What does a falling stone mean in the life of the universe?
The laws of physics are
mathematical expressions of how the universe operates.
The events taking place
in the universe and the relations between them and the laws ‘governing’ the
universe have drawn the attention of people from ancient times.
Scientists have tried to
explain whatever takes place in the universe, such as the movements of heavenly
objects, tides and the floating of ships on the water. However, according to
the thinkers of ancient Greece, scientists had to concentrate on man himself,
rather than on the natural world. They believed that natural phenomena and the
laws governing them could be explained through mental operations like deduction
and analogical reasoning. The Qur’an calls the attention of human beings
to the Divine manifestations on creatures such as the honeybee, ant, gnat and
spider, and invites them to reflect on and study phenomena like the movement
of air, the alternation of day and night and the seasons, and the movements
of heavenly bodies.
The importance the Qur’an
gives to the study of natural events inspired Muslim scientists to undertake
investigations using observation and the experimental method—long before these
came into use in Europe.
How did science pass to Europe?
Science passed to Europe
through the two centuries of the Crusades, through the universities in al-Andalus
and Sicily and the translations made there from Arabic. This was the main factor
behind the Renaissance in Europe. Building on (without ever openly acknowledging)
the works of Muslim scientists, Western scientists led the way to the birth
of modern science. Until correct conclusions were reached about phenomena through
observation and experimental methods, the assertions of the ancient Greek philosophers
had been accepted as the basic laws of nature. For example, it had been asserted
as true without question from the time of Aristotle that the speed of an object’s
falling is proportionate to its weight. However, the experiments done by Galileo
and Newton proved this to be false. Those experiments showed that—so long as
the resistance of air is negligible in proportion to the weight of the object
and its vertical cross-sectional area—the unhindered movement of an object on
the earth is not dependent on its mass. This means that objects of different
weight dropped from the same point reach earth at the same time. Such developments
in physics led scientists to approve observation and experiment as a basic rule
in establishing natural facts. It was the job of scientists to try to discover
the laws and basic truths prevalent in the universe through observation and
experiment—empirical methods— while it was the task of philosophers to reflect
on and comment on them. In other words, in order to have true conclusions about
the universe and the events taking place in it, we had to discard all of our
preconceptions about them and study nature through empirical methods and then
comment on the natural events and the relations between them.
To have a clearer understanding of modern science
In order to have a clearer
understanding of modern science and what it can give us of truth about the universe,
let us consider the law of general gravity, which is an undeniably established
scientific fact:
Various observations and
experiments have shown that any two objects attract each other or exert force
upon each other proportionately to their masses and in inverse proportion to
the square of the distance between them.
The force of attraction
or gravity is the force which is in effect in events such as the falling of
an object and the revolving of the earth around the sun. Science presents gravity
as if it were the cause of such events. However, what we call the force of gravitation
is only a notion which we use to explain those events. That is, there is an
attraction observed between objects. In order to explain this attraction, we
give it a name like the law or force of gravitation and then think that we have
explained the event of attraction.
Science does not know the
nature of what it calls the force of gravitation but, starting from the assertion
that we have already successfully explained many events whose causes were unknown
in the past, claims that it will be explained in the future. Nevertheless, science
is unable to explain the real cause of all the events in the universe. What
science in fact does is, starting from the recurrence of an event under the
same conditions, to make a generalization and call it a law. Then it proceeds
to assert that the same event will take place again and again under the same
conditions. For example, after observing the falling of objects thrown into
the air, it makes a generalization that all objects thrown into the air fall,
and then expresses this event of falling by a mathematical formula.
It can serve as a simple
example to see how science works to calculate and state beforehand how long
it takes for an object thrown into the air with a certain force and at a certain
angle to fall and at what distance it falls. Since events take place in a cause-and-effect
series, knowing what effect or event will take place in the next step does not
require understanding why it takes place in that way. Therefore, although we
suppose that the law of gravity will be understood as, say, dependent on an
exchange between certain particles or the obliquity of spatial time, it will
nevertheless remain unexplained through scientific methods why such an exchange
takes place or why the spatial time becomes oblique and why that exchange or
obliquity occurs according to certain mathematical formulations and thereby
objects attract each other. In addition to the fact that why objects attract
each other remains unknown, it is also a mystery (and a wonder) that this event
of attraction takes place according to a mathematical formula. Because of our
familiarity with the events taking place in nature, we ignore the important
fact that every thing, every event in nature is a miracle. In order to see why
the event of gravitation is a dazzling miracle, we should consider it more closely:
How does the law of gravity work and what does it mean?
As an example to understand
the law of gravity, let us consider the falling of a stone dropped (and then
allowed to fall unhindered) from a certain high point. Left unhindered, that
stone will realize a certain trajectory as the result of gravity affecting it.
