islam-sikhism - theology (the waheguru wave-particle duality)
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The Fundamentals ofIslamic CreedAbu Jafer Ahmad Sa...Best 43.95
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THE WAHEGURU WAVE-PARTICLE DUALITY
By Abu Adeeba
INTRODUCTION
Regular visitors will be familiar with the many exchanges we have had over the years with Sikh
apologists who have utilised a varying number of contradistinctive methodological approaches in
their attempt to rescue the logically incoherent theological concept of Nirgun-Sargun.
It ranged from the inexplicable self-defeating strategy adopted by the likes of I. S. Dhillon (1, 2, 3)
and Project Naad, which was to uncritically dismiss the a priori Law of Non-Contradiction (LnC)
whilst fallaciously maintaining that Waheguru is true without objectively proving it, to the likes of
Saajan Sandhu and Bijla Singh who perceptively chose the opposite approach of making their
defence through an internal critique of their theology without rejecting LnC.
There is, then, a third approach opted for by some Sikh apologists who, in an attempt to
objectively negate LnC, appeal to the presence of corporeal things that can supposedly co-exist
contradictorily.
In this regard, one particular example that is repeatedly cited by some Sikh apologists is the
Copenhagen interpretation (CI) of the wave-particle duality (WPD) in Quantum Mechanics (QM).
In doing so, however, these keen defenders of the faith, who have the courage to think so
radically outside the box, inadvertently set themselves up for the big fall, for, in appealing to WPD
they must also necessarily identify which interpretation of WPD they hold to be true.
It is irreconcilable for a theory, open to many uncorroborated interpretations, to be simplistically
cited as evidence for proving the absolute truth regarding the nature of God's being or essence.
For one thing, since this divinely revealed truth of God's existence is, fundamentally speaking,
absolute in nature, any evidence cited in an attempt to corroborate this absolute truth cannot rest
on shaky grounds.
If these Sikhs do indeed stand by the tenuous notion that Waheguru can exist contradictorily, and
that concrete evidence exists in the real world as indirect support of this, then the evidence must,at the very least, be well established and firmly corroborated.
Moreover, in the case of WPD, not only must these Sikhs make an informed choice over the
available interpretations, but should also furnish a scientific reason (as this is a scientific theory)
as to why they have betted on one to the exclusion of all others.
What one will find is that each WPD interpretation carries with it an open can of worms, which,
rather than strengthening a theological argument, will instead weaken it by raising a slew of
seemingly insurmountable questions vis--vis God's purpose in creating the universe and
mankind's relationship with him.
Before we continue, let us denote certain keywords that shall repeatedly be used throughout this
paper:
CI: Copenhagen interpretat ion
WPD: Wave-Particle Duality
QM: Quantum Mechanics
LnC: Law of non-Contradiction
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A PRIMER ON THE WAVE PARTICLE DUALITY
Sikh apologists, Project Naad, attempted to rescue the theology-proper ofNirgun-Sargun from
the assertion that it is contradictory, and thus false, by appealing to WPD. In their paperSikhism,
Science and Quantum Physics, which was presumably written in response to our website, they
claim:
Science has been used exhaustively to determine the nature and characteristics of matter
i.e. whether matter is a wave or a particle. .. .Quantum field theory explains this by stating that matter is neither a wave nor a particle.
It is something more abstract and could be considered as a simultaneous co-existence of
all possibilities. This leads to the idea of superposition i.e. all possibilities potentially
existing at the same time. [1]
There are also other Sikhs who favour this counterargument. One such individual is forum
frequenter going by the name ofms514:
Perhaps the author [Abu Adeeba of Islam-Sikhism] would like to explain the concept of a
photon, which exhibits properties of both waves and particles? Right...
And we will, of course, certainly oblige.
Our contention is that Sikhism's theological concept of the Nirgun-Sargun duality ascribed toGod's nature is contradictory; and since all contradictions are false according to LnC, Sikhism is,
therefore, a false religion.
Sikhs who make recourse to WPD do so by asserting that existential reality exhibits
contradictions; that is to say, since LnC is violated by the presence of corporeal things existing
contradictorily, God, who is the creator of these paradoxical phenomena, must also be able to
exist contradictorily.
And this is precisely what Project Naad holds by supporting such affirmations through the use of
scripture:
The Sikh scripture mentions the idea ofsuperposition as being an intrinsic part of
creation and the creator.
"You have thousands of eyes, and yet You have no eyes. You have thousands of forms,
and yet You do not have even one. You have thousands of Lotus Feet, and yet You do
not have even one foot. You have no nose, but you have thousands of noses. This Play
of Yours entrances me." SGGSJ page 13
"He Himself is formless, and also formed; the One Lord is without attributes, and also
with attributes" SGGSJ page 250
"At the same time, He is both hidden and revealed. For the Gurmukh, doubt and fear
are dispelled." SGGSJ page 1048 (bold, underline ours) [2]
Before we come to define Superposition's role vis--vis WPD and QM, as well as the theological
implications towards Sikhism and Waheguru, it will help if a brief overview is provided to betterunderstand and clarify the science that lies behind these hypotheses.
WPD is a concept that insists that all matter exhibits both wave and particle properties at the
quantum level. WPD is, thus, considered a central tenet of QM, while CI, which, according to a
poll taken at the 1997 UMBC quantum mechanics workshop, is considered the most popular
interpretation of QM followed by the Many Worlds interpretation, [3] attempts to reconcile the
seemingly paradoxical nature of matter, which can apparently behave both as a wave (something
which occupies a large space) and a particle (something which occupies a small space)
simultaneously.
The famous double-slit experiment, first carried out by English scientist, Thomas Young, in 1801,
essentially consists of light (photon) being passed over or through a medium to determine its
nature. Science then had to wait until 1961 for a source other than light to be used when Clauss
Jnsson performed the experiment using electrons, which again exhibited wave and particlecharacteristics.
The major problem with CI, and therefore with QM in general, is that it is, according to Prof. Paul
Marmet, [4] based upon "three unsurmountable [sic] difficulties:
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a) Negation of causality
b) Negation of realism and
c) Involvement of infinite and imaginary velocities or masses." [5]
THE CURIOUS CASE OF CAUSALITY
Causality is the basis of all scientific work
Causality is the condition that renders science possible [6]
Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)
Before moving on to examine the implications of discarding the law of causality from science, it is
necessary at this stage to remind ourselves of what the scientific method of discovery and
advancement is vis--vis prediction, experimentation and theory.
Prof. of Geology, Donald R. Prothero, defined it in lay terms as follows:
In that regard, the scientific method is similar to many other human endeavors, such as
mythology and folk medicine, which observe something and try to come up with a story
for it. But the big difference is that scientists must then test their hypotheses. They must
try to find some additional observations or experiments that shoot their idea down
(falsify it) or support it (corroborate it). If the observations falsify the hypothesis, then
scientists must start over again with a new hypothesis, or recheck their observations and
make sure that the falsification is correct. If the observations are consistent with the
hypothesis, then it is corroborated, but it is not proven true. Instead, the scientific
community must continue to keep looking for more observations to test the hypothesis
further (fig. 1.1).
This is where the public most misunderstands the scientific method. As many
philosophers of science (such as Karl Popper) have shown, this cycle of setting up,
testing, and falsifying hypotheses is unending. Scientific hypotheses must always be
tentative and subject to further testing and can never be regarded as finally true or
proven. Science is not about finding final truth, only about testing and refining better and
better hypotheses so these hypotheses approach what we think is true about the world.
