The Evangelical Universalist Forum

Implications of Quantum Physics

From another thread.

Fundamentally unpredictable to humans.

What you’re saying is that sub-atomic particles behave in a way that doesn’t appear to be governed by their physical make-up, or any known law.

What I don’t get is how that proves randomness.

If there’s a Supreme Intelligence above the laws of physics (above time and space), wouldn’t the presumption be that some things are directly determined by His will alone (and not by any law of Physics)?

How does the inability of a human observer to predict the precise sub-atomic particles that will constitute the 5% that pass through the mirror do more than confirm that presumption?

If it’s God’s will for particle x, y, and z to pass through the mirror in one instance, and God’s will for particles a, b, and c to pass through in another instance, and a human observer is unable to predict this, how does that prove that the selection of x, y, or z (or a, b, or c) is random (in the sense of being undetermined by God’s will, uncaused by Him, or unforeknown by Him)?