The Numbers Don't Lie: The Scientist Who Proved the World Needs a Creator
Dr. Sohn shares intriguing insights from both special and general relativity, and lists several fundamental equations. He becomes animated as he explains that these precise equations, essential for life, couldn't have come about by chance—it's simply impossible.
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Willy Sohn is an astrophysicist and aerospace engineer who teaches at Harvard University. Recently, he has appeared in media interviews, including with the famous American journalist Tucker Carlson, stating that it's possible to mathematically prove the existence of a creator for the universe. It's just simple math—not philosophy or emotional discussions. Numbers, clear evidence, like the Pythagorean theorem.
His argument centers on the existence of "antimatter," a discovery formulated back in 1928. In the universe, there isn't just matter that can be seen and measured, but also antimatter, a substance contrary to matter, yet it cannot exist without it. The electric charge of matter differs from that of antimatter; if their charges were equal, they would merge, cancel out, and disappear. With the creation of the world, there had to be a creator setting the balance between matter and antimatter to maintain their differentiation, otherwise the entire universe and reality would exist no more—reality would "consume" itself. It sounds fictional, but this is modern physics.
The idea of antimatter was discovered by Paul Dirac from Cambridge. He calculated the charges of electrons moving near the speed of light and found two results, representing matter and antimatter. He claimed both exist in reality, and later experiments have indeed proven this true. For every particle, there is an antiparticle. By 1995, scientists at the CERN particle accelerator managed to produce antimatter, creating 9 atoms of antihydrogen.
In an interview with Tucker Carlson, Dr. Sohn adds that the moment antimatter was discovered is one of those times in physics or math that seem disconnected from the tangible world but ultimately prove true. The idea of antimatter formed the foundation for "quantum field theory."
Dr. Sohn shares a wealth of fascinating details from both special and general relativity and points out several fundamental equations. His face lights up as he explains that all these precise equations, which allow life, couldn't have come about by sheer chance—it's simply impossible. For the average viewer, focusing and grasping the significance of the precision in these constants might be challenging, but Dr. Sohn certainly knows his stuff as he transitions from one field to another, demonstrating that wherever we examine the fundamental constants of the laws of nature, they were formed so that life on Earth is possible. Even if just one of them, just one, were to change slightly—not dramatically, just a small error—nothing would exist, life would not be possible at all.
To sum it up simply for us, ordinary folks... life as we know it couldn't exist without the current existing constants: 1) the precise distance of Earth from the sun; 2) the distances between the stars; 3) the precision of the weak nuclear force; 4) the exact amount of energy in the Big Bang; 5) the constants of quantum physics, the balance between matter and antimatter; 6) the density of mass-energy in the universe relative to the strong nuclear force. The calculation of all these data and the like amounts to mind-numbing figures, like 10120. All this is merely for the potential of life, not for its emergence, of course.
Even the skeptical physicist Stephen Hawking wrote: "The universe, in its initial state, had to have uniformly distributed temperature... The initial state of the universe had to be precisely chosen indeed, so that the hot Big Bang model would work throughout its progression back to the beginning of time. It's very hard to explain why the universe would have begun in such an exact way unless there was a divine hand intent on creating beings like us."