Any time scientists stop testing and trying to falsify their hypotheses, they also stop doing
science.One of the reasons for this is the nature of testing hypotheses. Lots of people think that
science is purely inductive, making observation after observation until some general
scientific law can be inferred. It is true that scientists must start with observations,
but they do not arrive at scientific principles from induction. (bold, underline ours) [7]
He added:
Most people think that science is about finding the final truth about the world and are
surprised to find that science never proves something finally true. But that's the way the
scientific method works, as philosophers of science have long ago demonstrated about
logic of the scientific method. Science is not about final truth or "facts"; it is only about
continually testing and trying to falsify our hypotheses, until they are extremely well
supported. At that point, the hypothesis becomes a theory (as scientists use the term),
which is a well-corroborated set of hypotheses that explain a larger part of theobservations about the world. [8]
Influential particle theorist at Harvard, Lisa Randall, agreed that a theory is:
A definite physical framework embodied in a set of fundamental assumptions about the
world - and an economical framework that encompasses a wide variety of phenomena. A
theory yields a specific set of equations and predictions - ones that are borne out by
successful agreement with experimental results. (bold mine) [9]
While particle physicist Lee Smolin stated:
A scientific theory that makes no predictions and therefore is not subject to experiment
can never fail, but such a theory can never succeed either, as long as science stands for
knowledge gained from rational argument borne out by evidence. There needs to be anhonest evaluation of the wisdom of sticking to research program that has failed after
decades to find grounding in either experimental results or precise mathematical
formulation. (bold ours) [10]
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But where does the scientific method stand if causality is negated for a physical phenomenon?
How can scientists set up experiments to determine causal relationships for things that are
ostensibly considered uncaused (causeless)? Further still, if a hypothesis is said to be uncaused,
how can "observations or experiments" be setup to falsify or corroborate it?
The counterintuitive implications of this stance are perhaps the reason why Marmet holds to the
seemingly a priori position that:
Nothing is created from nonexistence. We firmly believe that a cause is always essential.[11]
He further elaborates:
The aim of science is to explain phenomena and predict new observations. Practicing
scientific research means to find out why an effect has been produced. It would be
ridiculous and absurd to answer that there is no reason or no cause leading to the
observed results - that results simply happen like that. It would certainly be more
rational to answer that we do not know. (bold, underline ours) [12]
The implication of negating the law of causality within science is, indeed, absurd since it is clearly
self-defeating; and yet we have a major interpretive model which is established upon this premise
of causelessness.
Marmet declares:
The Copenhagen Interpretation claims that Modern Physics does not always require a
cause! [13]
And:
According to the Copenhagen interpretation, there is no cause to a phenomenon.
Consequently, since quantum mechanics is not causal, it is useless to look for causes.
One might well ask why so many physicist s look f or causes when they use and
support a model that is not causal! (bold ours) [14]
Werner Heisenberg, a prominent contributor to CI, clearly affirmed this self-defeating point:
The law of causality is no longer applied in quantum theory. [15]
It is only in holding to this preposterous stance that someone like Prof. Daniel Greenberger could
nonsensically proclaim that "Quantum Mechanics is Magic", [16] and why a distinguished
physicist, such as, Richard P. Feynman, could conclude:
The theory of quantum electrodynamics describes Nature as absurd from the point of
view of common sense. And it agrees fully with experiments. So I hope you can accept
Nature as she is - absurd. (bold ours) [17]
But, what an educated and critically minded person, who hears of any claim from a scientist,
should do, as Smolin urges, is "evaluate it as strictly as you would an investment. Give it as much
scrutiny as a house you would buy or a school you would send your children to". [18] Hence, whatdoes Feynman mean when he claims that the theory of quantum electrodynamics "agrees fully
with experiments"?
Marmet answers:
Physicists are taught to believe that when an equation gives a correct prediction, it proves
that the model is correct (even if the model is absurd). Furthermore, they claim that, since
the working model is absurd, one must conclude that Nature is absurd. [19]
And the problem with CI, and thus WPD, is that it is most assuredly absurd vis--vis both the
mathematical model and the accepted notion that it is uncaused.
The overarching problem is the attempt made through the interpretive framework of CI to
reconcile between nature and mathematics, as Marmet perceptively pinpoints:
It is clear that mathematics must cope with the internal mathematical relationship
between various physical concepts. The mathematical formalism used in physics forms
probably what is the most coherent and logical internal system that exists in science.
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However in physics, the choice of the mathematical relations is controlled by external
relations dictated by Nature with the help of experiments and observations. The
Copenhagen interpretation is expected to provide the external link between Nature and
mathematics. It is clear that the Copenhagen interpretation fails completely to give
a rational explanation o f Nature. (bold, underline ours)
Therefore, in regards to the WPD hypothesis, it is "feasible mathematically" and "not a problem
as long as we consider that it is an internal property of the mathematical formalism. However, if
one claims that this is an external relationship described by the duality of waves-particles, that
interpretation is absurd". (bold ours) [20]
Similarly, Marcus Chown recognised:
There are at least half a dozen different interpretations of quantum theory. Each one is a
way of relating the mathematics of quantum theory to what might be going on in the real
world. [21]
Contrast this with a mathematically coherent and logical internal system that contains infinite
(symbolically represented as ) and imaginary quantities, such as, velocities or masses. The
German mathematician, David Hilbert, "recognised as one of the most influential and universal
mathematicians of the 19th and early 20th centuries", held that infinites cannot exist in reality:
The infinite is nowhere to be found in reality. It neither exists in nature nor provides a
legitimate basis for rational thought.... The role that remains for the infinite to play issolely that of an idea.... [22]
In a documentary titled Horizon: To Infinity and Beyond, aired on BBC1 in 2010, the following
scientists accede to this position:
"Infinity is like a landscape, a place in which you do mathematics. It's not a real place;
you can't actually go there except in your imagination; but to those who do
mathematics, it seems very real indeed."
(Prof. Peter Cameron, Queen Mary University, London, UK)
"One of the problems of infinity is that it has some paradoxical properties and very
basic questions about infinity that we can't answer."
"Infinity; may be it doesn't exist , but it is a beautiful subject. And until one has real
reason to doubt the mathematical infinity, I just don't see the point."
(Prof. Hugh Woodin, University of California, Berkeley, US)
"Infinity in mathematics, to me, is nonsense because it's abstract nonsense. In my
opinion, infinity is only a fiction of the human mind."
(Prof. Doren Zeilberger)
"No matter how much I study the field of cosmology and think about this, it still makes no
sense to me that the universe is infinite and always has been infinite; I don't understand
that, I don't pretend to understand that.
"The idea that there may be an infinite number of earths and an infinite number of people
sitting here having this exact same talk that I'm having right now, that just doesn't
compute in my brain."I prefer a finite universe because I can get my mind around that. It's the only
universe that makes intuitive sense to me."
(Prof. Doug Leonard, San Diego State University, US)
"Fortunately, our math doesn't have any inhibitions; we can calculate all these things even
if they seem completely counter-intuitive. It's only through the math that we are
able to deal with all t hese ideas."
(Prof. Max Tegmark, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US)
Just as the role of an infinite variable is taken to be an abstract idea not found in reality, Marmet
similarly holds that the mathematical theorem of WPD cannot exist in reality:
The dualistic model is just as absurd as the Copenhagen interpretation because, in both
models, no physical reality can exist BEFORE DETECTION. (bold, underline, capitalsours). [23]
Why? Because:
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In the Copenhagen interpretation, things are created by the observer's knowledge. There
is an incompatible difference between:
a) combining mathematically two sets of properties in an equation, and:
b) saying that, in reality, light is simultaneously made out of a wave and of a particle.
