youre absolutely right.and pay no attention to the grammar nazis
2007-03-05 10:52:13
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answer #1
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answered by W J 3
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I absolutely agree! I'm a religous Jew, and I've had some of my most spiritual moments in biology class. The more you learn, the more you realize just how perfect and well thought-out God's world is.
FYI: A lot of people think that the Big Bang is a Big Problem. There's an excellent book called The Science Of God that shows it's really not. I really don't understand the complicated equations the author uses, but he uses Einstein's theory of reletivaty to show that fifteen billion years from an Earth perspective equals exactly six days from the perspective of the universe.
2007-03-05 11:32:44
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answer #2
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answered by Melanie Mue 4
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Why do people think that understanding science exempts God? We hardly know anything. We think because we have a little bit of technology, a few telescopes out in space, and a couple of vaccines, that we have even the slightest grasp of scientific knowledge. Just because you can explain how one thing happens doesnt mean you have proven something else isnt true. God organized this earth on scientific principles, principles we have just barely begun to understand. When someone can tell me how everything in the world and universe works then I guess they will be a God themselves and will have proven that a God can indeed exist.
2007-03-05 10:49:26
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answer #3
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answered by cadisneygirl 7
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And, if more people had a better understanding of science, they wouldnt need Gods...
And, if you stopped reading the Bible and perhaps read a book on the English language, you'd know that "they'd understand science more better" is a grammatically incorrect statement.
2007-03-05 10:49:16
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answer #4
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answered by ? 5
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Perhaps if you discard the idea of a God you could learn how to use the english language better. NOT MORE BETTER!
Why not follow the evidance and not the man made fables! The evidance points to NO GOD! Why would a God do that???
2007-03-05 10:49:39
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I think it is just the positive. The more a person is knowledgeable about science, the better they would understand God.
2007-03-05 10:48:08
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answer #6
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answered by MoPleasure4U 4
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No.
I think that if people understood reality better then they would understand science better.
Tell me, how do biblical claims of flat immovable planets, talking animals, global floods, and a six day earth at all support science?
2007-03-05 10:49:07
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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why would people understand science better? Knowing God didn't seem to help your grammar. You shouldn't use the phrase "more better" it makes you seem ignorant.
2007-03-05 10:47:09
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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The laws of science and nature are man made laws God defies those laws. And yes they would understand a whole lot of things much better if only they knew God.
2007-03-05 10:46:57
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answer #9
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answered by Angelz 5
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I agree with you all the way!
Even some of the most famous scientists of all time (Newton, Darwin) were Christian. We can live a life in which religion explains science, there is more proof of a pro-creator (our God is that btw) than there is no-creator.
As Albert Einstein once said "science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind".
2007-03-05 10:48:14
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answer #10
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answered by Cookie_Monster_UK 5
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would god use grammar MORE BETTER than his spokes-person? Or if he were smarter, wouldn't he have picked a spokes-person who understands the workings of basic grammar?
Besides, what do the myths I choose to surround myself with have to do with understanding the facts of science???
2007-03-05 10:47:54
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answer #11
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answered by the guru 4
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