The entire thing you just posted is in a different language to me.
right, but what does this all mean now as far as GOD/Evolution is concerned?
AND,,,what can we do with this discovery now? Will it be of any use to us in any way possible?
There is a reason I got a C in physics.
The Big Bang Theory is going to have a field day with this. I see at least one episode about it coming next season.
The important question is "now what?" or "what's next?"
So here's my understanding of it, in terms we can understand. Real scientists, I've taken some liberties with poetic license, but I think this works. Feel free to correct or elaborate as necessary.
The Higgs boson is Kyrie irving in the Cavs' universe. He gives us substance and mass, and without him, our team is just a bunch of empty forces interacting with each other but with no real substance. We have long predicted that such a player should exist, and had a hypothetical understanding of what we needed in such a player, but we could only have him with a very high energy draft pick. When we drafted that player, we thought he fit perfectly into the model we created, but until proven last year, it was only hypothetical.
Sure, we've had the four forces on our team. We had Anthony Parker, the Weak Force. Not really sure what he does, but without him, we don't have a complete team. Antawn is the strong force. Hard to believe I'm calling him Strong, but he scores points, and no one else really does that. We're hoping Dion Waiters becomes the Strong Force, and represents it in a much better manner. Tristan and Andy are electricity and magnetism. They provide excitement and energy, the rebounding and defense. Important forces, they win championships, and really are flip sides of the same coin. They can be considered two faces of one and the same force. Gravity will hopefully be provided by Tyler Zeller. A true center is the force in the middle, and the ball really revolves around and is pulled toward the center, but we haven't had this in years, since the Z force, and we've forgotten what it looks like.
But the Higgs Boson, Kyrie Irving, he stands alone in our universe. Not a force, but an elementary particle. And the final piece to the puzzle of our Standard Model of a complete team. He provides the substance to the Cavs universe. Without him, there is no mass, and without mass, there is no gravity. Without mass, there is no impact, substance, or solidity to our team. Just a bunch of empty forces interacting, but with no meaning or impact. We've known for a long time that such a player existed. We plotted and schemed, and calculated exactly what that player should look like. We knew what he would do, what he would measure, but we searched and we searched, and never had definitive proof. We found some pretenders and tried to make them work. Mo kind of looked like he should fit the part, but once plugged in, it became clear that he really didn't. Lebron? Wrong particle, and he decayed in a way that few could have predicted at the time. We had to start over with a new and better model. But a particle like Kyrie could only come into existence with a very high energy draft pick, and after a lot of careful planning, experimentation, and calculation. When we drafted him, we thought we might have had the real thing, but we weren't too sure. He looked like he fit the calculations properly, but he wasn't proven. Only now, after seeing for sure what he could do on the court for a full year, and against real NBA players, can we say with scientific certainty that he is it.
Is he proven absolutely? Well, we can't really say that with 100% certainty. He'd have to win a few championships or at least we'd have to have an excellent and winning team for years - it depends on who you are and what you expect, in order to 'have proof'. But most reasonable people would say he's it, that we have sufficient evidence now to say so. Even though 100% absolute proof is not attainable, there's no such thing, really. But with regard to the Higgs Boson, there is less than a 1 in 2 million chance that it's not the correct particle, and in the scientific community, that is enough to say that it's 'proof'.
So there you go, my lame analogy for Kyrie Irving, aka the Higgs Boson, aka the God Particle, of the Cleveland Cavaliers.