翻訳と辞書
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・ God's Choice
・ God's chosen people (Jostein Gaarder op-ed)
・ God's Clay
・ God's Clay (1919 film)
・ God's Clay (1928 film)
・ God's Comedy
・ God's Cop
・ God's Counting on Me, God's Counting on You
・ God's Country
・ God's Country (1946 film)
・ God's Country (1985 film)
・ God's Country (2011 film)
・ God's Country and the Law
・ God's Country and the Woman
・ God's Country Radio Network
God's Debris
・ God's Ears
・ God's Equation
・ God's eye
・ God's Father
・ God's Favorite
・ God's Favorite (album)
・ God's Favorite Sons
・ God's Fool
・ God's Fury
・ God's Gift
・ God's Gift (soundtrack)
・ God's Gift (TV series)
・ God's Gift - 14 Days
・ God's Gift to Women


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God's Debris : ウィキペディア英語版
God's Debris

''God's Debris: A Thought Experiment'' is a 2001 novella by ''Dilbert'' creator Scott Adams.
''God's Debris'' espouses a philosophy based on the idea that the simplest explanation tends to be the best (a corruption of Occam's Razor). It surmises that an omnipotent God annihilated himself in the Big Bang, because an omniscient God would already know everything possible except his own lack of existence, and exists now as the smallest units of matter and the law of probability, or "God's debris", hence the title.
The introduction disclaims any personal views held by the author, "The opinions and philosophies expressed by the characters are not my own, except by coincidence in a few spots not worth mentioning".〔''God's Debris'', page X〕
==Description==
The central character, according to the introduction, knows "everything. Literally everything." Adams, whose knowledge is as incomplete as the next person, got around this by using the aforementioned "simplest explanation" for each concept raised in the book because, while "in this complicated world the simplest explanation is usually dead wrong", a more simple explanation often sounds more right and more convincing than anything complicated.
This character, the Avatar, defines God as primordial matter (like quarks and leptons) and the law of probability. He offers recommendations on everything from an alternative theory for planetary motion to successful recipes for relationships under his system. He proposes that God is currently reassembling himself through the ongoing formation of a collective intelligence in the form of the human race, modern examples of which include the development of the Internet; this is related to the idea of the Omega Point.
However, in the introduction, Adams describes ''God's Debris'' as a thought experiment, challenging readers to differentiate its scientifically accepted theories from "creative baloney designed to sound true," and to "Try to figure out what's wrong with the simplest explanation."〔''God's Debris'', page XI〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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