Condition a) is possible. [...] b), that is the model of light made out of a wave and of a
particle, is totally irreconcilable. [24]
And Marmet quotes Heisenberg as alluding to just this point:
The paradoxes of the dualism between wave picture and particle picture were not solved;
they were hidden somehow in the mathematical scheme. (bold, underline ours) [25]
ESSE EST PERCIPI -EXISTENCE IS PERCEPTIONIf actually all our knowledge is derived from perception,
there is no meaning in the statement that the things really exist [26]
WernerHeisenberg (1901-1976)
CI becomes ever more absurd when one learns of the alleged phenomenon known as the Wave
Function Collapse: [27]
Prior to the act of measurement, the 'reality' of a quantum object exists only as a series
of 'ghost-like' probabilities that correspond to the wavefunction.As soon as the
attention of an intelligent observer is directed at the object (in other words, an
attempt is made somehow to 'measure' it), its wavefunction 'collapses' and the
object is changed from a superposition of probabilities to a 'classical'
phenomenon. Once the state vector is defined as our knowledge of the system,
measurements that alter our knowledge also alter the system. The system therefore has
no reality independent of the measuring apparatus (and its interpretation). Wigner (1961;
1963; 1964) therefore argued that wavefunction/state vector collapse requires the
interaction of the system with a conscious (information processing) observer. As Wheeler
(1994, 19) succinctly put it: ... we have no right to say that the electron is at
such-and-such a place until we have installed equipment, or done the equivalent, to locate
it. What we thought was there is not there until we ask a question. No question? Noanswer! (bold ours) [28]
Philosopher David Berlinsky elaborated further:
So long as no one is looking, the electron is all things to all men. But let the physicist have
a look, and boom! the particle that could be here and there becomes here orthere all
over again. The wave packet collapses into just one of its possibilities. The other quantum
states that it embodies vanish, and they vanish instantaneously. No one knows why.
Niels Bohr [...] embraced this interpretation of quantum mechanics, whence its
designation as the Copenhagen interpretation. It has become canonical.
It has not, however, explained the connection between the quantum realm and the
classical realm. "So long as the wave packet reduction is an essential component [of
quantum mechanics]," the physicist John Bell observed, "and so long as we do not know
when and how it takes over from the Schrdinger equation, we do not have an exact andunambiguous formulation of our most fundamental physical theory." (bold ours) [29]
To show this self-conflicting hypothesis, Erwin Schrdinger "devised a thought experiment to
explain his own perplexity". Called Schrdinger's Cat, Berlinsky explicates:
Imagine that a cat has been placed in a sealed container, together with a device that if it
goes off will kill it - a revolver, say, or some sort of radioactive pellet. Whether the device
goes off is a matter of chance. So long as no one is looking, the cat exists in a
superposition of quantum states, at once half dead (the gun might fire) and half alive (it
might not). As soon as an observer peeks into the box, that superposition gives way. That
cat is either dead or alive and there are no two ways about it. [30]
If the reader does not appreciate the profundity of this analogy, let us cite an alternative:
The most accurate way of describing the state of the yet-to-be-observed atom is to put
into English the mathematics describing the state of the atom: The atom was
simultaneously in two states: it is wholly-in-the-top-box-and-not-in-the-bottom-box,
and simultaneously it is wholly-in-the-bottom-box-and-not-in-the-top-box. This is
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saying that t he atom was in both situations at the same time.
Putting it this way, however, boggles the mind. It's saying a physical thing was in two
places at the same time. The quantum mechanical term for this situation is that the atom
is in a "superposition state" simultaneously in both boxes.
Quantum mechanics says the method of looking creates the present situation of the atom
concentrated in a single box or spread out over two. It says more than that: the method
of looking creates the atom's history - apparently backward in time . Finding it in a
single box implies it had come on a single path after its earlier encounter with the
semi-transparent mirror. Interference establishes that it had come on both paths after
that earlier event. ...Quantum theory tells us that any look, anything in fact that provides information,
collapses the previously existing state. There's no immaculate perception. (bold,
underline ours) [31]
According to Cramer, CI teaches that the result of the experiment is not decided and does not
exist "until such time as the observer collapses the state vector into one or the other of these
states by making an observation, since it is the change in the observer's knowledge that
precipitates the state vector collapse". [32] Little wonder Marmet said that "such a description
does not make sense". [33]
Thus, it is unsurprising to find a physicist of the calibre of Richard Feynman candidly stating:
What I am going to tell you about is what we teach our physics students in the third or
fourth year of graduate school. It is my task to convince you not to turn away becauseyou don't understand it. You see my physics students don't understand it... That is
because I don't understand it. Nobody does. [34]
So, how would these proponents go about inoculating their neophytes from the potential disease
of disillusionment during those crucial early stages of indoctrination?
Niels Bohr realized that he had to confront the influence of knowledge on physical
phenomena in order to allow physicists to just get on with doing physics without getting
bogged down in philosophy. He thus asserted his principle of complementarity: The
two aspects of a microscopic object, its particle aspect and its wave aspect, are
"complementary," and a complete descript ion requires both contradictory aspects,
but we must consider only one aspect at a time.
We avoid the seeming contradiction by considering the microscopic system, the atom, not
to exist in and of itself. We must always include in our discussion - implicitly at least - the
different macroscopic experimental apparatuses used to display each of the two
complementary aspects. All is then fine, because it is ultimately only the classical
behavior of such apparatus that we report. (bold, underline ours) [35]
Indian theoretical physicist at the Bose Institute, Kolkata, Prof. Dipankar Home, further revealed:
[T]he philosophy of complementarity was an attempt to go beyond pragmatism. Bell [5]
remarked:
Rather than being disturbed by the ambiguity in principle, Bohr seemed to take
satisfaction in it. He seemed to revel in contradictions , for example between
"wave" and "particle." That seem to appear in any attempt to go beyond the
pragmatic level. Not to resolve these contradictions and ambiguities, but rather toreconcile us to them, he put forward a philosophy which he called
"complementarity."
Once Bohr recognized that wave particle dualism was inescapable, he did not
concentrate on overthrowing the ideas of wave and particle but on removing the
paradoxical consequences by limiting their use. (bold ours) [36]
His revelling in contradictions is similar to the revelling of these Sikhs who, perhaps recognising
the illogicality of the Nirgun-Sargun concept, wherein Waheguru is simultaneously both
attributeless (sans creation) and its opposite, feel they have no other choice accept to defend an
absurdity. If only they were sincere and critically minded enough to recognise that they do:
Islaam!
But there is certainly more to this ad hoc hypothesis than some care to admit. One of the mainproponents of CI, Heisenburg, acknowledged the influence of philosophers, who brazenly rejected
realism, over his decision in accepting this theory; in his own words:
The next step was taken by Berkeley. If actually all our knowledge is derived from
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perception, there is no meaning in the statement that the things really exist; because if the
perception is given it cannot possibly make any difference whether the things exist or do
not exist. Therefore, to be perceived is identical with existence. (bold ours) [37]
As Marmet noted:
"Heisenberg admits that he just carried Berkeley's idea of modern philosophy to modern
physics."
Who, then, was Berkeley and what did he say of realism ("defined as the result that matter hasits own existence independent of the observer")?
"[Bishop] Berkeley was an Irish philosopher of the seventeenth century" and this is what he had to
say of reality:
It is indeed an opinion strangely prevailing amongst men, that houses, mountains, rivers,
and in word all sensible objects have an existence natural or real, distinct from their being
perceived by the understanding. [38]
Marmet quotes Berkeley further as claiming:
Some truths there are so near and obvious to the mind, that a man need only open his
eyes to see them. Such I take this important one to be, to wit, that all the choir of heaven
and furniture of the earth, in a word all those bodies which compose the mighty frame ofthe world have not any subsistence without a mind, that their being is to be perceived or
known.
And, thus, did Berkeley bizarrely conclude:
Esse est percipi meaning Existence is perception. [39]
Hence, Marmet observes that "modern philosophy is astonishingly identical to modern physics
as suggested by the Copenhagen interpretation of Bohr, Heisenberg and Pauli" where "matter is
not considered to have its own independent existence before it is detected, just as in the case of
modern philosophy of Descartes and Berkeley". [40]
The question we wish to raise at the end of all this is whether these Sikhs, who have conveniently
hitched a ride on Heisenberg's, Bohr's and Pauli's bandwagon, agree with them and theirpredecessors, Descartes, Cardinal Ballarmino, Bishop Berkeley, Hume, et alia, that existence is
nothing more than perception (esse est percipi)?
