Stephen Hawking on Cosmology
A Brief History of Time (New York: Bantam, 1988), p. 140-41.
The idea that space and time may form a closed surface without boundary
also has profound implications for the role of God in the affairs of
the universe. With the success of scientific theories in describing
events, most people have come to believe that God allows the universe
to evolve according to a set of laws and does not intervene in the
universe to break these laws. However, the laws do not tell us what the
universe should have looked like when it started — it would still be
up to God to wind up the clockwork and choose how to start it off. So
long as the universe had a beginning, we could suppose it had a
creator. But if the universe is really completely self-contained,
having no boundary or edge, it would have neither beginning nor end: it
would simply be. What place, then, for a creator?
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