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I have already melted the ice crystal and the snow flake as examples of PERFECT geometry in nature and now its the nautilus shell's turn in the barrel. the shell its self is imperfect spherical shape, The perfect geometry that many people claim to exist in the shell does not. I have seen diagrams of perfect geometry of the shell. and yes one can make perfect geometric model of the shell. some claim this is proof that perfect geometry occurs in nature. But if perfect geometry existed in nature like the diagram models of the shell suggest then a nautilus shell would look EXACTLY like the diagram model of its perfect geometry. But the shell does not look like the geometric model. the shell is imperfectly spherical and its nature in nature is to be spherical and imperfect not perfectly geometric. The ONLY PERFECT GEOMETRIC SHAPE that occurs is the MAN MADE INTELLIGENTLY DESIGNED diagram models of the shells themselves. Yes or no?

2006-07-11 11:34:52 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

9 answers

no.

intelligent design is such a load of crap.

Why create nipples on a man when it doesn't give milk? Why create an appendix when it's not needed? Why even make animals that go extinct?

intelligent BS.

Now tell us the science behind Noah ark too! LMAO.

2006-07-11 11:40:36 · answer #1 · answered by Iomegan 4 · 0 1

Why does life need perfect geometry? How can this be so? Have you never heard of Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle? Even if an object is perfect on the macro scale it wouldn't be perfect on the micro scale. Only the mathematical equation is perfect and on a philosophical level you could even argue against that.

However, your argument doesn't actually discount intelligent design as there is no reason to suppose intelligent design would demand perfection (even though I think intelligent design is totally fabricated and fallacious, but for better reasons than that it requires perfection).

2006-07-11 12:09:10 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

What about minerals that fracture in exact 60 and 120 degree angles? What about a crystal lattice formed from slowly cooling magma? What about the various geometric crystal structures, octahedrons, dodecahedrons and so forth?

2006-07-11 11:50:15 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes, there is perfect geometry in nature. You just aren't looking at small enough things to find it. In crystalline solids, atoms "stack" in lattices that are geometrically perfect.

2006-07-11 11:55:28 · answer #4 · answered by nardhelain 5 · 0 0

How about the individual cells in a beehive? They are perfect hexagons, due to equal pressures being exerted from all sides.
There's the concentric circles formed when something hits a pool of water, like raindrops in a puddle.

2006-07-11 15:07:41 · answer #5 · answered by jogimo2 3 · 1 0

No.

All matter is composed of atoms. If these atoms were not arranged in a "perfect geometry", the universe would cease to be.

And you may be looking at the wrong shells!

2006-07-11 11:45:29 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Perfect geometry? I believe that mathematicians call them proofs and theorems for a reason.

Will D
Enterprise AL

2006-07-11 11:43:09 · answer #7 · answered by Will D 4 · 0 0

there is no such element as actual, certainly acceptable geometry everywhere in the universe. nicely, a minimum of that all of us know of. Everlything has the smallest bump or bend in the periphery.

2016-11-01 21:14:43 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

yes, no perfect geometry in nature

2006-07-11 11:44:02 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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