SARGUN AND NON-REALISM
The can of worms that these Sikhs have opened begins with the major obstacle of reconciling the
philosophical notion of non-realism, which they are forced to embrace having acceded to WPD,
and Sikh theology.
What these Sikhs have perhaps overlooked is that God (Waheguru), or more precisely the
Sargun nature of God, is all-pervasive through the very fabric of existence, i.e. space and time.
According to Daljeet Singh, one of the definitions ofNaam is that it "extends to all creation. Thereis no place or space where Naam is not". He then qualifies the meaning ofNaam by adding:
"There are numerous verses in Guru Granth Sahib where Naam and God have been descr ibed
synonymously. Both Naam and God have been mentioned as [...] 'permeating and informing all
things, beings, space and interspace.' [...] This unambiguously leads us to conclude that God
and Naam are one and the same." (bold, underline ours) [41]
Are we to infer from this that if matter does not exist until it is observed or perceived, then
Waheguru, who is in every place or space of creation, will not be manifest until matter is
perceived?
In contradistinction to non-realism, Prof. Taran Singh, former head of the Dept. of Guru Granth
Studies at Punjabi University in Patiala, believed that creation is real, emphatically declaring:
The Supreme Reality is one and indivisible, its manifestations and the form of creation isreal, not illusory, the Supreme Reality is personified consciousness which is creative and
is eternally progressing. [42]
The 'Sidh-Gosti' (Raga Ramkali, pages 938-46) of Guru Nanak maintains that all creation
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is real because it has its ground in the One Real.... [43]
Similarly, Prof. Sohan Singh elucidated the meaning of the word sat(i), from the clause sat(i)
nam(u) of the mool mantra, to mean "'truth' or 'reality' [... ] as existence, in contrast to reality as
something non-existing, yet real".
He further added that sat(i) can also mean "power (sakti)" and that "there is no other approach
to truth other than the empirical approach. But existence is truth, because it is power, energy.
An energy-less existence, would not be existence at all-dead matter is dead once [sic] for all, and
no philosophy with any credibility can ever resurrect the concept of a dead matter". (bold ours)[44]
He concluded:
Guru Nanak was always antipathetic to any view of t he world which denigrated its
reality or made the world illusory. To make the world illusory is to inject non-being into
the very texture of the world. This would tantamount to vitiating man's dharma in the
world. He was, therefore, firm on the principle that t he creation is as real as the
Creator... (bold ours) [45]
If the empirical approach is the only way of determining and discovering truth, then how can such
an approach empirically quantify CI and WPD when it is known that "in both models, no physical
reality can existbefore detection"? [46]
It is this "rejection of realism" that is today, according to Arthur Jabs, leading to "a large and
growing number of physicists who feel the need for a realistic formulation (Bell [1973]; Rayski
[1973]; Bunge and Kalnay [1975]; Levy-Leblond [1976]; Bunge [1977]; Roberts [1978]; Max- well
[1982]; Burgos [1984]; Popper [1985]; Stapp [1985]; Rohrlich [1987]; Bohm et al. [1987]; and
many others)". [47]
There is yet more; Prof. Wazir Singh, head of the Dept. of Guru Gobind Singh Religious Studies
at Punjabi University in Patiala, in clarifying the term purakh(u), said that "the supreme Being does
not possess consciousness, but rather it is consciousness... He is the cosmic
consciousness, in the sense of personification of the cosmos that is self-aware." (bold ours)
[48]
This throws out another conundrum for these Sikhs to mull over, and one which Project Naadglaringly overlooked:
The Sikh scripture also goes further to mention that mind or consciousness and matter
are interchangeable and that the spirit of God rests within both.
"You Yourself are conscious of Your Creation." SGGSJ page 1076
"Wherever I look, I see the Lord pervading there, in the union of Shiva and Shakti, of
consciousness and matter" SGGSJ page 21
"The distinction between Shiva and Shakti - mind and matter - has been destroyed, and
the darkness has been dispelled." SGGSJ page 163
"He Himself is mind, and He Himself is matter" SGGSJ page 1236
If matter cannot exist independent of a conscious (information processing) observer, and yet
Waheguru is said to be consciousness itself and fully conscious of his creation, how then can
WPD be a viable model when CI is established upon the notion of a wavefunction collapse?
This quandary was also highlighted by Christian philosopher, William Lane Craig:
In short, Hawking's wave-functional analysis of the universe requires the Many Worlds
Interpretation of quantum physics, and in another place Hawking admits as much
(Hawking [1983], pp.192-3). But why should we adopt this interpretation of quantum
physics with its bloated ontology and miraculous splitting of the universe? John Barrow
([1988]. p. 156) has recently remarked that the Many Worlds Interpretation is
'essential' to quantum cosmology because without it one is left, on the standard
Copenhagen Interpretation , with the question. 'Who or what collapses thewavefunction of the universe?' - some Ultimate Observer out side of space and
time? This answer has obvious theistic implications. Indeed, although 'the theologians
have not been very eager to ascribe to God the role of Ultimate Observer who brings the
entire quantum Universe into being', still Barrow admits that 'such a picture is logically
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consistent with the mathematics. To escape this step cosmologists have been forced to
invoke Everett's "Many Worlds" interpretation of quantum theory in order to make any
sense of quantum cosmology (Barrow [1988], p.232). 'It is no coincidence', he says, 'that
all the main supporters of the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum reality are involved
in quantum cosmology' (Barrow [1988]. p.156). (bold ours) [49]
And with this final observation, we come to the final problem, and that is: what interpretation of
WPD will these Sikhs invoke in defending their understanding of Truth and what legitimate
scientific justification will they provide for accepting one to the exclusion of all the others (and yes,
there are many others)?
WAVE PARTICLE INTERPRETATIONS GALORE
John Cramer said:
Despite an extensive literature that refers to, discusses, and criticizes the Copenhagen
interpretation of quantum mechanics, nowhere does there seem to be any concise
statement that defines the full Copenhagen interpretation. [50]
And the reason for this, as we have already seen, most plausibly stems from the euphemistically
termed paradoxes that are an inevitable consequence of CI. The result is, as Marmet identified in
his bookAbsurdities in Modern Physics, that "many different versions of the Copenhagen
interpretationcan be identified... [all of which lead] to the most astonishing set of contradictions
that ever existed in science". [51]
These differences, unsurprisingly, filter over to affect even the results generated from Young's
double-slit experiment because the apparent behaviour of a particle is based not only on what
Michael Brooks called "updated versions" of the experiment, but also more importantly, "how you
detect them":
Place a detector far behind the slits, and a single electron will produce a characteristic
interference pattern - a wave has seemingly passed through both slits at once.
Place separate detectors close enough behind tie slits, and only one registers a click - as
if the electron were a single particle.
All that leaves a fundamental question: how can stuff be waves and particles at the same
time? Perhaps because it is neither, says Markus Arndt of the University of Vienna,
Austria, who did the buckyball experiments in 1999. What we call an electron or a
buckyball might in the end have no more reality than a click in a detector, or our brain's
reconstruction of photons hitting our retina.
"Wave and particle are then just constructs of our mind to facilitate everyday talking," he
says. [52]
Dipankar Home and John Gribbin concur:
This duality is one of the key puzzles of quantum mechanics, the most successful theory
we have of the way matter and radiation behave at the atomic and subatomic levels. How
can something be both a particle and a wave at the same time? Common sense, based
on our experiences in the macro world, says that this is impossible. But quantum
mechanics requires that in the micro world, light, electrons and other entities can behave
as either wave or particle, depending on t he experimental arrangement. ...
By moving the detector about, we can build up a picture of the pattern made by the
photons. Quantum mechanics predicts that this will be the standard interference pattern,
just as if each photon has somehow gone through both holes in the intervening screen,
and interfered with itself before deciding where to go next. [53]
Speaking of the Bohrian thesis, John A. Wheeler, therefore, acknowledges this ad hoc approach:
It is wrong to attribute a tangibility to the photon in all its travel from the point of entry' to
its last instant of flight.... What answer we get depends on the question we put . The
experiment we arrange, the registering device we choose. By his choice of
question, the observer decides about what feature of the object he shall have the
right to make a clear statement.
Only AFTER the detection process is complete, can we infer which of the twoclassical models, wave and partic le, is relevant to t he experiment in question. As
already mentioned, to avoid any logical inconsistency due to mutual incompatibility
between these two classical pictures, the possibility is precluded that a single experiment
whose observed results contain one subset of data comprehensible in terms of a
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classical wavelike propagation coexists with another subset of data interpretable by using
a classical particle like propagation all the way from a source to a detector. (bold,
capitals, underline ours) [54]
According to Marcus Chown:
Bohr proposed that the face you see [a particle-like or a wave-like face] depends on
how you set up your experiment. And, he said, you'll never see both at the same time
in one experiment. He called this the "principle of complementarity". (bold ours)
Hence, not only does CI stand on shaky epistemological grounds, but the results from the
double-slit experiment will always be inconclusive, and thus uncorroborated, owing to the bizarre
notion that "observations make a difference to what we will see". On these grounds, Albert
Einstein, categorically rejected this unscientific principle:
Einstein took exception to this: he refused to believe that the very fabric of the
observable universe could change depending on our choice of measuring
equipment . But he never managed to find an experimental way to refute
complementarity, and Bohr's influence ensured that it gradually became the accepted
view of how the quantum world will manifest in our classical experiments. (bold ours) [55]
So, then, how much do we really know about this strange magical world of QM, and, by
extension, WPD? Relatively little, according to the New Scientist:
If you want to know how little we know, ask a roomful of physicists what goes on when
we
measure a particle's properties. All will be able to calculate the result of the measurement
but the explanation they give will differ wildly.
Some will tell you that new parallel universes necessarily sprang into being. Others will
say that, before a measurement is performed, talk of particles having real properties is
meaningless. Still others will say that hidden properties come into play.
Another group will tell you that they deal with physics, not philosophy and dismiss the
question without giving you an answer. It has been thus for more than 80 years. "These
conceptual challenges are still not understood at all," says Markus Aspelmeyer at the
University of Vienna in Austria. "We're still right at the beginning." [56]
Hence, how can anyone say for certain that WPD is corroborated when we admittedly know so
little? No wonder Home and Gribbin conceded:
But three centuries after Newton, we have to admit that we still cannot answer the
question 'what is light?' As yet there is still no answer to the basic question: is light 'really'
a wave, a combination of wave and particle, or something entirely different which cannot
be comprehended except as an abstract mathematical description? As Einstein remarked
in 1951, four years before his death, in a letter to M. Besso: 'All these fifty years of
conscious brooding have brought me no nearer to the answer to the question 'what are
light quanta?' Nowadays every Tom, Dick and Harry thinks he knows it, but he is
mistaken.' [57]
However, this proverbial rabbit hole simply continues to spiral out of control. Rosenblum and
Kuttner are more than honest in their evaluation of the many interpretations of QM:
There is no way to interpret quantum theory without in some way addressing
consciousness. Most interpretations accept the encounter but offer a rationale for
avoiding a relationship. They usually start with the presumption that the physical world
should be dealt with independently of the human observer. ...
Each interpretation we will discuss is currently defended as the best way to view what
quantum mechanics is telling us. Each, however, presents a weird view of the world. How
could it be otherwise? We saw the weirdness of quantum mechanics right up front in the
most basic experimental findings. Any interpretation explaining those findings that goes
beyond FAPP (or "Shut up and calculate!"), must be weird.
Though the interpretations we discuss have been developed with extensive mathematical
and logical analysis, we package each in a few nontechnical paragraphs. Thoroughness
in understanding them is not crucial for what follows.
It's enough to get the flavor of the wide range of views expressed and to see that
quantum physics shows that profound questions about our world are wide open. Noticeparticularly how each interpretation involves consciousness or tries to evade the
encounter. [58]
MANY WORLDS INTERPRETATION
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It is surely the most bizarre of all the ideas [59]
To what extent are these possible worlds fictions?
They are like literary fiction in that they are free inventions of the human mind [60]
John Stewart Bell (1928-1990)
Lev Vaidman of Tel Aviv University, Israel, said:
[L]ike many other physicists, touts an alternative explanation. "I don't feel that I don't
understand quantum mechanics," he says. But there is a high price to be paid for that
understanding: admitting the existence of parallel universes.
In this picture, wave functions do not collapse to classical certainty every time you
measure them; reality merely splits in to as many parallel worlds as there are
measurement possibilities. One of these carries you and the reality you live in away
with it.
"If you don't admit many-worlds, there is no way to have a coherent picture," says
Vaidman.
Or, in the words of Feynman again, whether it is the Copenhagen interpretation or
many-worlds you accept "the paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling of
what reality ought to be". (bold, underline ours) [61]
We shall allow Rosenblum and Kuttner to provide a somewhat lengthy explanation of this bizarrehypothesis, which, according to the aforementioned poll taken at the 1997 UMBC quantum
mechanics workshop, came second behind CI:
The many-worlds interpretation accepts literally what quantum theory says.
Where the Copenhagen interpretation has observation collapsing the atoms wavefunction
into a single box-and Schrdingers cat into the living or dead state-the many-worlds
interpretation "just says 'no'" to collapse. If quantum theory says the cat is simultaneously
alive and dead, so be it! In one world, Schrdingers cat is alive, and in another it is dead.
"Many worlds" may be the most bizarre description of reality ever proposed.
Hugh Everett came up with the idea in the 1950s to allow cosmology to treat a
wavefunction for the universe. Since there are no "observers" external to the entire
universe, the many-worlds interpretation resolves the mystery of the conscious observer
by the sensible-seeming ploy of including consciousness as part of the physical universe
described by quantum mechanics. ...
In the many-worlds interpretation, when you look into one of the boxes, you entangle with
the atom's superposition state. You go into a superposition state both of having seen the
atom in the box you looked in and also of having seen that box empty. There are now two
of you, one in each of two parallel worlds.
The consciousness of each one of you is unaware of the other you. Nothing we actually
experience conflicts with this bizarre view.
Instead of the look-in-a-box experiment, you might have chosen to do an interference
experiment. It is your exercise of free will-your being able to freely choose to do either
experiment-that brings about physics' encounter with consciousness. In the many-worlds
interpretation, you are part of the universal wavefunction. Everything that can possibly
happen as the wavefunction evolves does happen. You both looked in a box and did an
interference experiment. You took both options. You exercised no free will.
To bring more than one observer into the picture, let's go back to Schrdinger's cat. Alice
looks in the box while Bob is far away. The world splits in two. In one world Alice, call her
Alice1, sees a live cat. In the other, Alice2 sees a dead cat.
At this point Bob is also in both worlds, but Bob1 and Bob2 are essentially identical.
Should Bob1 meet Alice1, he would help her get milk for the hungry cat. Bob2 would help
Alice2 bury the dead cat. Macroscopic objects Alice2 and Bob1 exist in different worlds
and, for all practical purposes, never encounter each other.
After Bell's theorem and the experiments it allowed, we know we cannot have both reality
and separability. In the many-worlds interpretation, there is no separability. And there is
no single reality, which is essentially equivalent to no reality.
The many-worlds interpretation stirs strong feelings. One academic author decries it as
"profligate" and refers to its proposer as a "chain-smoking, horned-Cadillac-driving,
multimillionaire weapons research analyst." (At the time Everett proposed it, he was just
a graduate student.) On the other hand, a leader in quantum computing writes that themany-worlds interpretation "makes more sense in so many ways than any previous
world-view, and certainly more than the cynical pragmatism which too often nowadays
serves as a surrogate for a world-view among scientists." (By "cynical pragmatism" he
surely means the unquestioning acceptance of Copenhagen.)
