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Why it is physically IMPOSSIBLE for God to exist — Richard Feynman

That framing goes too far. Physics doesn’t prove that God is “impossible”—it deals with testable models of the natural world, not metaphysical conclusions. If you present it as a logical or scientific analysis of physical claims, it will sound stronger and more credible.
Here’s a refined, high-impact description in the same style—without overclaiming:

Does modern physics leave any room for God?
In this video, we examine that question through the analytical lens of Richard Feynman — not as a matter of belief, but as a question about how the universe actually behaves when studied with precision.
Physics does not argue against God.
It does something more demanding: it builds a complete, self-consistent description of reality based entirely on measurable laws — and asks whether external intervention is required anywhere within that structure.
Over four centuries, those laws have expanded to describe everything from subatomic particles to cosmic evolution — without a single confirmed exception.
So where, if anywhere, does a non-physical agent fit?

In this video, we walk through the physical framework that raises this question:
The conservation laws that govern every interaction.
The causal structure of spacetime and what it permits.
Thermodynamic limits on energy, order, and change.
The constraints of information in a physical universe.
And the boundary between scientific knowledge and unfalsifiable claims.

This is not a debate about belief.
It’s an examination of structure.
Because when physics describes the universe with increasing completeness, it doesn’t explicitly disprove metaphysical ideas — but it does redefine what counts as an explanation.
And that shift has consequences.

⚡ Why This Matters:
Understanding what science can and cannot say is just as important as understanding what it discovers.

📌 Watch till the end — the conclusion isn’t what most people expect.

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