God is knowable, and obviously he designed it, I am a biochemistry and a genetics major. God-willing I will be able to prove the Intelligent Design theory, rationally so even those adamant atheists will be convinced, and if they are not, well God has sent them astray.
I am Muslim
peace be with you
2007-03-05 15:29:03
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Read the Sumerian book, the Chronicles of earth, written in or around 6000BCE - 4000BCE.
When you get there look for the symbol of a man called Enki, it is two serpents climbing two ladders, in between the ladders is a perfectly formed DNA structure. Also according to the Sumerians, he is also the creator of Adam and Eve.
Very interesting Reading on a civilization that gave us time, government, astronomy, law, you name it they had it and no one knows where they came from.
This is not fiction but proven fact and it is currently under study by leading universities around the world.
What our history is and what we have been taught appears to be very different as the academic scholars are now discovering.
This could be the most important discovery of our beginnings on earth.
Peace
2007-03-05 23:20:44
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answer #2
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answered by nmp948 4
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You are asking the same questions that scientists ask. You have, however, asked this in the Religion & Spirituality section, where we are mostly humanities majors, not biologists or physicists. Would you come to R&S to find out what opus number was Mozart's 40th Symphony? I think not. You're asking us to play to our weakness. Quite frankly, you're being unfair.
So let me suggest two things:
1. If you are serious about wanting to know the current evidence-based understanding on the origins of the universe and on evolutionary theory, there are excellent descriptions found at http://www.talkorigins.org .
2. Consider that you are proposing (not so subtly) that anything that is not explained is a place for God to be discovered. This is commonly referred to in ontology as "the god of the gaps" theory. It typically assigns God to any blank space that science has not yet reached useful conclusions. Remember what I said about disease? Before bacteria were discovered, it was assumed God was punishing the ill, or that they were demon possessed, or some other supernatural phenomenon caused sickness. This is the same god of the gaps.
Science never assumes, and should never assume, anything is supernatural. The purpose of science is to discover through measured observation, testing, and repetition what natural causes lead to our natural world. If you impose a statement "God caused it," then this stops the search for knowledge, because God is ultimately unknowable. This is the reason that the "god of the gaps" theory is discounted among learned ontological academicians, and is ignored by science.
2007-03-05 23:23:43
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answer #3
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answered by NHBaritone 7
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I imagine there were countless billions upon billions of combinations of various molecules in the early ocean, the ones that conferred some type of selective advantage to the earliest organisms became part of life, the ones that gave no advantage did not.
2007-03-05 23:21:31
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answer #4
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answered by Nick F 6
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Wrong category. You want to ask in "biology".
2007-03-05 23:21:22
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answer #5
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answered by Contemplative Monkey 3
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