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Post by The Ninevite on Jan 18, 2024 16:06:47 GMT -8
The First Three Minutes is a book by Werner Heisenberg, who authored the uncertainty principle on the basis of Schrodinger's Cat. The principle is that particles movements in the cube depend on whether anyone is watching or not. That's probably truer of thieves than it is of electrons, but the Millennium problems are phrased in terms of chemical reactions. Atomic combination is the predicate subject of recombinant DNA theory, which operates under exactly the same paradigm.
While I'm unimpressed with Heisenberg, it is absolutely central to understanding Einstein's relativity. Heisenberg based his "abstract, theoretical" guess as to what had happened during the first three minutes of Earth's history on Einstein's paper regarding Brownian Motion. If you're really a serious evolution vs. creation debater, you have to read Heisenberg, because as a rhetorical scholar you are always prepared and able to recite and compare base arguments from memory with notes, aren't you? The classic one-line retort from either side, mean to stop the conversation, is "You weren't there you didn't see it." Well, neither was Moses, he lived after Noah's flood as you recall. Heisenberg wasn't on the scene himself, but his essay on "The First Three minutes" is his visionary account on the subject.
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