British physicist Stephen Hawking attends the 2010 World
Science Festival opening night gala performance at Alice
Tully Hall on June 2 in New York. Physicist Stephen Hawking
says God wasn't necessary for the creation of the universe.
(AP Photo / Evan Agostini)
Did creation need a creator? British physicist and
mathematician Stephen Hawking says no, arguing in his new book
that there need not be a God behind the creation of the
universe.
The concept is explored in "The Grand Design," excerpts of
which were printed in the British newspaper The Times today.
The book, written with fellow physicist Leonard Mlodinow, is
scheduled to be published by Bantam Press on September 9.
"The Grand Design," which the publishers call Hawking's first
major work in nearly a decade, challenges Isaac Newton's
theory God must have been involved in creation because our
solar system couldn't have come out of chaos simply through
nature.
But Hawking says it isn't that simple. To understand the
universe, it's necessary to know both how and why it behaves
the way it does, calling the pursuit "the Ultimate Question
of Life, the Universe, and Everything."
"We shall attempt to answer it in this book," he wrote.
"Unlike the answer given in 'The Hitchhiker's Guide to the
Galaxy,' ours won't be simply '42.'"
The number 42 is the deliberately absurd answer to the
"Ultimate Question" chosen by sci-fi author Douglas Adams.
Hawking, who is renowned for his work on black holes, said
the 1992 discovery of another planet orbiting a star other
than the sun makes "the coincidences of our planetary
conditions ... far less remarkable and far less compelling as
evidence that the Earth was carefully designed just to please
us human beings."
In his best-selling 1988 book "A Brief History of Time,"
Hawking appeared to accept the possibility of a creator,
saying the discovery of a complete theory would "be the
ultimate triumph of human reason - for then we should know
the mind of God."
But "The Grand Design" seems to step away from that, saying
physics can explain things without the need for a "benevolent
creator who made the Universe for our benefit."
"Because there is a law such as gravity, the Universe can and
will create itself from nothing," the excerpt says.
"Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather
than nothing, why the Universe exists, why we exist. It is
not necessary to invoke God to ... set the Universe going."
Hawking retired last year as the Lucasian Chair of
Mathematics at Cambridge University after 30 years in the
position. The position was once held by Newton.
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.