Methink the great one has slipped up a little in this paragraph:
I don't buy the prayer claim for a minute. But assuming there were to be a god involved, I don't think we can say that there would be any attenuation. Since the usual concept of the christian god is that it is omnipresent, it could pick up the weak signal from the pray-er in the USA and emit a signal in Asia which was stronger than the received one. Just like a cell tower, or a ham radio repeater.
Also, the inverse square law is not universal. The strong nuclear force doesn't follow it, for a start.
--Terry
The prayers, considered as a transmitted signal of some bizarre nature, whether they had to go through a deity, or directly affected the reproductive systems of the subjects, would be expected to obey the Law of Inverse Squares, one of the most very fundamental laws of nature that has never in the history of our species been "disobeyed." The expected attenuation, over the distances involved, would have had a parallel in a tourist standing on the Great Wall of China, shouting to his wife in New Jersey, and expecting her to not only hear, but to understand his message.
I don't buy the prayer claim for a minute. But assuming there were to be a god involved, I don't think we can say that there would be any attenuation. Since the usual concept of the christian god is that it is omnipresent, it could pick up the weak signal from the pray-er in the USA and emit a signal in Asia which was stronger than the received one. Just like a cell tower, or a ham radio repeater.
Also, the inverse square law is not universal. The strong nuclear force doesn't follow it, for a start.
--Terry