who tuned the constants of the universe so amazingly accurate that the universe could not only exist but life on Earth could exist.
If any of these constants were altered even by a millionth of a percent of their value life may not of been possible.
Mathematicians give the odds of the universal constants accidentally being as they are as billions and billions to 1.
Out of all the wide range of theories science can offer out such as different universes created this one being the lucky one and so... Can intelligent design by God be just as plausable?
2006-07-30
21:01:43
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20 answers
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asked by
Gingerbread Man
3
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Society & Culture
➔ Religion & Spirituality
kak that would be blind faith and I'm not happy just accepting no God blindly.
2006-07-30
21:06:17 ·
update #1
chaseredbat, the constants were working perfectly you slipped do to the constants of friction, mass and gravity and not watching wht you were doing.
2006-07-30
21:09:10 ·
update #2
Job 48:4- 6
Where did you happen to be when I founded the earth?
Tell [me], if you do know understanding.
Who set its measurements, in case you know, Or who stretched out upon it the measuring line?
Into what have its socket pedestals been sunk down, Or who laid its cornerstone?
2006-07-30
21:18:29 ·
update #3
ScarletRose, getting bitter and calling something fiction because of prejudice doesn't mean what you say has any fact to reality.
There is no hard proof of a big bang it is a model that some argue for and against.
The question is with the universal constants so finely tuned for life to exist and the mathematical odds of such constants occuring as they are then couldn't intelligent design be as plausable as any theory given by science?
2006-07-30
21:53:29 ·
update #4
Yes. There are too many coincidences to think all this design was an accident. People just want to think what they want because they don't want to change their lives. They want to continue sinning and think its good. The world society is going down the pipes. I hope Jesus comes back soon, I'm pretty ready to get out here and watch them destry themselves and the world from the safe distance of heaven :)
2006-07-30 21:09:18
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answer #1
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answered by blizgamer333 3
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Look up the Antropic Principle.
Physics know these things but 80% of physicists are not religious, and probably more. I find intelligent design a very bad argument, and ultimatley unconsiderable.
Consider...
Matter flying unorganized?
or
Ultimate organization with qualities any human desires! Eternal life, infinite intelligence, love, and power.
The problem is you just don't need a God for life to start.
Some people say it is extremely improbable life could have started, but they are misinformed. Not only is it possible, but probable. I would expect many forms of life spread throughout the universe. It isn't 1/10^360 chances or w/e wishful thinking it is. Life started in steps. It is more 1/2.4x10^24, very high but this is the chance of one cell forming, and billions of oppurtunities were avaiable, and it took almost a billion years to actually start anyways, as opposed to starting immediatley.
2006-07-31 04:09:05
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answer #2
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answered by mathcore321x 2
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who turned the constants of the universe so amazingly inaccurate that i slipped this morning and stubbed my toe so hard half the nail came off? im an agnostic and dont really care how the universe was created, im just glad it was. my toe feels differently.
i do want to say one thing. i could use the same arguments against christians. how did god come to be in the first place. if he was around for infinity then technically there is no such thing as time. he was created an infinity ago. both sides do not seem plausible because of this among other things.
2006-07-31 04:07:19
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answer #3
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answered by chaseredbat 2
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Of course it can. Just look at the beautiful creation of this planet called Earth. I really don't think it was a "random" event, nor are we. With all of our exploration of space, wouldn't we have found something like our Earth out there somewhere by now? Or have been visited by other beings other than these icky UFOs people have seen all over our world? What kind of planet did they come from? Nothing like ours, I would have to think. But who is to say that 10,000 years down the road, we might be visiting another younger planet and doing the same to them as they are doing to us? Did God create them also? Is that how this planet will end up...cold beings in space ships going to younger planets and "harvesting" what they wish? Shudder to think.... but maybe that is part of the evolution. Maybe God created them before he created us. Who the hell knows?
2006-07-31 04:17:08
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answer #4
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answered by 420Linda 4
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I believe in God but I think that given all the infinate time that has preceeded us that it could be entirely possible (given infinate time) that just accidentlly it could happen. Think about infinate time for a second then maybe big bang happend a couple billion times before and just collapsed back on itself. But once it actually produced what we see here. Its not beyond the relm of possibility. For (gasp) where did God come from?
2006-07-31 04:10:39
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answer #5
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answered by Lasher702 3
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Well, I am ignostic so I don't accept that the non-existance of God is conclusive because, of course, it is not. I think that the concept itself is meaningless and, while I accept that people feel good about thinking about it, it really has no meaning. One might as well discuss whether Ares and Jupiter existed because they are written about.
Sure, maybe there is a "Creator". Maybe not. But what then? Who it, he, she may be is the problem. The "Creator" is not neccesarily Christian, Hidu, or Islamic. Who the "Creator" may be is unverifiable
2006-07-31 04:09:39
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answer #6
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answered by ? 5
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They have, also, failed to explain how highly complex, specific, and highly precise information becomes encoded upon DNA molecules.
They believe that such a level information just appears out of nowhere....
That's like saying that the instructions of how to build a space shuttle can just appear randomly without any causation...
Now that is a fairy tale.
2006-07-31 04:03:55
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answer #7
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answered by Adyghe Ha'Yapheh-Phiyah 6
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Statistically speaking, it is not only plausible, it is highly likely.
Further, it is highly UNlikely, given the numbers you have presented, that anything like the 'Big Bang' or evolution occured. These numbers are so small it registers as a statistical IMPROBABILITY; which means it probably didn't happen that way.
2006-07-31 04:08:45
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answer #8
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answered by Lonnie P 7
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Good point! Creation cannot create itself. Like a masterpeice has to have a master to be created. The master has to have all perfections if his creation is to be perfect otherwise all that cosmic science would just have collapsed under the weight of its own imperfection.
2006-07-31 04:07:38
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answer #9
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answered by Ahab 5
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There is no proof of "God", therefore anybody who is a religious freak and backs up their arguments with passages from the bible, and with "words from God", are stupid. The "facts" they provide are fiction, because there is NO proof of God!
2006-07-31 04:22:59
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answer #10
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answered by Stella 4
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