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For instance, if you didn't know how you came to be, what is above the clouds, how babies are made, why kids get cancer, etc... is attributing a creator to these unknown things a good idea?

2006-12-11 04:38:54 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

7 answers

I doubt it...Come on, in the past people didn't know anything about the sun,the moon,the atmosphere,the storms,the weather and so on,they were scared of these things and called them gods...now we know what these things are and the idea of worshiping them seems funny.But we still keep finding god in things that we can't understand.What will happen if one day science finds answers to all these questions?What if we find out after all how big the universe is,where it starts and where it ends,and whether there are aliens and what happens after death?Just wondering....

2006-12-11 04:48:39 · answer #1 · answered by Victory 4 · 0 0

To beleive in God is inevitable....Your questions have already been answerd through your schooling to which the Almighty himself had given to learn...If you don't ask, how would you know? Just be carefull upon what you ask of Him, Think of the commandments before you ask upon the knowledge that you seek.

2006-12-11 13:25:28 · answer #2 · answered by vincent d 1 · 0 0

An atheist will say it's not a good reason. It's an easy answer, but not necessarily (and probably not) the correct one. A wise man once said:

"When an atheist finds the truth, he calls it happiness. When a theist finds happiness, he calls it the truth."

That wise man was... me. :)

2006-12-11 12:45:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

yes, maybe. it's how people see the religion. i see it as hope for better lives without all this bullshit of this society. i see it as something that supports us while we're walking on this difficult path of life. for other people, it's unanswered questions who lead them to God, and they hope these questions will be answered someday.

2006-12-11 12:41:43 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

That is how most religions originated. People were trying to explain things that seemed inexplicable.

2006-12-11 12:42:11 · answer #5 · answered by ana_is_a_cat 4 · 2 0

No, dude. That's just the intellectually lazy answer.

2006-12-11 12:45:26 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

if you are alluding that you believe there is no GOD, then just say it.. at one point science and religion were one and the same.

2006-12-11 12:53:58 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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