It will move faster and faster and finally hit the ground. How the stone will
accelerate, how long it will take it to reach the ground and how it will move
at every second of its trajectory depends on the stone’s distance from the center
of the earth, the mass of the earth and the constant of gravity. This means
that the stone does not move at random, rather each of its movements during
its fall is calculable by mathematical formulas. This is an extremely regular
movement. From this we inevitably conclude that if the stone does this movement
of falling by itself, without an agent directing or determining its trajectory,
then the stone must know accurately the constant of gravity, the mass of the
earth and its distance from the center of the earth at each moment of its trajectory
and then move in conformity with that knowledge. Whoever has a bit of intelligence
will not attribute to the stone itself such a trajectory, simple in appearance
but extremely complex in reality. Indeed, the falling of a stone is so complex
a movement that during it all the objects in the universe, every thing with
a certain mass, exerts on it certain force of attraction and the stone moves
under the influence of all those forces. (Here we do not consider other essential
forces such as the electro-magnetic and nuclear ones, which have determining
effect on the movement of things. Expressed, again, with certain mathematical
formulas, these forces make the movements in the universe even more complex.)
That is, in order to determine its trajectory, the stone must know the exact
distance between itself and each of about 1080 particles in the universe, calculate
accurately at each moment of its trajectory the force of the attraction exerted
on it by each of those particles according to the mathematical formula of gravity—a
force which changes every moment—and focus all those forces to a single point
in consideration of the direction of each. Let alone a stone, even the most
advanced computer the size of the universe could not accomplish that. For the
position of each of the particles with respect to the stone changes at every
moment during its fall. Thus, the simplest-seeming movement in the universe
like the falling of a stone requires comprehensive knowledge and mastery of
an infinite number of interrelated processes.
Any event
taking place in any part of the universe has connection with each of the particles
in the universe and the whole of the universe itself
Since any event taking place
in any part of the universe has connection with each of the particles in the
universe and the whole of the universe itself, only one who has perfect knowledge
of each of those particles and the universe as a whole, one who sees the whole
of the universe with each particle in it, can determine and direct all the movements
in the universe. Also, since the law of gravity and all the other physical laws
are the same and have the same uniformity throughout the whole of the universe,
the one who makes these laws operative in the whole of the universe must be
an absolutely powerful one, who dominates each and every thing therein. Otherwise,
each atom in the universe must have an eye seeing the whole of the universe
at the same time, know the position, mass, electrical charge, in short, all
the physical features, of each particle in the universe, be aware of all the
physical laws and obey the laws itself originated.
Every event and every thing
in the universe is interrelated to every other and whatever takes place in the
universe takes place according to certain laws. Therefore, it is impossible
for even the smallest, most insignificant-seeming event to take place without
one with an absolute, perfect knowledge of the universe with all its particles
and an absolute power governing it. Said Nursi expresses this fact as follows:
If the existence and operation
of the universe is not attributed to God Almighty; then it requires admitting
that each particle has the attributes of the Necessarily Existent Being, and
that each particle should both dominate and be dominated by all other particles.
Again, each particle should have an all-encompassing will and knowledge, for
the existence of a single thing is dependent on all things and one who does
not own the universe cannot rule a single particle.
After explaining how complex
a phenomenon gravitation is, we can go a little further to see the real cause
of that phenomenon. The relation sensed between the fall of a stone and the
rotation of the moon around the world in a fixed orbit led Newton to discover
the law of gravity. Ever since this law received a general welcome, the cause
of the falling down of an object thrown into the air has unquestionably been
accepted as gravity. However, it is not necessary that the real cause of this
movement is the force of the attraction of the earth or the existence of another
material cause.
Consider this:
Let us imagine some animate
beings living on a two-dimensional table. These living beings are aware of only
the table on which they live and completely unaware of the three-dimensional
world around them. Someone from the three-dimensional world fires at the table
in equal frequencies and makes holes at equal distance from each other. Seeing
the holes at equal distances, the animate beings living completely unaware of
the three-dimensional world will inevitably conclude that each hole causes another
one to be made. Whereas it is some other firing from the outside world who made
the holes.
What do we know about the reality of causality?
This is how the scientists
attributing every thing and event in the universe to the law of causality think
about the working of the universe. It is questionable whether the attraction
of an object toward another near it (for example, the attraction of a falling
stone toward the ground) is because of the objects themselves or there is some
other source forcing the objects to such a movement. (The event of attraction
is the simplest of the events occurring in the universe. You may consider how
a honeybee makes honey or a cow gives milk, events which contain a much greater
number of physical interactions, chemical reactions and cause and effect.) In
short, since the movement of an object according to the law of gravity is one
each moment of which is mathematically described and requires as many masses
and distances as the articles in the universe and the distances among them to
be known in their mutual, complex relations, there must be One Who is the All-Knowing.
This One must also have an absolute will to choose and assign for each event
a law out of innumerable ones. The uniformity of the law, that is, all the laws
being prevalent throughout the universe, calls for the unity of that All-Knowing
and All-Willing One, and the obedience of all things, small or great, to those
laws demonstrate that that One is also the All-Powerful. Again, the unchangeability
or stability of the laws and the magnificent, unchanging order and harmony of
the universe show that that One is Self-Subsistent and the All-Subsisting. That
means it is that All-Knowing, All-Willing, All-Powerful, Self-Subsistent and
All-Subsisting, Single One Who causes a stone to fall. For no one and nothing
in the universe has the knowledge, will and power absolutely necessary for the
falling of a stone. Every thing and event in the universe is too complex and
magnificent for any material cause to bring it about. There is then no way for
man other than to admit and recognize the existence and Unity of God.
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