Hey, why would you want some responses if you've already told other people how to answer?
2007-03-05 13:27:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Nobody created me, in the sense you mean. Most things that exist in this universe were not "created", in the sense of being deliberately crafted by some enigmatic, otherworldly designer. The fact that people see design where none exists has been confirmed in psychological studies to be an error or bias in the way we think. Humans tend naturally to view the universe in a human perspective: we see faces in the moon and clouds, we ascribe conscious and deliberate intent to random and arbitrary events, etc. It is therefore completely understandable that humans would view the universe itself in this sort of human paradigm, in order to help try to comprehend the sheer horrifying immensity of the cosmos. But what this view really amounts to is hollow speculation, and hiding from unpleasant realities.
The evidence gathered thus far strongly indicates the following: I exist because my parents gave birth to me; my parents exist because their parents gave birth to them; and so on, to the very earliest life forms, which were barely even recognizable as "living" at all (much like viruses are debatably "alive"), and which developed through natural chemical processes from undesigned assortments of organic chemicals. The fact that life forms demonstrate complexity and order no more implies design than the fact that snowflakes do. In the same way that natural processes can result in remarkably consistent, complex, and even beautiful arrangements without any conscious intention behind them in the case of snowflakes, so can this occur in the case of organisms.
And the evidence indicates that it does; there is no evidence for a Creator having created us, there is no apparent reason for such a Creator to have created us, there is no apparent way a Creator could have created us, and there is no apparent reason for a Creator to have created us in the way that we are. This doesn't mean that it is impossible that we were created; but it does make the proposition that a Creator made us for some special, magical purpose--appealing though such fantasies may be--just as implausible as the idea that each individual snowflake exists for some divine and cosmic purpose.
2007-03-05 21:20:24
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answer #2
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answered by Rob Diamond 3
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See, thats the problem with religious people. You automatically default to "someone created" us. Why does there need to be a "someone"? There doesn't need to be a "someone" because nature is quite capable of creating us itself through things like evolution.
2007-03-05 21:28:14
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't believe in any way of being created except by God. He says he knew me before I was in the womb. He says that I am made in his image. He says that I am fearfully and wonderfully made. He says that I am loved with an every lasting love. Sounds good to me.
2007-03-05 21:24:07
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I know my Dad and Mom did their job by creating me... and that is not cheating that is the absolute truth.
Well .... maybe I could ask you .... Who created god? Don't say he is the almighty one and hence he was there, because he says so, that is cheating.
2007-03-05 21:20:18
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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God created me
2007-03-05 21:20:07
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answer #6
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answered by Jesus Freak 5
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There're these little things called quarks. Quarks make up protons, nuetrons, and electrons. The protons, nuetrons, and electrons make up atoms which in turn make up molecules and so forth.
2007-03-05 21:22:58
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answer #7
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answered by KJ 5
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So, it's cheating to give the true answer?
2007-03-05 21:28:51
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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I'm the product of over 3 billion years of evolution. And I am here because my mother gave birth to me.
2007-03-05 21:24:00
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Cheating or no, I was "created" by my parents.
2007-03-05 21:20:05
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answer #10
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answered by N 6
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