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The question "is there such thing as beginning?" is totally unanswerable as of these years. It may be that there'd be raised answers, but they could never be considered factual, they'd just exist as theories. But as for my understanding, and a believer of evolution, answers for this question would soon come out ONLY after thousands of years.. For I believe that our human brains are not too developed enough to understand such cases, and only by the time the next thousands of generations would come, with them more advanced structure of human brains, this question would be "answered."

2006-08-09 17:01:46 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

16 answers

No, I don't want ot agree with you simply so that I can go through my own thought process to get to the same point that you are at now... because I am human and that's what we do!

2006-08-09 17:06:12 · answer #1 · answered by Starlight 5 · 0 0

I wouldn't like to agree with you. How else can you explain all the things around you, all the people, animals, and trees, if there was no beginning to all of these. We did not just popped out into this world from nowhere, and even if that were the case, popping out from nowhere could be considered a beginning. There's an end to everything, maybe just in form or state, but that is an ending, and therefore I believe that there is also a beginning. People die and babies are born, and the conception of a baby can be considered a beginning in its own although you might say that his life is just a continuation of his parents' life, which is totally not the case because it is a union of two parents' genes, and I doubt if the baby will agree to the thought that his life is just a continuation of someone else's; he deserves to live his life as his own and not anybody else's morsel.

2006-08-10 01:02:37 · answer #2 · answered by malko 3 · 0 0

the principal question, "Is there such thing as a beginning?" can be followed up by, "how must it end?". see, the key is not to realize it's source, but to observe it's development. everything we have is a new beginning, like every sunrise... every tomorrow brings changes, every decisions brings different solutions, every options has its choices to pick different in it's approach... therefore, for every existing change applies a new beginning.

so the real question would lie on "how would it end?" or "will it end?". we can never surmise the reason if it becomes the beginning, but we can experience it's challenges, and always expects it's end... for such is the wonder of man...

2006-08-10 02:37:25 · answer #3 · answered by VeRDuGo 5 · 0 0

Given the length of generations in human beings evolution will take millions of years to occur, that in addition to the fact that our technology has isolated us from our environment leads me to believe that evolution of the brain will be rather unlikely. Our advancement depends on knowledge aquired from the experience of prior generations. Our reasoning skills don't seem any more developed than those of aristotle. What leads you to believe that brain structure is going to evolve for the positive. Are you presumeing darwins theory of evolution or some other theory? Perhaps the great percentage of our own DNA which is unused will unlock some hidden potential of the human being? Your hope of evolution sounds like fantasy.

2006-08-10 00:23:41 · answer #4 · answered by kioruke 2 · 0 0

I agree.
But that should not mean for us to stop searching for the answers.
Searching for the answers is part of the evolution.
When you're searching, there's never an agreement that you will find the answers, but there's also never an agreement that you will not.
So lets keep going in the direction we are going, and keep studying and trying to figure things out the best we can.

2006-08-10 00:07:54 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I don't think an answer is possible, because regardless of what we come up with, it would still be speculative.

And regardless of the theory, there would still be detractors...

So. Is there and answer to the question? Not a firm one. Regardless of brain development.

2006-08-10 00:08:34 · answer #6 · answered by Village Idiot 5 · 0 0

I don't know about your philosophy, but your grammar is pretty bad, dude
As to your question, the Bible says there was a beginning and that is good enough for me.

2006-08-10 00:08:43 · answer #7 · answered by jchristop05 3 · 0 0

i don't agree with you
i think we have been created as complete humans with complete brains
what change is our thoughts & cultures , not our brains
& about your Q ... god is the begining!
he created the universe & then it is constantly growing up ,the universe i mean,!

2006-08-10 11:57:27 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i disagree with u...and i'm sure u have point but if there was no beggining, where'd did everything start? the better question is when was the beggining?

there is a begginign of life...birth
w/e was created has a beggining

2006-08-10 00:09:47 · answer #9 · answered by knightamar13 3 · 0 0

i dont know I'd have to take out your brain to look at it and see what i think and by the time we all get done with it would it be obsolete. so why bother

2006-08-10 13:27:23 · answer #10 · answered by mike L 4 · 0 0

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