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There's an unresolved problem with many-worlds: What constitutes an observation?
When does the world split? The splitting into a finite number of worlds is presumably just
a way of speaking. Are infinitely many worlds continuously created?
In any event, this interpretation vastly extends what Copernicus started. Not only are we
removed from the center of the cosmos to a tiny spot in a limitless universe, but the world
we experience is just a minute fraction of all worlds. However, "we" exist in many of them.
Though bizarre, the many-worlds interpretation is a fascinating base for speculation. [62]
In light of this speculative model, one can appreciate why Maggie McKee would say that the
Quantum "theory has been criticised for casting doubt on the notion of an objective reality - aconcept many physicists, including Albert Einstein, have found hard to swallow":
Other interpretations of quantum theory - of which there are at least half a dozen - deal
with the measurement problem by suggesting even more far-fetched concepts than a
universe dependent on measurement. The popular many worlds interpretation suggests
quantum objects display several behaviours because they inhabit an infinite number of
parallel universes. [63]
On the other hand, Frank J. Tipler, while accepting this tenuous interpretation, reluctantly
acknowledged:
Of course, the Many Worlds Interpretation may be wrong; most physicists think it is
(most physicists think it nonsense). But the overwhelming majority of people working on
quantum cosmology subscribe to some version of the Many Worlds Interpretation, simplybecause the mathematics forces one to accept it. The mathematics may be a
DELUSION, WITH NO REFERENCE IN PHYSICAL REALITY. (bold, capitals, underline
ours) [64]
And Berlinsky comically noted:
The many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is rather like the incarnation. It
appeals to those who believe in it, and it rewards belief in proportion to which belief is
sincere. [65]
But, would these Sikhs also be sincere in their belief? Would they be sincere enough to explain, in
scientific terms, why they would wager on this particular interpretation and not the others?
Furthermore, how would they reconcile between the existence of a seemingly endless number ofparallel universes and their theology? Would they accept the idea that there also existed an
endless number of Wahegurus or 10 Gurus in each universe?
And after all this, there exist more interpretations, including one carried out by Iranian-American
physicist, Prof. Shahriar Afshar, in 2001. Called the Afshar Experiment, some have speculated
that it negates the many worlds model. Prof. Afshar believes his version of the double-slit
experiment "contradicted the standard result", which holds that "nothing really exists until it is
measured", and it, therefore, "made no sense to talk about an objective reality independent of
observers because our observations make a difference to what we will see".
According to my experiment, one of our key assumptions about quantum theory is wrong.
Cramer holds that "Afshar's experiment also falsifies the 'many worlds interpretation'":
Afshar has identified a place where the Copenhagen and the many worlds interpretations
are inconsistent with the formalism of quantum mechanics itself.
More interestingly, however, is the motivations for accepting and rejecting any of the surplus
number of interpretations. Chown recognised that:
Afshar is aware that each person's opinion of his experiment depends on their own view
of how quantum theory should be interpreted. Valentini, for example, believes that there
must be something behind quantum theory, and that things do have properties with
well-defined values (New Scientist, 29 June 2002, p 30), so it is unsurprising that he finds
a refutation of Bohr's ideas so appealing. Cramer, too, has a vested interest in Afshar's
experiment. He has developed his own interpretation of quantum theory, called the
transactional interpretation. This uses waves that travel backwards in time to allow
quantum particles to interact and, Cramer says, it stands up to Afshar's experimental
test. [66]
And, of course, these Sikhs also have their vested interests in simplistically appealing to WPD in
defence of their religious beliefs.
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There is then the Penrose interpretation that is a variation of the wavefunction collapse, which
proposes, again purely mathematically, that the wavefunction is a physical wave that randomly
collapses without the intervention of an observer.
Penrose suggests that the threshold for wave function collapse is when superpositions
involve at least a Planck mass worth of matter. He then hypothesizes that some
fundamental gravitational event occurs, causing the wavefunction to choose one branch of
reality over another. ...
Penrose believes that things can exist in more than one place at one time. In his view, amacroscopic system, like a human being, cannot exist in more than one position because
it has a significant gravitational field. A microscopic system, like an electron, has an
insignificant gravitational field, and can exist in more than one location almost indefinitely.
[67]
And the list goes on:
Heisenberg's uncertainty paper was aimed at providing a satisfactory interpretation of the
new quantum theory. Today there are many interpretations of quantum theory-the
Copenhagen, the many worlds (Everett 1957; De Witt and Graham 1973), the realistic
statistical (Ballentine 1970), the (nonlocal) hidden variables (Bohm 1952; Vigier 1982), the
modal (van Fraassen 1981, 1991; Kochen 1985; Dieks 1994; Bub 1992; Healey 1989),
the quantum logical (Finkelstein 1965; Putnam 1968; Friedman and Putnam 1978). [68]
Yet there is no agreement on the basic question: what does it mean to interpret amathematical-physical theory? [69]
There is, however, a final question that arises vis--vis Penrose's suggestion that macroscopic
systems, "like a human being, cannot exist in more than one position because it has a significant
gravitational field".
This argument, which is not restricted to Penrose's interpretation, for differentiating between the
micro- and macroscopic world vis--vis the effects of QM is one that is highlighted by Marmet:
Van Zandt writes:
Thus we are led to suggest a critical size for separating the microscopic world of
quantum mechanics and the macroscopic. [70]
This would mean that logic is dif ferent when applied to small things than it is whenapplied to big things. Yurke and Stoler show that the frontier between the macroscopic
and the microscopic world does not exist because any macroscopic state can evolve
from the superimposition of many microscopic states. Yurke and Stoler conclude:
Hence there is a possibility of bringing the strangeness of quantum mechanics
into the macroscopic world. [71]
It is clear that the field of application of the Berkeley-Copenhagen interpretation cannot
be limited to microscopic systems: logical reasoning cannot depend on the size of the
systems considered. (bold ours) [72]
In light of this differentiation, if Sikhs hold that Waheguru is, if not a part of, then at least greater
than his creation (macroscopic world), then it would seem fallacious for them to use CI, and the
existence of contradictions in the microscopic world, as an argument for Waheguru existing
contradictorily precisely because CI fails to affect the macroscopic world.
As Marmet has queried: what logical reason is there to make what seems to be another ad hoc
condition for maintaining CI?
Smolin gives a plausible reason why:
Quantum mechanics, at least in the form it was first proposed, did not fit easily with
realism. This is because the theory presupposed a division of nature into two parts. On
one side of the division is the system to be observed. We, the observers, are on the
other side. ...
One difficulty is where you draw the dividing line, which depends on who is doing the
observing. When you measure an atom, you and your instruments are on one side and
the atom is on the other side. ...
This whole issue goes under the name the foundational problems of quantum
mechanics. It is the second great problem of contemporary physics . (bold ours)
[73]
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Popper concluded:
[T]his epistemological claim I regarded, and still regard, as outrageous. [75]
By putting all of their eggs into such a scientific basket, Project Naad et al. risk an all or nothing
outcome, which in relation to religious truth will always be a risky approach.
The ignorance of Project Naad et. al. and the hole which they have dug themselves into becomes
even more pronounced and unscalable when one reads the historical research of Professor MaraBeller, "a distinguished historian of the emergence of quantum physics", [76] in her excellent work
Quantum Dialogue: The Making of a Revolution. Shewrote:
[C]ontrary to the usual historical account that the heated controversy between Bohr and
Heisenberg eventually ended in complete agreement due to Pauli's skillful intervention, a
genuine unanimity of opinion between the two men never occurred. Heisenberg stated
clearly in an interview with Kuhn that he never accepted Bohr's dualistic approach .
