anyone know anything about the foundation?


lilk, the foundation was setup by the late Sir John Templeton, supposedly a devout Christian, who made his fortune in the mutual fund industry. He headed one of the largest fund families, which later merged and today is known as Franklin-Templeton Funds. They profess to being a low expense fund group, on the order of the Vanguard Group funds.
0 Replies
 
Wolf ODonnell
 
  1  
Reply Mon 7 Apr, 2008 12:36 pm
Surely, you can use maths to prove anything? I mean, it wasn't that long ago when some mathematician "proved" that we live in the Matrix (or at least, something similar).
0 Replies
 
Foofie
 
  1  
Reply Thu 24 Apr, 2008 09:14 pm
Zippo, you use the term, "maths." In the U.S. it's "math." You've spent time in the UK?
0 Replies
 
 

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