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RE: Dark stars as a cosmic window on a mirror world
Interesting view of the universe.
But where is God?
Is God part of our universe or of the mirrow world?
Or is he part of both worlds?
And if God is part of our universe - is there an "Anti-God" - the devil existing in the mirror world?
If so, isn´t it better to get no contact in any kind to the dark matter of your proposed mirrorworld?
Best regards.
Mmhhh... The eternal question of religion and science. That is a complicated debate as we enter the territory of the personal beliefs. And I will skip it and answer only from a scientific standpoint.
Here, I would say what is going on with God (or gods or anything that could play this role, depending on what one believes in) is completely disconnected from the topic: I am discussing some ways to understand the mechanism behind the functioning of the universe at the fundamental level: what is the nature of the building blocks of matter and how they interact.
By the way, this theory is not something I have proposed myself (other great physicists did). It is for now only theoretical: it may exist (and then we know how to look for it) or it may not exist. As it may exist, we need to be pragmatic and test it (to make sure not any interesting phenomenon is missed in data).
However, at the end of the day, we are discussing elementary particles and there is no real concern about the existence of mirror beings, mirror animals or even mirror gods. The abundance of the mirror chemical species being different from what they are in our world, I doubt mirror-us would exist (see my answer to @chappertron a bit further above in this post).
Why would God be bound inside His creation? You don't seek the artist in his every painting. The architect is rarely in the buildings he designed.
There is no scientific proof of the existence of any god. Okay, similarly there is no proof of its non-existence as well. Which is why science and religion are somehow not mutually exclusive. But this is not the topic of my post :)
If God exists outside of, separate from, and independent of His creation, it is a matter outside the realm of scientific inquiry. It is a very weak, and indeed fallacious, argument to demand that a negative assertion be disproven. I don't think there is any inherent conflict between science and religion. The people who made the first forays into the scientific revolution were often religiously motivated.