This of course is exactly what Muslim theologians would say about Muslim theology. And I’m perfectly happy to say, “Well, the physicists are right and Muslim theologians are wrong”, but that’s because I’m relying on my own judgment thereon.
The equivalent to asking Muslim theologians about Allah would be to ask many-worlds-believing quantum physicists about many-worlds.
The equivalent of asking quantum physicists about many-worlds would be to ask theologians about Allah, without specifically picking Muslim theologians. And if you ask theologians about Allah (by which I mean the Muslim conception of God—of course “Allah” is just the Arabic for “God”), you’re going to find that quite a few of them don’t think that Allah exists and that some other version of God does.
And that’s not even getting into the problems caused by the fact that religion is a meme that spreads in a way that skews the population of experts, which quantum mechanics doesn’t.
This of course is exactly what Muslim theologians would say about Muslim theology. And I’m perfectly happy to say, “Well, the physicists are right and Muslim theologians are wrong”, but that’s because I’m relying on my own judgment thereon.
The equivalent to asking Muslim theologians about Allah would be to ask many-worlds-believing quantum physicists about many-worlds.
The equivalent of asking quantum physicists about many-worlds would be to ask theologians about Allah, without specifically picking Muslim theologians. And if you ask theologians about Allah (by which I mean the Muslim conception of God—of course “Allah” is just the Arabic for “God”), you’re going to find that quite a few of them don’t think that Allah exists and that some other version of God does.
And that’s not even getting into the problems caused by the fact that religion is a meme that spreads in a way that skews the population of experts, which quantum mechanics doesn’t.