User:Highram/Divine physics

Divine physics
Divine physics is a branch of scientific and theological study encompassing the idea that the divine ("God") exists between each of the strands and atoms that compose matter in the universe. It is based on a theory that we are all intrinsically and divinely linked, on a physics-oriented level. The term was coined by Shane Rand of Dalhousie University and in his studies of Zeno of Citium, who expressed his beliefs in the divine physics of the world profusely in the book entitled Diogenes Laërtius.

The study of divine physics started with the Stoics, and their belief in Stoic physics. Divine physics differs from the Stoics version of their beliefs in that Divine physics also begins to focus into more intrinsic theories of mathematics in nature, including inside the Human body itself. Divine physics seeks, as a discipline, to prove that there are actual spiritual forces at work within the Human brain and within nature itself.

In studies performed by Jeffrey Schwartz, a nonmaterialist neuropsychiatrist out of UCLA, he was able to successfully determine that patients are capable of re-training their brains. Their minds control their brains, according to Dr. Schwartz. During his experiments, which were successful, evidence was shown that materialist thinking toward that event could not be possible.

The one distinction between divine physics, and the debates of materialism versus nonmaterialism, is that divine physics doesn't seek, according to Mario Beauregard and Denyse O'Leary, authors of the book The Spiritual Brain, to separate science from God. It seeks to reunite both of them in common cause.

Divine physics also has trace roots in the long-abandoned field of intelligent design, due to the very nature of the topics it discusses. Intelligent design states that our nature, our Earth, our bodies, were engineered by something other. The divine, or God. Where other scientists have long since debunked intelligent design as a waste of resources, newly inspired scientists and mathematicians are publishing once again under the name of divine physics.