Roman Suzi
1 min readAug 17, 2024

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About a century ago, the scientific worldview was largely deterministic, grounded in Newtonian mechanics, where the universe was seen as a "predictable machine". However, the emergence of quantum mechanics and relativity ruined this certainty. Quantum mechanics fundamentally probabilistic nature of reality. Relativity showed that space and time are not absolute but interwoven. These paradigm shifts illustrate that science doesn't produce absolute truths but models that approximate reality, always subject to revision as our understanding deepens.

The absence of evidence for supernatural intervention doesn't equate to an absolute denial of such possibilities; it reflects the limits of our current scientific methods and understanding. Science is confined to studying the natural world and what can be empirically observed and tested. Just as past scientific frameworks were enriched by new discoveries, current understanding may also be incomplete. Science is about being open studying phenomena that lie beyond our present capacity to measure or comprehend.

If our consciousness extends beyond the realm of physics, and if the spiritual domain is indeed real, it's conceivable that the world could undergo a sudden transformation without violating any physical laws, much like the concept of 'jumping to a parallel time-path.' Genuine divine intervention could achieve such changes seamlessly, without disrupting the fundamental principles of physics. Metaphorically, it would be akin to setting the initial conditions of the universe in such a way that these possibilities are naturally embedded, allowing them to unfold without contradiction.

Here, we're assuming that free will is still intricately woven into the fabric of the world, rather than the universe functioning as a deterministic, giant machine.

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