According To A New Book—Science Just Proved That God Exists

According To A New Book—Science Just Proved That God Exists


December 9, 2025 | Jesse Singer

According To A New Book—Science Just Proved That God Exists


A Book Making Big Waves

A new debate is erupting in science circles and beyond. The newly translated God, the Science, the Evidence dives into modern discoveries in physics and cosmology—and makes a bold claim about what they reveal, arguing that today’s scientific discoveries don’t just allow for a Creator…they practically point straight at one.

God Science MsnMeet the Authors

Advertisement

Michel-Yves Bolloré and Olivier Bonnassies come from scientific, engineering, and philosophical backgrounds—not clergy. Their stated goal, according to interviews, is to examine the scientific data honestly and rigorously and follow it wherever it leads.

PexelsPexels, Pixabay

Why Scientists Are Paying Attention

The French edition sold more than 400,000 copies and generated widespread discussion—from mainstream newspapers to religious publications to skeptical science blogs. Events hosted at institutions such as Princeton and Berkeley helped push the debate into academic circles.

reading bookFactinate

Advertisement

The Question of Beginnings

The book begins with a central point found across modern cosmology: the universe had a beginning. If time, space, and matter all started at a single point, the authors argue that whatever caused it must exist outside the physical universe we observe.

File:En-busca-de-los-origenes-del-Big-Bang.jpgArabian University, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The Big Bang’s Implications

Rather than a simple explosion, the Big Bang represents the sudden appearance of everything—matter, energy, and the laws that govern them. Reviews note that the book frames this as a philosophical turning point, since physical laws cannot pre-exist the universe they govern.

File:Big-bang-universo-8--644x362.jpgMunacas, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Thermodynamics Steps In

Thermodynamics predicts that the universe is slowly running out of usable energy. If it were infinitely old, reviewers note the authors’ point that it would have already reached heat death. The fact that it hasn’t is presented as evidence for a finite beginning.

File:Second Law of Thermodynamics - geograph.org.uk - 270054.jpgIain Thompson, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Fine-Tuning: The Cosmic Puzzle

Physicists widely acknowledge that many constants—like gravity, electromagnetism, and the strong nuclear force—fall within incredibly narrow life-permitting ranges. The authors highlight this fine-tuning as one of the strongest pointers toward design.

File:Hubble Extreme Deep Field (full resolution).pngNASA; ESA; G. Illingworth, D. Magee, and P. Oesch, University of California, Santa Cruz; R. Bouwens, Leiden University; and the HUDF09 Team, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

How Improbable Is “Chance”?

The book argues that the probability of these constants aligning by coincidence is effectively zero. Some scientists counter with multiverse theories, but the authors respond that a multiverse would itself require explanation.

File:Starsinthesky.jpgEuropean Space Agency (ESA/Hubble). Credit ESA/Hubble in any reuse of this image. Full details at http://www.spacetelescope.org/copyright.html, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The Beauty of Mathematical Order

Many scientists have commented on the universe’s mathematical elegance. The authors echo this point, arguing that the consistency and intelligibility of natural laws resemble structure rather than accident. This idea appears repeatedly in summaries of the book’s thesis.

File:EinsteinLeiden4.jpgEinstein (gravitational) field equations including the cosmological constant Λ {\displaystyle \Lambda } by Albert Einstein from his theory of general relativity (Stephen Weinberg, Gravitation and cosmology, New York, 1972 p. 155); painting by Jan-Willem Bruins (TegenBeeld); photograph by Vysotsky, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Consciousness Still Has No Agreed Explanation

While the book focuses more heavily on cosmology and fine-tuning, it also touches on questions like consciousness—the subjective experience science has not fully explained. The authors treat this as suggestive of dimensions beyond purely physical explanations.

File:Milky Way over Avenue of Baobabs (ann22042n).jpgAmirreza Kamkar/IAU OAE, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

DNA: Information That Behaves Like Code

Reviews of the book note its claim that the complexity and information-rich structure of DNA raises questions about whether unguided processes alone can account for life’s origin. This line of argument appears prominently in coverage of the book.

a close up of a blue and purple structureSangharsh Lohakare, Unsplash

Advertisement

The Mystery of “Something Rather Than Nothing”

Physics can describe how the universe behaves—but not why anything exists at all. The book presents existence itself as a clue, arguing that “nothingness” is more expected unless something caused reality to begin.

File:Earth and Universe.jpgPablo Carlos Budassi, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Order Keeps Emerging

From atoms to galaxies to life, the universe consistently forms higher levels of organization. The authors interpret this upward trend as evidence of purpose or direction rather than randomness.

