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Infinity, God, and the MONAD

Silent Method

New member
For those interested in this subject, let me elaborate on "monads" for a moment.

Take any particle of substance. Lets say you start with a grain of dust. Having substance it is divisible. That is, it could conceivably be smaller - cut in half. Do this and you now have two grains of dust, each half the size of the first.

As long as there is substance, you can repeat this process over and over again. Do this an infinite number of times and you will achieve a "particle" that is infinitely small - the monad.

In order for this monad to be infinitely small, it MUST HAVE NO SUBSTANCE!! After all, if it did have substance it would be divisible.

This is the "God particle," and if true (which is entirely logical) it explains how God created the universe out of nothing - nothing save for his infinite ideas!
 
40butpumpin said:
Yeah man, and He's good too. Aren't we fortunate for that.

:)
:) Yes sir.

I believe this "monodology" to be a prime logical argument for his existence. Perhaps you cannot "prove" monodology - we cannot split a substance infinitly. However, it cannot be disproven.
 
Silent Method said:
For those interested in this subject, let me elaborate on "monads" for a moment.

Take any particle of substance. Lets say you start with a grain of dust. Having substance it is divisible. That is, it could conceivably be smaller - cut in half. Do this and you now have two grains of dust, each half the size of the first.

As long as there is substance, you can repeat this process over and over again. Do this an infinite number of times and you will achieve a "particle" that is infinitely small - the monad.

In order for this monad to be infinitely small, it MUST HAVE NO SUBSTANCE!! After all, if it did have substance it would be divisible.

This is the "God particle," and if true (which is entirely logical) it explains how God created the universe out of nothing - nothing save for his infinite ideas!

Ive often thought about this. Im no physicist, but the logical conclusion of this compelling thought experiment is certainly fascinating.
 
I've read Leibniz's "Monadology," though it's been a while. It's worth the read if your interested. If so, prepare to spend hours analizing passages.


There is a book called "The God Particle." I've haven't read it yet, but I'm sure it's quite interesting. (Probably an easier read than Leibniz's "Monadology").
 
Silent Method said:
For those interested in this subject, let me elaborate on "monads" for a moment.

Take any particle of substance. Lets say you start with a grain of dust. Having substance it is divisible. That is, it could conceivably be smaller - cut in half. Do this and you now have two grains of dust, each half the size of the first.

As long as there is substance, you can repeat this process over and over again. Do this an infinite number of times and you will achieve a "particle" that is infinitely small - the monad.

In order for this monad to be infinitely small, it MUST HAVE NO SUBSTANCE!! After all, if it did have substance it would be divisible.

This is the "God particle," and if true (which is entirely logical) it explains how God created the universe out of nothing - nothing save for his infinite ideas!

Interesting. Einstein believed in God. There are a lot of people on these boards who think they're too smart to believe in such a thing.
 
Re: Re: Infinity, God, and the MONAD

biteme said:


Interesting. Einstein believed in God. There are a lot of people on these boards who think they're too smart to believe in such a thing.

1 Corinthians 1:18-31
 
This concept is entirely possible. There are actual theorems in mathematics that state that there are "things" that exist in our universe that are not describable, the monad seems to fit this description.
 
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