Linka wrote:JACKSONVILLE, FL -- The familiar sounds of faith. They are all sounds Frank Tippler heard as a boy. Heard and roundly rejected.
Tippler was born into a Christian family but rejected religion. An atheist at 16, Tippler preferred the sounds of chalk on a blackboard.
The black and white truth found in mathematics.
But just like the biblical story of The Road to Emmaus, Tippler says he was stunned to realize God was right in front of him the entire time.
He simply hadn't recognized him.
Tippler found his faith in physics.
"Really and truly believing the laws of physics.
Believing the implications of where they may lead, God exists," he says.
Tippler's findings have been published in well respected scientific journals. Tulane University where he is a professor of mathematical physics funds his research. But Tippler says his work shouldn't be any great revelation. In fact, he says, it isn't even original.
"All of the basic ideas are developed by people much greater than myself. Albert Einstein, Isaac Newton. The only way I differ from them is that I believe in the consequences of their equations and they don't."
Tippler describes God as the Omega Point in a still expanding universe. He says eventually, billions of years in the future, the universe will be full, and that all life will return to that Omega Point. Return to God.
But his latest research goes even further.
In his new book, The Physics of Christianity, Tippler says not only can he prove the existence of God, but something else. "In reality there is just one, separated into three hypostasis. God is a trinity coming naturally out of the physics. Inalterably, inevitably out of the physics," he says.
Tippler says his equations prove there is only one true religion: Christianity.
It's his conclusion that all the other world religions are, in a word, wrong. "Wrong as a matter of physics," he says.
When asked if he's ready for the firestorm that statement will cause, Tippler is unapologetic.
"Well if people don't like that two plus two equals four, that's their problem," he says.
Math, Tippler says, never lies. He is first and foremost a believer in physics. "Fundamentally, he quips," I am a physics fundamentalist."