- by Chris Matyszczyk @ChrisMatyszczyk - September 26, 2014 9:33 AM PDT
"Believe
in science, believe in God" seems to cover all the possibilities and gives
you the best chance for a cheery afterlife.
For
a time, it was thought that astrophysicist Stephen Hawking had also left a tiny
gap in his credo window for a magical deity. However, he has now come out and
declared that there is no God.
He
gave an interview to Spain's El Mundo in which he expressed his firm belief that el
mundo was the work of scientifically explainable phenomena, not of a supreme
being.
Hawking
said: "Before we understand science, it is natural to believe that God
created the universe. But now science offers a more convincing
explanation."
I'm
not sure whether there was a specific moment in which science overtook the
deistic explanation of existence. However, El Mundo pressed him on the
suggestion in "A Brief History of Time" that a unifying theory of
science would help mankind "know the mind of God."
Hawking
now explained: "What I meant by 'we would know the mind of God' is, we
would know everything that God would know, if there were a God. Which there
isn't. I'm an atheist."
He
added: "Religion believes in miracles, but these aren't compatible with
science."
Perhaps.
But some look at, for example, the human eye and wonder how that exciting ball
of jelly could have come about scientifically.
Hawking's
been tending toward such an absolute pronouncement for a while. In a speech last year, he offered an explanation of how the world came to being
without God. He mused: "What was God doing before the divine creation? Was
he preparing hell for people who asked such questions?"
I
do worry, though, about Hawking's sweetly divine faith in humanity. He told El
Mundo: "In my opinion, there is no aspect of reality beyond the reach of
the human mind."
If that's true, the human mind still has to develop
exponentially to explain everyday phenomena, such as social networking. And
then there's Hawking's insistence that his speech synthesizer, which gives him
a curiously American accent, has had this consequence: "With the American
accent, I've had far more success with women."
We definitely need some serious research to explain that.
A related video - Stephen Hawking: Questioning the universe
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