Ah, but there you're assuming God has mass... perhaps he is some weird no mass entity or more like some inside us all...
I really have no clue (being an Atheist). Try asking your nearest theologists from a safe distance. ;)
2007-01-28 10:23:21
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answer #1
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answered by Katie A 1
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But, I have heard that e does not always = mc2 when travelling through certain substances, so your basic premise may be wrong, and your theory shot to pieces. Wish I could remember what the substance was and who said it, cos then I could sound like a real physicist.
It was water
2007-01-28 18:25:44
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answer #2
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answered by jeanimus 7
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God is light, why would he want to exceed himself? Could god go faster than himself is you question? He is a brighter light than the light that we see, so he would be faster than the speed of light. What is infinity? And why ask a question for a speed that has no definition?
2007-01-28 18:27:41
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Does E=mc2? It's a mans THEORY! Has this theory been proven? No! That's why it's called the THEORY of relativity. You are asking if God is limited to a mans theory?! That's funny!
2007-01-28 18:34:10
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answer #4
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answered by Jon H 1
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to the idiot "Alvaro E. A" above me, e=mc2 has PLENTY to do with it. accoriding to lorents symmetry, the speed of light remains the same no matter how fast the light source is moving, meaning that as you approch the speed of light, time slows, distances contract and energy and mass are interchangeable
2007-01-28 18:30:52
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answer #5
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answered by Matthew M 2
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Is that the limit of God, or the limit of expressed phenomena in the manifold of space/time?
My question is, can God create a being who knows more than God?
2007-01-28 18:24:23
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answer #6
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answered by neil s 7
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Maybe Einstein is wrong? Uh oh, I just questioned The Master...
Check out: http://www.thunderbolts.info for anything you might want to know about astronomy. The electric universe theory is the wave of the future. I'm pretty sure the force of gravity exceeds light speed.
2007-01-28 18:22:38
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answer #7
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answered by Atlas 6
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This is a logically fallible 'false pretenses' theory. In which you are trying to subject a non-physical idea/being with a physical law. Same rule of fallacy applies to the 'a rock so be he couldn't lift it' proposition.
2007-01-28 18:25:39
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answer #8
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answered by Theophile 2
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God is not a created being therefore not subject to relativity, which only applies within the created order.
2007-01-28 18:24:47
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answer #9
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answered by HAND 5
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And if God knows everything that is going to happen (omniscient) then he can't change his mind - meaning he's not omnipotent. And if he's omnipotent (can direct things as he wishes) he isn't omniscient...
2007-01-28 18:22:51
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answer #10
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answered by Bad Liberal 7
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