English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

If we consider to do some repetitive stuff like typping the same keystroke, at some time we are going to fail. I think that is due to some information attached to us, which if we discovered, and altered, we are going to limit those imperfections. Doing this, will also allows us to perform better in sport, because we have some restrictions in speed, jumps, etc.Besides, have you heard that under extraordinay circumtances, we can do something (jump higher, run faster) due the the adrenaline? So please, consider this information to be useful for your answer.
R.E.S.T.

2006-12-08 03:18:52 · 4 answers · asked by Randall S 2 in Science & Mathematics Biology

4 answers

Imperfect creatures cannot conceive perfection. We can only impose our own concept of beauty and ability on what we perceive as ugliness and incompetence and vainly imagine what our own individual egotistical definition of a perfect world would be.
While certainly the process of de-evolution is closer to scientific fact than evolution, we are still wonderfully and fearfully made creations of God Almighty. The nearest approach to perfection we will ever achieve in this age is to let go of our pride and prejudice and let Him guide us in our imperfection to do that which will most greatly benefit the world as it exists today. This is possible because Jesus Christ, God on Earth as a human, paid the price by His unjust death to redeem us from our fallen and lost status as the property of Satan. God, the author of your DNA, will lead you closer to perfection than any other source.
Hitler was obsessed with the concept of perfecting humans - look at the carnage he inflicted in that pursuit. While 'religion' is generally blamed for the bulk of wars throughout history by those who oppose Ultimate Truth, God is not the author of those things - it is brought about by men's prejudice, greed, lust, and misguided desire to impose their concept of order or perfection on others who do not measure up to or do not agree with the idea.
It is fascinating to imagine someday being able to take a crippled, damaged person and perhaps along the lines of 'Star Trek' "beam" them into sub-atomic particles where they could be precisely reconstructed from the genetic level on up to have a "perfect" body. But how to we handle intellect, spirit, soul, artistic ability, emotional balance, desire, hope, selfishness, good, evil - all those things that make us who we are regardless of the vessel we occupy?

2006-12-08 04:04:40 · answer #1 · answered by rumplesnitz 5 · 0 0

I do not think any of that information was useful to that answer. It sounds like you have spent too much time reading X-men and watchin Heroes. Humans are limited in a lot of ways. Certainly if our DNA was significantly altered, we could eliminate some of those limitations, but they would create new ones. Specifically, when you talk about perfection, you need to define exactly what you mean. What is perfection? What are we trying to obtain? The ability to run faster? When we achieve that, won't people like you want the ability to run faster than that? I mean, what are we really talking about here.

2006-12-08 03:25:06 · answer #2 · answered by pdigoe 4 · 1 0

Probably the same way that they account for the human appendix. By providing an intentionally vague description of a hypothetical function that has little or no evidence to back it up. Creationists can be so... erm... creative. I almost hated doing this, because it may actually encourage some of them to do exactly what I've mentioned above.

2016-05-23 06:36:28 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Your thoughts imply humans are totally programmable which ignores our brains. Our capability to assimilate information and use it to form thoughts and in turn choose actions for ourselves is not something that is controlled solely by a static code. Yes our brains derive from coding. but what we do with our brains comes from our decision, our learning, our environment.

2006-12-08 03:31:34 · answer #4 · answered by bardmere 5 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers