فائن ٹیوننگ
اسی طرح سائنس کا مطالعہ بتاتا ہے کہ کائنات کے مختلف اجزا آپس میں بے حد مربوط ہیں، اور ان کے درمیان ایک انتہائی فائن ٹیوننگ (fine-tuning) پائی جاتی ہے تو اِس مائنڈ باگلنگ (mind-boggling) ظاہرے کی کوئی توجیہہ ہونی چاہیے:
Fine-Tuning in the Universe:
“There is plenty of good scientific evidence that our universe began about 14 billion years ago, in a Big Bang of enormously high density and temperature, long before planets, stars and even atoms existed. But what came before [The physicist Lawrence] Krauss in his book discusses the current thinking of physicists that our entire universe could have emerged from a jitter in the amorphous haze of the subatomic world called the quantum foam, in which energy and matter can materialize out of nothing. Krauss’s punch line is that we do not need God to create the universe. The quantum foam can do it quite nicely all on its own. Aczel asks the obvious question: But where did the quantum foam come from? Where did the quantum laws come from? Hasn’t Krauss simply passed the buck? Legitimate questions. But ones we will probably never be able to answer.” ...[The fine-tuning problem] For the past 50 years or so, physicists have become more and more aware that various fundamental parameters of our universe appear to be fine-tuned to allow the emergence of life - not only life as we know it but life of any kind. For example, if the nuclear force were slightly stronger than it is, then all of the hydrogen atoms in the infant universe would have fused with other hydrogen atoms to make helium, and there would be no hydrogen left. No hydrogen means no water. On the other hand, if the nuclear force were substantially weaker than it is, then the complex atoms needed for biology could not hold together. In another, even more striking example, if the “cosmic dark energy” discovered by scientists 15 years ago, were a little denser than it actually is, our universe would have expanded so rapidly that matter could never have pulled itself together to form stars. And if the dark energy were a little smaller, the universe would have collapsed long before stars had time to form. Atoms are made in stars. Without stars there would be no atoms and no life. So, the question is: Why? Why do these parameters lie in the narrow range that allows life. (Book: ‘Why Science Does Not Disprove God’ by mathematician Amir D. Aczel, who is currently researcher in the history of science at Boston University. The above are excerpts taken from a review on the book by physicist Alan Lightman for The Washington Post, April 11, 2014)