Image Credits:
Yahweh: By Rama, CC BY-SA 3.0 fr, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=87617466 Shiva: By Thejas Panarkandy from India — Murudeshwara Statue, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=9761046

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Who Is the Supreme Deity: Yahweh or Shiva?

Science Can Now Answer This!!

Tony Berard
5 min readApr 21, 2023

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You’ve all heard of Einstein’s famous E=mc² equation. If we use this to find God’s power, we combine it with P = E/t to get P = mc²/t. The incorporeal god means in scientific terms that such a non-physical being has zero mass. Plug zero in for m in this power equation, and you’ll see that God has zero power because zero times anything is zero.

I received criticism of this in earlier articles because E=mc² doesn’t ALWAYS work. But, Einstein had a fuller version of his equation that DOES WORK in all situations in our universe. It is the following:

E² = (mc²)² + (pc

This is the full relativity equation, and that lowercase p is momentum. So, we have two substitutions to make: one with the equation P = E/t and the other with p = mv. That second equation is momentum equals mass times velocity.

When we make the substitutions, we get the following:

Let us say that v is zero. That makes the c² the only thing left under the radical. The square root of the square of c is just c. We multiply that by the c standing next to the m in the numerator over there, and what do we get? We get P = mc²/t, which is what the other equation said. Thus, we can now account for velocity in our God Power Equation.

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Tony Berard
Tony Berard

Written by Tony Berard

I have lately been constructing arguments against God and the supernatural. I have proven that stuff doesn't exist with science equations. I aspire to be great.

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