Who is the real God of the universe?

Who is the real God of the universe?

In ancient Egyptian Atenism, possibly the earliest recorded monotheistic religion, this deity was called Aten and proclaimed to be the one “true” Supreme Being and creator of the universe. In the Hebrew Bible, the titles of God include Elohim (God), Adonai (Lord) and others, and the name YHWH (Hebrew: יהוה‎).

Is darkness and dark matter the same?

But okay, okay, dark matter: The “darkness,” in this case, refers to the matter’s ability to not interact with itself, or anything at all but gravity: When clusters of galaxies collide, it seems that the dark matter inside them can butt up against other dark matter (and gas and dust) without slowing down.

Can neutrinos be dark matter?

Neutrinos are a form of dark matter, because they have mass, and weakly interact with light. But neutrinos have such a small mass and high energy that they move through the universe at nearly the speed of light. For this reason, they are known as hot dark matter.

What does it mean if God is dark matter?

If God is dark matter, that means the moment humans have accumulated enough knowledge of dark matter, God ceases to exist. It’s just like claiming God to be light; we have discovered what light is – the more proper name is electromagnetic radiation – in which case, God ceases to exist as light. God is always the gap!

Is the dark matter part of the universe?

Dark matter as theorized by scientists is a heretofore unknown percentage of the universe that has yet to be understood. But we do understand that it has a limited and specific, quantifiable range of interaction with the rest of the universe. That’s how we know it’s part of the physical universe in the first place.

Is there such a thing as the Unknown God?

Published in Creation magazine 37 (2):22-24, 2015. Over years of researching cosmology and astrophysics, I have argued that ‘dark matter’ is a sort of ‘god of the gaps’, 1 the ‘unknown god’. It is proposed mainly to rescue the standard big bang model from problems when a mismatch is found between the theory and some observations.

How much of the universe consists of ordinary matter?

Since 1933, scientists have measured the gravitational force holding galactic clusters, galaxies and solar systems together and have determined that only about 4 percent of it consists of ordinary matter.