This is the reason the papers of Jordan and Wigner (1928) on second quantization made
him very happy-they demonstrated not that one needs both waves and particles but
that one can do it " either way." "We have," Heisenberg emphasized, "one mathematical
scheme that allows many transformations, but... just one mathematical scheme----The
fact that we can use two kinds of words ... is just an indication of the inadequacy of
words." And when Kuhn asked about the -ray thought experiment, in which
Bohr-contrary to Heisenberg's first, mistaken account-used both particle and wavefeatures of radiation, Heisenberg insisted: "For explaining the -ray experiment, it was
useful to play between both pictures- But it was not absolutely essential. You could
actually use both languages independently" (interview with Heisenberg, 25 February
1963, AHQP). [77]
What is more, Beller, who according to Smolin "has studied his [Bohr's] work in detail", points out
that in spite of the fact that Bohr "laid the foundations of the quantum theory of an atom and
inspired and supervised the erection of the new quantum theory", he was yet remarkably "unable,
with his heavy administrative duties and limited mathematical knowledge, to participate actively in
further developments when the field became too mathematical (chapter 12)". She reveals:
While Bohr presented himself as a dilettante who had to approach "every new question
from a starting point of total ignorance," Pais graciously remarks that "Bohr's strength lay
in his formidable intuition and insight rather than in erudition" (1991,7).
Bohr's "formidable intuition" and "subtle reasoning" were often used by the orthodox to
certify the Copenhagen interpretation as final and to disarm those who sought an
alternative. The legend that Bohr had some sort of access to nature's secrets,
qualitatively different from that of other mortals, directly discouraged critical dialogue.
This legend is supported by another, peculiar claim-unlike other theoretical physicists,
Bohr did not need to calculate in order to obtain "the truth." Blaedel's is a typical
statement: "Perhaps his intuition allowed him to grasp things when others needed
calculations" (1988, 11). Bohr's personal limitation is thus uncritically transformed into a
strength. [78]
Such an approach would be equivalent to a person with no knowledge of Gurmukhi, the language
ofSri Guru Granth Sahib, attempting to make an internal critique and an exegetical study of the
Sikh's holy book from the point of view of its language! No Sikh would stand for that.
In light of all the above, it is clearly apparent that jumping on the CI bandwagon has, rather than
support Project Naad et al., exposed their ignorance and further compounded their situation
vis--vis their defence of the falsehood that is Nirgun-Sargun.
They essentially have three options:
Provide a comprehensive response to the questions we have raised so as to
defend their adopted position.
1.
Abandon this seemingly hopeless stance and forward something more robust.2.
Or be sincere and honest enough to recognise the Truth of what we have been
saying all along: The Nirgun-Sargun theology-proper is contradictory; thus,
Sikhism is false, precisely because of the fact that the a priori LnC is inviolable.
3.
In the end, it would have been better if Project Naad et al. had been more critically minded and
adopted the astute position delineated by well-known writer, G.S.Sidhu, who wisely said in his
work Sikh Religion and Science:
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Scientific theories keep changing for years and years until one particular theory is
accepted in the hope that no one at any time will be able to disprove it. For example,
Newton first advanced 'The corpuscular theory' of light, proving that light is a stream of
particles thrown out by a luminous source and always travels in a straight line. Later, this
was disproved when reflection, refraction and diffraction of light were brought into play.
'The corpuscular Theory' gave way to 'the wave theory' but soon even this theory lost its
appeal and "the quantum theory" of indivisible photons was advanced to replace it. At
present, light is considered both as a wave and a particle at the same time (Theory of
Waveparticle duality). Sometimes it behaves like a wave and at other times as a particleand this behaviour is un-predictable. Einstein also proved that light could bend. Future
research may even question this stand. [79]
One of the great Muslim scholars of the late 20th
century, Muhammad ibn Saalih al-'Uthaymeen,
likewise warned against the inherent dangers of this approach vis--vis the Qur'an:
There are some risks involved in interpreting the Qur'an according to modern theories.
That is because, if we interpret the Qur'an according to those theories, then other
theories are produced which contradict them; this implies that the Qur'an will be incorrect
in the view of the enemies of Islam. The Muslims would say that the error is in the
understanding of the one who interpreted the Qur'an in that manner, but the enemies of
Islam are always watching for an opportunity to attack Islam. Hence, we must exercise
the utmost caution against rushing into interpreting the Qur'an according to these scientific
matters. We must leave these alone and let matters take their course. If it is proven thatsome of these theories are correct, we do not need to say that the Qur'an has already
proven it, the Qur'an was revealed for the purpose of worship and moral, and for people
to ponder its meanings. Allaah says:
"(This is) a Book (the Qur'an) which We have sent down to you, full of blessings, that
they may ponder over its Verses, and that men of understanding may remember. "
(Qur'an Surah Saad 38:29)
It was not revealed concerning these matters which are subject to experimentation and
which people study as part of their scientific quest. ...
But for us to distort the meaning of the Qur'an and to try to make it fit this event, this is
not correct and is not permitted. [80]
Subhanakallaahuma wa bi hamdika, ash-Shahaadu al-Laa ilaaha il la Ant, astaghfir uka wa
atoobu ilayka.
[1] Sikhism, Science and Quantum Physics, (Project Naad, 11 Oct 2007), p. 10.
[2] Ibid.
[3] M. Tegmark (1997), The Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics: Many Worlds or Many Words? , (Cornell University
Library, 7 Oct. 2007)
[4] Paul Marmet (1932-2005) was professor of physics at Laval University, Quebec, for over 20 years, and author of over
100 papers in electron microscopy. He was president of the Canadian Association of Physicists and received the Order of
Canada. For more on the author, one can visit his website.
[5] P. Marmet,Absurdities in Modern Physics: A Solution, (Newton Physics; date accessed: 24 Sept. 2010), Section 1-1.
[6] Ibid., Section 1-2: Fn.1.3: Kant cited by Popper, Karl R., Quantum Theory and the Schism in Physics , Totowa (New
Jersey), Rowman and Littlefield, 1982, p. 229.
[7] D.R. Prothero (2007), Evolution What the Fossils Say and Why It Matters, (Columbia Universi ty Press, New York), p. 4.
[8] Ibid., pp. 4-5.
[9] L. Smolin (2008), The Trouble with Physics: The Rise of String Theory, the Fall of a Science and What Comes Next,
(Penguin Books, Clays Ltd, St Ives plc), p. xvi:
Fn. 7: Lisa Randall, "Designing Words," in Intelligent Thought: Science Versus the Intelligent Design Movement, ed. JohnBrockman (New York: Vintage, 2006).
[10] Ibid., p. 352.
[11] P. Marmet (2000), Frequently Asked Questions About Why Quantum Mechanics is Non-sense? Series #8, (Date
accessed: 24 Sept. 2010).
God alludes to this a priori position in the Qur'an with a three-fold question that leads to the inevitable conclusion that nothing
created comes into existence without a cause:
Or were they created from noth ing? Or did they create themselves? Or did they create the heavens and
the earth? Nay, but they have no firm belief. (Qur'an 52:35-6)
Ibn Kathir Ad-Damishqi (d.1372CE) commented:
Allah asks them, were they created without a maker or did they create themselves. Neither is true. Allah is the One
Who created them and brought them into existence after they were nothing.
(Ibn Kathir (2000), Tafsir Ibn KathirAbridged Vol. 9, (Darussalam Publishers & Distributors), p.297.)
[12] P. Marmet, op. cit., Section 1-2.
[13] P. Marmet (2000), op. cit..
[14] P. Marmet, op. cit., Section 1-2.
[15] Ibid. Fn.1.5: Heisenberg, Werner, Physics and Philosophy, the Revolution in Modern Science, New York, Harper and
Row, 1966, p. 88.
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[16] Ibid. Fn. 1.6: Greenberger, Daniel, Discussion remarks at the Symposium on Fundamental Questions in Quantum
Mechanics, Albany, SUNY, Apri l 1984.
[17] Ibid. Fn.1.7: Feynman, Richard P., The Strange Theory of Light and Matter, New Jersey, Princeton University Press,
1988, p. 10.
