Random Person
Senior Member
Rabid disbelief? I can very well understand why someone well versed in modern physics doesnt accept the physically impossible concept ”god”.Well, I did read Krauss's book, and I agree fully with his defense of it--that he didn't mean literally "nothing" in the sense that both of these critics took him to mean. That was actually pretty clear from reading the book, and I don't know how you missed it. It was written for a popular audience, not an audience of philosophers or physicists. The point is that there is no such thing as a perfect "vacuum". What we take to be "nothing" really isn't. Krauss's problem is that he likes to play around with words, and he can get a little snarky. Horgan, in particular, should have known better than to go after him for being a "poor philosopher", when Horgan himself is little better. I think that it goes without saying that Krauss is a poor philosopher, but so are a lot of scientists. There have been a number of popular books written with pretty much the same content as this one, but Krauss is an outspoken atheist. So he used the book to explain some elementary modern cosmology, but he also mixed in his thoughts about why the "gap" that the modern God rules over has shrunk down to the point where it is essentially too small to keep trying to cram him into that space.
Yes. He didn't mean literally nothing, but he also didn't mean literally something either. That's the equivocation people are referring to.
He's allowed his rabid disbelief in God to take hold if his senses.
I don't know of anyone that claims that God is physically possible. Krauss wanted to prove that God doesn't exist, which is outside the range of what physics can determine.
So ya', rabid disbelief.