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God's Politics

Humans, Humility, and the Higgs Boson Particle

by Ernesto Tinajero 10-20-2009

Imagine trying to figure out the earth, while living on a grain of sand on a small island in the middle of the Pacific. What could be known of snow, of plants, of wolves? Not much. We humans are attempting from an even smaller perspective than that to decipher the entire universe.

Such a perspective should breed humility once we realize the smallness of our place. Our grand pronouncements would be tempered by fear and trembling. Humility would lead to awe. Instead we are arrogant. Humans and humility are distant cousins — related, but somehow unable to hang out. Arrogance, on the other hand, is our bud.

These thoughts made me laugh when reading “The Collider, the Particle and a Theory About Fate” about how a couple of respected physicists speculate that the Large Hadron Collider will fail because its future will sabotage its present. For those unfamiliar with the Large Hadron Collider, it is a multibillion dollar project in Europe to smash protons into each other. They are hoping to find the hypothesized Higgs boson particle, and with it find the key to understanding origins of the universe. Holger Bech Nielsen, of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, and Masao Ninomiya of the Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics in Kyoto, Japan proposed a theory that states the search for Higgs boson will be like looking for the Holy Grail, a task fated for failure. Quoting Dr. Nielsen from the article:

“It must be our prediction that all Higgs producing machines shall have bad luck,” Dr. Nielsen said in an e-mail message. In an unpublished essay, Dr. Nielson said of the theory, “Well, one could even almost say that we have a model for God.” It is their guess, he went on, “that He rather hates Higgs particles, and attempts to avoid them.”

Dr. Nielsen’s thoughts invoke the story of the fall in Genesis 3 with the Higgs boson playing the part of the forbidden fruit. One wonders who plays the part of the serpent? God is hiding the boson because…? The most humorous part is how we think that we could find the answers to the puzzle of the universe from our small planet, when we are still babes. Can we contain the mystery through our arrogance?

portrait-ernesto-tinajero1Ernesto Tinajero is a freelance writer in Spokane, Washington, who earned his master’s degree in theology from Fuller Seminary. Visit his blog at beingandfaith.blogspot.com.

Categories: Theology
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  • titopoet
    I don't use the "arrogant" to describe scientific curiosity, rather to think that we can find the secretes of the universe from our small place in the universe. What I found arrogant was not Higgs boson research, I find that awe inspiring, but I found the quote about having a model of God and that God hates Higgs bosons from this model as arrogant.
  • bbuudd
    Thank you for the clarification.

    I agree that arrogance is a stumbling block. It can come in several forms - like arrogance about what one has learned and think they know; and arrogance of what one is certain of and, as a result, discredits / rejects anything else.

    I like the suggestion to learn to love the question. Striving to be a beginner in all things keeps fresh the eagerness for the quest of discovery.
  • darkmoses
    "Arrogant" seems a little harsh to describe scientific curiosity and a desire to learn more about the universe in which we live. In fact, humility may be at the heart of the Higgs boson search - the desire to know how we came to be, what we are, what our purpose is. We Christians find these answers in Christ, and comprehend them "through a glass darkly." It seems to me Psalm 8 might be a better scriptural passage to be read while contemplating the mystery of the Higgs boson.
  • titopoet
    I was not trying to say the Scientific endeavor or the search for knowledge is an affront. It is not. Actually, arrogance is a bigger stumbling block to learning, discovery and understanding, and that is my larger point. Rilke advice to a young poet is one we should all heed. Learn to love the question, and always strife to be a beginner in all things.
  • bbuudd
    Actually, some have been making the same argument about the scientific endeavor for centuries. For some reason, they see the quest for knowledge as an affront. The desire to explore, to learn, to understand is part of how we have been created. Discoveries have always revealed that things are not as they seemed - that creation is more complex than we could have imagined.

    So - why does this make the effort to learn and discover so evil?
  • Bungarra
    Monty Python’s song about the universe (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWVshkVF0SY) and just how big it is, is an insight into our significance in creation. Yet it reinforces the message of the significance of the incarnation.

    We are created beings exploring the creation so how can we fully comprehend the Creator? Personally it the thrill of the chase, moderated by humility based on pondering on how does the created comprehend the Creator?

    Simple doctrinaire proscriptions of just how and why the creation works, was made, and why, remind me of the adage "that for every problem, there is a simple explanation / solution which is usually wrong".

    Good fun exploring, and who knows we may even solve where and why only one sock of a pair goes to die, or why wardrobes fill up with coat hangers, let alone dark matter, who were the hobbits of Flores, when the next eathquake, and the mind body problem.
  • If the Higgs is the forbidden fruit, I would expect it to blow up in our face instead of running away. Black hole anyone?
  • DJ9791
    I just today read that there are another 32 planets recently discovered by European astronomers...it constantly amazes me that we picture ourselves as lords of the universe, when we can't even cope with a winter storm delivering more than 8 inches of snow.

    God created the UNIVERSE, not just our tiny island floating through it. It seems to me that science should humble us, not embolden us to see ourselves as masters of our world. Further, our attempts at mastering the natural world have lead to the current global environmental difficulties. Our worldview is seriously flawed; it revolves around domination: of nature, of our fellow man. We have yet to embrace Our Lord's teachings of peace and harmony with the world around us. Until we do, we will continue on the path of self-righteous "mastery" of the world, a path which has lead to global poverty, injustice, war and destruction of His creation.

    Pray for Peace and Dare To Act!
  • Surely it is the peak of folly to believe that we could ever fully understand the works of His hand, but He made us with questioning minds and an drive and ability to discover. Going through even a high-school level physics class it is funny to watch the progression of thought and theory. It feels like every chapter starts out with, "Last chapter we learned x, now we're going to learn why that was almost all wrong". The best science, however, is grounded in the fact that we are imperfect in our ability to comprehend the world around us and demands further questioning and refinement of our collective scientific understanding. This is why the scientific and religious communities have a little trouble seeing eye-to-eye: religion is grounded in eternal and immutable truths, whereas science is the discipline of challenging all things eternal and immutable. That doesn't mean the two points of view can't/shouldn't exist in the same space though. Einstein said it best (rough paraphrase), "Science without religion is lame, and religion without science is blind"
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