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Ooh!  This is so interesting!
Cheers!
Amy

URL to a fascinating article in MSNBC
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16126932/site/newsweek/

I've found that questions can be a very effective way to get people to think, 
sometimes more effective than passing on facts.  The efforts of this cosmology 
think-tank at Arizona State University could be some great questions for us to 
ponder on.

The article is short
"Dec. 18, 2006 issue - The more the universe seems comprehensible," the 
physicist Steven Weinberg once wrote, "the more it seems pointless." It is said 
that many of his colleagues were dismayed, not by the assertion that the 
universe was pointless, but over the implication that it could even have a 
point. But then, retorts Paul Davies, the scientist and author of more than 20 
books on cosmology, what's the point of science itself? 

Davies, who has spent his career asking variations on this question, will now 
be in a position to look for answers as the head of a new cosmology think tank, 
provisionally named Beyond, at Arizona State University. The outfit, part of an 
ambitious effort by ASU president Michael Crow to stake out new intellectual 
territory for his young institution, will ask no easy questions, only deep ones 
like "Why are the laws of nature mathematical?"—something that's been gnawing 
at scientists for about 2,500 years. Davies says he wants to look into "the 
origin of the universe, life, consciousness and the emergence of humanity." Its 
first conference, later this month, will focus on what Davies calls "looking 
for life on Earth as we don't know it." Is our kind of DNA-based life the only 
kind there is? How could we tell? Where should we look for other examples? The 
idea that life might have evolved more than once is the central premise of the 
Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence, and thus of special interest to 
Davies, who heads SETI's "post-detection" committee—the best committee to be 
on, he says, since it never meets. 
But it's also of special interest to him because he occupies an increasingly 
isolated position among top physicists, neither conventionally religious nor as 
ruthlessly skeptical as Weinberg. Davies has devoted his career to searching 
for the equation that will reveal what he calls "the mind of God," the 
metaphysical foundation for everything there is. "Scientists proceed on the 
assumption that there is a coherent scheme to the universe to be uncovered," he 
said last month at a conference on belief and reason at the Salk Institute that 
brought together many prominent atheists, including Richard Dawkins and Sam 
Harris. "That's also an act of faith." Davies then gave his own version of 
Weinberg's formula. "The more the universe seems pointless," he said, staring 
down his audience of hardened skeptics, "the more it is incomprehensible."

Here is a link to a news release from the ASU Foundation about the think tank

http://www.asufoundation.org/news/stories/113006-davies.asp

Here is a link to an article by Paul Davies titled What Happened Before The Big 
Bang?

http://www.beliefnet.com/story/62/story_6233_1.html




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