Maybe when that happens peoples minds will open up and realize that with so much stuff, out there, God would not limit himself to one little planet.
Must one be "religious" in order to have faith? We will set aside our differences when we decide to let it go. Or you can just warp youself away and be done with it.
Steve
2006-10-24 03:14:04
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answer #1
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answered by steve 2
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I think you'd end up with people of significantly differing philosophies/religion spreading out to different planets to build up a power base and eventually they would all decide Earth was the home-cradle of their particular beliefs and thus was rightfully theirs.
You'd end up with a massive war, earth would be pretty well annihilated, then everyone would start blaming each other and there'd be unending war.
In the end, Muslims (predominantly Arabs), would fall first, then the Christians (predominantly caucasians and africans), the Atheists and Buddhists (25/75 split between caucasians and asians) would forge a long-lasting alliance, the pagans (fairly even mix) would try to stay uninvolved but open diplomatic and trade channels with the Athuddist alliance. Jews would evolve into the merchant class (no offense meant, I'm speaking of cultural generalities, not specific individuals). The hindus would likely split and go with which group best appealed to each individual or group and they'd slowly integrate into their respective chosen cultures, contributing their values while absorbing the given culture.
This would remain the status quo for a few centuries. However, as the Athuddist alliance continued to expand, the merchant guild would eventually be politicized and integrated into that alliance's structure.
At this point, if the Pantheist and Polytheist Confederacy fell, it would be a disaster for the human race, because they would be maintaining the primary 'human nature' aspects while the Athuddist alliance would be taking care of the mind. In short, humanity would have split into two final groups, one that was atheistic and scientific, the other that was omnitheist and human-oriented. So long as humanity had both these halves, it would survive. The loss of one would cause the fatal stagnation of the other. Their integration would cause them to lose their distinctiveness and would end the same way, with fatal stagnation.
2006-10-24 03:11:50
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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No.
God warps space and time all the time. How do you think God and the Angeles get around? You think their minds are limited by the physical realities of Newtonian physics? Einstein says a brick can fall upwards in a Realativistic Universe.
He's a human not a God.
But if you or I said a brick could fall upwards, we'd be laughed at. Einstein says it and people try and figure out how to do it!
God and Jesus tells us WE CAN BE LIKE THEM and no one pays attention.
Jesus walked on water, feed the masses with nothing, turned water into wine and raised the dead with the touch of a hand.
You never heard of CPR?
Religion is put forth slyly in many differnt forms and formats.
The trick is, not to bend the spoon, but to realize there is no spoon!
Everything is Atoms (Adam?).
Let's face it, that is YOUR reality.
The only difference between the spoon and you is the make up of the Atomic template.
So, let's go back to Einstein. In a Newtonian universe the brick falls to the Earth (downwards). In a Relativistic Universe, the brick can fall upwards.
If Jesus is a looney, then so is Einstein.
Both talk nonsense. Walking on water, bricks falling upwards.
What makes your science more valid than religion. Both are about the nature of the universe(s).
Warp through space. We'll do it. God can do it, we can do it.
Jesus and God already KNOW how to do it and they said WE can do it too, but cryptically.
Jesus said things like, you have to be like little children.
Limited knowledge of good and evil? A more vivid imagination? The ability to fantasize?
Hard to say what he meant by that.
Your science will do it, but probably NOT in our lifetimes!
The difference is, Science relies on processes and machines.
God and Jesus just do it.
Now, go work on that concept.
The Japaense have already manged to, with limitations, move a mouse cursor using brain power.
The brain generates waves (maybe even particals for all we know) and if you will yourself you make a different wave form.
Religion says if you will yourself you can warp time and space. You are manipulate atomic mass.
Science is epitomized in the Krell, just be careful of Monsters from the Id, eh!
2006-10-24 04:55:35
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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When I get to participate in warp space travel I will forget everything religious I ever knew. Because then I will be experiencing the true metaphysical realms firsthand.
2006-10-24 03:03:07
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answer #4
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answered by a_delphic_oracle 6
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Such large magnitude it may be to shuttle at warp velocity. Such lands we'd see. Such destiny's we'd have. yet does such deliver peace and happiness to this international? Does it enhance are non secular nature for the greater suitable? Will the Earth exchange right into a sane planet? i think of faith is maximum quite substantial, right here, there and everywhere.
2016-10-16 08:24:48
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answer #5
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answered by graviett 4
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It is a forgotten piece of Christia doctrine that space is a spherical globe in which the earth is the center and the stars are affixed to the shell. What happens when the spaceship crashes into that shell?
2006-10-24 03:03:22
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Why would a person's religious belief change if warp space traveling was accomplished?
2006-10-24 03:10:59
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answer #7
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answered by Sick Puppy 7
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Can't talk, I have to take 5 of 10 out for a walk, he needs to go.
2006-10-24 03:08:33
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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God is in the whole universe so were I go, He goes
2006-10-24 03:01:14
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answer #9
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answered by ckrug 4
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