Lakeman
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There are, I believe, two issues here. I think for someone (like Hawking) who has consciously faced the prospect of imminent death for so long, resorting to any sort of belief in an afterlife would smack of an emotional cheat—as if he didn’t need the courage of facing his actual physical condition (courage which he obviously has in abundance). I think he’s wrong about this, by the way—that is, I don’t think that such a belief must necessarily be viewedin such a way, as an emotional crutch signifying immaturity or weakness—but I can see his point, even if I don’t agree with it.
The second point is that, formany professional or academic intellectuals (scientists, philosophers, etc.), terms like “God” and “afterlife” are viewed as being embedded in an archaic monotheistic religious framework in which “God” is worshipped as a kind of Cosmic Emperor (“Lord” and “King”) who created the world for mankind’s benefit a few thousand years ago, stands in moral judgment over humanity, promises heaven for His minions and Hell for his enemies, etc.
But from the standpoint of the sophisticated, truly mind-blowing Infinities of quantum physics, the old-time religious worldview pales in comparison—it is a childishly simple fairy tale, fit only for a kindergartener. And with this point I am deeply sympathetic. When you read, for example, what people like Robert Monroe and many Near-Death Experiencer have discovered about the non-physical reality through their own direct experience, their accounts more closely match the quantum physicists’ multitudinous Infinities than they do the simple old textbook religious bromides. I think Hawking and many others are, of course, wrong to conflate belief in non-physical reality with only one version of that belief--and here they are almost certainly guilty of not having examined the actual mountains evidence provided by experiencers, or the arguments of fellow scientists like David Bohm or Pim van Lommel--but their distaste for words like "God" and "afterlife" is at least intelligible to me to the extent that those terms are identified with outmoded meanings. The magical multiverse of the contemporary physicist is just far more fascinating than the claustrophobic, tinker-toy world of folks like Harold Camping.
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