It is necessarily true that a plane would be built IF nothing makes that impossible. It might be impossible because the parts are not in the junkyard, and the parts could be aluminum atoms. Or it may be impossible because the tornado does not have the ability to bond the broken windshield fragments, only smash them together, which breaks them down.
From infinity big bangs, there would be me typing this and you reading it...seven...carry the...infinity times.
2006-06-14 12:48:20
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Absolutely. In fact, not only that, but it would *have* to be. An infinite number of times, as well. Ain't infinity grand? I think I see where you're going with this and I agree. In an infinite universe, it doesn't matter how small the chance of life occurring by chance is. It WILL happen, if it has an infinite amount of chances. It has to.
Holy mohammad on a stick, Biomimetik, do you think you clear out some of that two pages of crap? The story's fine but nobody here needs/wants 30 double spaced freaking links to your religious propaganda.
2006-06-14 17:17:37
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answer #2
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answered by The Resurrectionist 6
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If one believes that a living cell can come into existence by coincidence, then there is nothing to prevent one from believing a similar story that we will relate below. It is the story of a town:
One day, a lump of clay, pressed between the rocks in a barren land, becomes wet after it rains. The wet clay dries and hardens when the sun rises, and takes on a stiff, resistant form. Afterwards, these rocks, which also served as a mould, are somehow smashed into pieces, and then a neat, well shaped, and strong brick appears. This brick waits under the same natural conditions for years for a similar brick to be formed. This goes on until hundreds and thousands of the same bricks have been formed in the same place. However, by chance, none of the bricks that were previously formed are damaged. Although exposed to storm, rain, wind, scorching sun, and freezing cold for thousands of years, the bricks do not crack, break up, or get dragged away, but wait there in the same place with the same determination for other bricks to form.
When the number of bricks is adequate, they erect a building by being arranged sideways and on top of each other, having been randomly dragged along by the effects of natural conditions such as winds, storms, or tornadoes. Meanwhile, materials such as cement or soil mixtures form under "natural conditions", with perfect timing, and creep between the bricks to clamp them to each other. While all this is happening, iron ore under the ground is shaped under "natural conditions" and lays the foundations of a building that is to be formed with these bricks. At the end of this process, a complete building rises with all its materials, carpentry, and installations intact.
Of course, a building does not only consist of foundations, bricks, and cement. How, then, are the other missing materials to be obtained? The answer is simple: all kinds of materials that are needed for the construction of the building exist in the earth on which it is erected. Silicon for the glass, copper for the electric cables, iron for the columns, beams, water pipes, etc. all exist under the ground in abundant quantities. It takes only the skill of "natural conditions" to shape and place these materials inside the building. All the installations, carpentry, and accessories are placed among the bricks with the help of the blowing wind, rain, and earthquakes. Everything has gone so well that the bricks are arranged so as to leave the necessary window spaces as if they knew that something called glass would be formed later on by natural conditions. Moreover, they have not forgotten to leave some space to allow the installation of water, electricity and heating systems, which are also later to be formed by coincidence. Everything has gone so well that "coincidences" and "natural conditions" produce a perfect design.
If you have managed to sustain your belief in this story so far, then you should have no trouble surmising how the town's other buildings, plants, highways, sidewalks, substructures, communications, and transportation systems came about. If you possess technical knowledge and are fairly conversant with the subject, you can even write an extremely "scientific" book of a few volumes stating your theories about "the evolutionary process of a sewage system and its uniformity with the present structures". You may well be honoured with academic awards for your clever studies, and may consider yourself a genius, shedding light on the nature of humanity.
The theory of evolution, which claims that life came into existence by chance, is no less absurd than our story, for, with all its operational systems, and systems of communication, transportation and management, a cell is no less complex than a city.
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2006-06-14 17:16:42
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answer #3
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answered by Biomimetik 4
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My husband works on jets. Electronics are pretty temperamental. Dropping some parts is enough to render them perfectly useless. And you'd have to have so many power sources.
It takes several crews of specialists to design, assemble, and work on them. No, I don't think tornadoes - even an infinite number of them - could create one. Even one that didn't work.
Tornadoes are destructive. Not creative.
2006-06-14 17:21:00
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answer #4
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answered by Contemplative Chanteuse IDK TIRH 7
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If this crazy world we live in came about in billions of years, you would think an infinite number of tornadoes could build just about anything.
2006-06-14 19:15:33
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes and you could be the test pilot and your followers are hereby all granted upgraded seats in 1st class on its maiden flight. I'll even throw in extra miles if you agree to make it a one way trip.
2006-06-14 18:11:19
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answer #6
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answered by michael s 3
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That's a lotta wind. Just slightly more than can be found in a typical day on the Y!Answers R&S board. :)
2006-06-14 19:27:04
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answer #7
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answered by ? 7
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Anything is possible. Many things, like the situation quoted in your example, are improbable at best.
2006-06-14 19:15:15
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answer #8
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answered by byhisgrace70295 5
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A long as there were a finite number of monkeys typing about it!
2006-06-14 17:15:54
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Yeah, eventually, assuming that friction didn't first corrode the metal down to nothing.
2006-06-14 17:15:59
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answer #10
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answered by ysk 4
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