The Laws of Physics Express the Unchanging Nature of a Personal God

My previous book, Journey to the Center of the Brain and my recent paperback, Consciousness Finally Explained logically, for the first time, explain consciousness — a conceptual breakthrough proving irrefutably that God actively participates in brain activity, apart from whom the brain could not function. Other authors have claimed success, but this book identifies the actual brain center responsible for consciousness, and the mechanism within this center which creates and sustains an image.

The gist of the argument is that we relate to God through a tiny expectancy gap—to which, in the momentary absence of an image, we tend, probabilistically speaking, toward the weightless infinitude of our own nonexistence—with this regression releasing the energy needed for creating or sustaining an image. However, the logic is sound only if infinity and/or God has been encoded within neural design — this being the only way to explain how a regression relative to infinity can precisely channel energy into an image, the expectable and finite nature of which thwarts the Second Law of Thermodynamics. It is then but a quick skip and hop to explaining how, apart from an image, the equation E = mc2 is meaningless.

The upshot is that all of the Laws of Physics are the physical manifestation of an unchanging God. And, as readers will see, what appears to be “physical” is actually an image in the mind of God in whom, according to Scripture, “we live and move and have our being.” The proof is in the pudding: the human brain.

Both books are available through Amazon and other outlets. Click on the “Home” tab above for a brief further analysis of these two books.

About Glenn Dudley

GLENN DUDLEY became interested in the mind-body problem as a Pre-Med student at the University of Colorado where he emphasized studies in physics, philosophy, and Judeo-Christian theology. He received his M.D. degree from the University of Colorado in 1969. After a mixed Psychiatry/Medicine internship, he worked for two years at MIT's Neurosciences Research Program -- a think tank whose objective was that of understanding how the hard-wiring of the nervous system mediates thought and emotion. Then, he spent a year in the Department of Psychiatry at Tufts Medical School in Boston reviewing the world's literature on psychological and emotional predispositions to cancer. From 1975 to his retirement in 1998 he practiced primary care medicine.
Comments are closed.