File:Messier81.pngPablo Carlos Budassi, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Critics Push Back

Skeptical scientists respond that unexplained phenomena do not automatically imply design. They argue that scientific gaps should not be filled with metaphysical conclusions. Critics nonetheless acknowledge that fine-tuning, origin, and consciousness questions are legitimate scientific puzzles.

three people in lab coats looking at a tabletNational Cancer Institute, Unsplash

Advertisement

The Multiverse Counterargument

Many critics appeal to the multiverse to explain fine-tuning. The authors argue that even an infinite number of universes needs a mechanism—and possibly a cause—so the multiverse does not eliminate the deeper question.

File:Eta Carinae (1991-10-43).jpgNASA and ESA, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Is Randomness Really Random?

Quantum physics includes randomness at the smallest scales. The authors suggest that what appears random may still follow deeper laws science hasn’t uncovered yet.

File:Physics-3871216 1920.jpgGeralt - geralt / 21281 images on Pixabay site, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Einstein’s Reluctant Agreement

Historically, Einstein resisted the idea of a universe with a beginning, preferring an eternal model. When evidence for cosmic expansion solidified, he accepted the implication. The book uses this to show how data can reshape even deeply held assumptions.

File:Albert Einstein Head cleaned.jpgPhotograph by Oren Jack Turner, Princeton, N.J. Original image cleaned/leveled by User:Jaakobou., Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

A Universe Meant to Be Known

The authors emphasize how unusual it is that human beings can understand the universe’s laws. They argue that the intelligibility of the universe suggests underlying order rather than chaos, echoing one of the book’s recurring themes.

File:NewtonsPrincipia.jpgIsaac Newton, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

A Surprising Modern Reversal

Coverage of the book repeatedly highlights the idea of a great reversal: discoveries once thought to push God out of the picture are now prompting philosophical reconsideration. The authors argue that recent findings put the question of a creator God firmly back on the table.

File:Galileo before the Holy Office.jpgJoseph-Nicolas Robert-Fleury, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

A Rational Route to Belief

The authors do not argue for a specific religious tradition. Instead, they propose that belief in a Creator is now the most rational explanation for the data. Reviewers note that this framing—evidence first, faith second—is central to the book’s tone.

File:Center of the Milky Way Galaxy IV – Composite.jpgNASA/JPL-Caltech/ESA/CXC/STScI, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Bridging Science and Faith

The book does not claim scientific proof of God. Instead, it argues that the convergence of evidence makes a Creator a coherent and reasonable explanation. Science and faith, in this view, become two complementary ways of approaching the same reality.

File:The revised version of the New Testament, with a history of the present and former revisions.. (1881) (14782521442).jpgInternet Archive Book Images, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Why Readers Are Hooked

Readers appreciate the book’s attempt to present evidence without preaching. Reviews suggest the appeal comes from its data-driven style, which invites readers to think through the arguments rather than simply accept a conclusion.

congerdesigncongerdesign, Pixabay

Advertisement

A New Conversation Begins

The book encourages a shift in the science-faith conversation—one that sees curiosity as the bridge between worldviews. Whether one agrees or disagrees, the authors argue that the debate itself has become scientifically relevant again.

File:Science and Religion Panel at ECSO.jpgSgerbic, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The Bigger Picture

In the end, the authors suggest two basic possibilities: either the universe is a spectacular accident…or it reflects intention. And if it does reflect intention, the next question becomes unavoidable—what, or who, caused it?

File:Messier-42-10.12.2004-filtered.jpegRochus Hess, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

You Might Also Like:

Archaeologists and historians can't ignore the strange similarities between the heretic Pharaoh Akhenaten and the biblical Moses.

There’s a human body part that no other animal has—and evolution still can't explain why it even exists.

Sources: 1, 2, 3


READ MORE

Ancient roman road

Running along a construction corridor in southern France, preventive digs unearthed a Roman road portion set between tombs, ceramics, and ancient lamps

Preventive excavations along a construction corridor in southern France revealed a Roman road segment that had remained sealed beneath layers of soil for nearly two millennia. Archaeologists uncovered the structure while assessing the land before modern development, a standard procedure in regions with long settlement histories.
December 15, 2025 Miles Brucker

The Female Lawrence Of Arabia You've Never Heard Of

Gertrude Bell was one of history's greatest explorers—equally as important as the lauded Lawrence of Arabia. But few know her incredible story.
December 2, 2024 Sarah Ng
wallup.net

Blood-Curdling Facts About Horror Movies

"We make up horrors to help us cope with the real ones." - Stephen King
December 31, 2023 Miles Brucker