[18] L. Smolin (2008), op. cit., pp. 353-4.
[19] P. Marmet, op. cit.
[20] Ibid., Section 1-4.
[21] M. Chown (2004), Quantum rebel wins over doubters, (New Scientist, Vol.183/2457, 24 July 2004), p.30-5.
[22] David Hilbert, "On the Infinite," in Philosophy of Mathematics, ed. Paul Benacerraf and Hilary Putnam (Englewood Cliffs,
N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1964), p. 151.
[23] P. Marmet, op. cit., Section 1-4.
[24] Ibid.[25] Ibid., Fn.1.17: Heisenberg, Werner, Physics and Philosophy, the Revolution in Modern Science, New York, Harper and
Row, 1966, p. 40.
[26] P. Marmet, op. cit., Section 1-6.
Fn.1.21: 1.21 Heisenberg, Werner, Physics and Philosophy, the Revolution in Modern Science, New York, Harper and
Row, 1966, p. 84.
[27] Also known as: collapse of the wavefunction state vector; collapse of the state vector; reduction of the wave packet.
[28] S. Harrison and P. Dunham (1998), Decoherence, Quantum Theory and Their Implications for the Philosophy of
Geomorphology , (Blackwell Publishing on behalf of The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British
Geographers); Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, New Series, Vol. 23, No. 4), p. 505.
[29] D Berlinski (2008), The Devil's Delusion, (Crown Publishing Group, New York), pp. 93-4.
[30] Ibid., p. 99.
[31] B. Rosenblum, F. Kuttner (2008), Quantum Enigma: Physics Encounters Consciousness, (Oxford University Press
US), p. 79.
[32] P. Marmet, op. cit., Section 2-1.
Fn.2.1: Cramer, John G., "The Transactional Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics", in Reviews of Modern Physics, Vol. 58,
No. 3, 1986, p. 673.
[33] Ibid.[34] R.P. Feynman (1990), QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter, (Penguin Books, London), p. 9.
[35] B. Rosenblum, F. Kuttner (2008), op. cit., p. 108.
[36] D. Home (1997), Conceptual Foundations of Quantum Physics: An Overview from Modern Perspectives, (Springer),
p. 272.
[37] P. Marmet, op. cit., Section 1-6.
Fn.1.21: 1.21 Heisenberg, Werner, Physics and Philosophy, the Revolution in Modern Science, New York, Harper and
Row, 1966, p.84.
[38] Ibid., Section 1-5. Fn.1.19: Berkeley, George,A New Theory of Vision, and Other Writings, New York, Everyman's
library, 1963, p. 114.
[39] Ibid., Fn. 1.20: Berkeley, George,A New Theory of Vision, and Other Writings, New York, Everyman's library, 1963, p.
115-116.
[40] Ibid., Section 1-6.
[41] D. Singh, K Singh (1997), Sikhism - Its Philosophy and History, (Institute of Sikh Studies, New Delhi), p. 38.
[42] P. Singh (1985), Sikh Concept of the Divine, (Guru Nanak Dev University Press, Amritsar), p. 129.
[43] Ibid., p. 131.
[44] Ibid., p. 134.
[45] P. Singh (1985), Sikh Concept of the Divine, (Guru Nanak Dev University Press, Amritsar), p. 135.[46] P. Marmet, op. cit., Section 1-4.
[47] A. Jabs (1992),An Interpretation of the Formalism of Quantum Mechanics in Terms of Epistemological Realism , (Brit
J Philos Sci 43: 405-421), pp. 405-6.
[48] P. Singh (1985), Sikh Concept of the Divine, (Guru Nanak Dev University Press, Amritsar), p. 147.
[49] W.L. Craig (1990), 'What Place, Then, for a Creator?': Hawking on God and Creation, (The British Journal for the
Philosophy of Science, Vol. 41, No. 4), p. 482.
[50] P. Marmet, op. cit., Section 1-1.
Fn.1.2: Cramer, John G., "The Transactional Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics", in Reviews of Modern Physics, Vol. 58,
No. 3, July 1986, p. 649.
[51] Ibid.
[52] M. Brooks (2010), Weirdest of the Weird, (New Scientist Magazine, 08-06-2010), p. 38.
[53] D. Home, J. Gribbin (1991), What is Light?, (New Scientist Magazine, 02-11- 1991), p. 30.
[54] D. Home (1997), Conceptual Foundations of Quantum Physics: An Overview from Modern Perspectives, (Springer),
p. 275.
[55] M. Chown (2004), op. cit.
[56] M. Brooks (2010), Rise of the Quantum Machines, (New Scientist Magazine, 26-06-2010), p. 35.
[57] D. Home, J. Gribbin, op. cit.[58] B. Rosenblum, F.Kuttner (2008), Quantum Enigma: Physics Encounters Consciousness, (Oxford University Press US),
p. 156.
[59] J.S. Bell (1989), Speakable and Unspeakable in Quantum Physics, (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge), p. 192.
[60] Ibid., p. 194.
[61] M. Brooks (2010), Weirdest of the Weird, (New Scientist Magazine, 08-06-2010), p. 42.
[62] B. Rosenblum, F.Kuttner (2008), Quantum Enigma: Physics Encounters Consciousness, (Oxford University Press US),
pp. 159-61.
[63] M. McKee (2006), Introduction: Quantum World, (New Scientist Magazine, Sept).
[64] F.J. Tipler (1988), The Anthropic Principle: A Primer for Philosophers, (Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the
Philosophy of Science Association, Vol. 1988, Volume Two: Symposia and Invited Papers (1988), pp. 27-48), p . 38.
[65] D Berlinski (2008), op. cit.,p. 100.
[66] M. Chown (2004), op. cit.
[67] Wikipedia (2010), Penrose Interpretation, (Ed. 11 Aug 2010).
[68] Fn. 4: "It sometimes seems as if there are as many different attempts to understand quantum mechanics as there are
people who have seriously made the attempt" (Healey 1989, 2). In fact, it is difficult even to list all the exciting interpretive
work being done nowadays as an alternative to the Copenhagen interpretation. The recent volume on Bohmian-de Broglie
alternatives edited by Cushing, Fine, and Goldstein (1996) includes such notable examples as Durr, Goldstein, and Zanghi(1996) and Valentini (19%). For an overview of this interpretive work, see Redhead (1987) and Cushing (19%).
[69] M. Beller (2001), Quantum Dialogue: The Making of a Revolution, (University of Chicago Press), p. 106.
[70] P. Marmet, op. cit.
Fn.2.3: Van Zandt, L. L., "Separation of the Microscopic and Macroscopic Domains", inAmerican Journal of Physics , Vol.
45, No. 1, 1977, p. 55.
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[71] Ibid., Fn. 2.4: Yurke, B., Stoler, D., "The Dynamic Generation of Schrdinger Cats and Their Detection", in Physica B,
Vol. 151, 1988, p. 300.
[72] P. Marmet, op. cit., Section 2-1.
[73] L. Smolin (2008), op. cit., pp. 8-9.
[74] D.R. Prothero (2007), op. cit.,p. 5.
[75] P. Marmet, op. cit., Section 1-2.
[76] Review of Beller's Quantum Dialogue (University of Chicago Press, 1999) by Jeremy Butterfield, philosopher of Physics
at the University of Cambridge, who described the work as "a very impressive book" and said that "future work on the early
history of quantum theory, and especially on the history of the Copenhagen interpretation, starts here".
[77] M. Beller (2001), op. cit., p. 226.
[78] Ibid., p. 271.
[79] G.S. Sidhu, Sikh Religion and Science, (e-book; date accessed: 24 Sept 2010), pp.21-22.[80] M. ibn S. al-'Uthaymeen, Fataawa ash-Shaykh Muhammad ibn Saalih al-'Uthaymeen, (Book of Knowledge), pp.
150-152.
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