Does mathematics prove god
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No.Mathematics is a domain of reasoning that uses logic, number theory and a small set of abstract axioms to prove ever-more-complex theorems. But everything in mathematics is abstract (not real), since its axioms are abstract.It is a happy coincidence that many mathematical theorems are useful for modeling the real world. So many, in fact, that many people make the mistake of believing that the underlying reality of our world is mathematical. While it may be possible to construct a philosophical argument for this, I have several objections:such a world-view would necessarily also include the philosophical argument and thus not be purely mathematical;Gödel's first incompleteness theorem suggests that reality will always be more complex than any mathematical model; andin quantum mechanics, both the uncertainty principle and the observer effect are real phenomena that cannot be modeled by mathematics as a causal chain of events.Even if somebody came up with a mathematical proof that seemed to show that God existed, it would remain in the theoretical world and could not be shown to be true in reality because it would rest on unproven axioms.A related issue is whether there are logical proofs of God’s existence, such as Thomas Aquinas’ Quinque viae. IMHO each of these proofs is flawed. Even Aquinas qualifies them as ways to understand God rather than proofs of God’s existence.
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Of course not, bcz mathematics is full of logic, mind calculation , critical thinking. It's very scientific, so why need to connect it with religious things. ?
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