No.
Our bodies are not harmonious ensembles, rather they are in a constant state of change like everything else.
Planets are turning, but it only seems regular in our perception of time and space. Actually, the rotation of planets is not regular and is constantly changing.
Your last question makes you sound a little mad.
2007-03-13 00:56:13
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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No, I don't think so. If you have lived long enough, you hav no doubt encountered some "improbable" events. I, for instance, have seen a dime fall to the floor and stand on edge. I have also seen a cigarette brushed from the corner of a desk and land upright on the butt. So, "given time enough. the improbable happens." Consider that there were billions of years durning which the primordial sea, bombarded with lightning blasts almost constantly. Every now and then - every millinneum or so - the right combination of atoms would be struck with just the right amount of energy to cause the formation of a molecule. Let this happen a few billion times over a few billion years, and one such combination will be capable of sustaining itself and multiplying. In time, life as we know it will evolve.
This is quite a simplification of a complex subject, but I for one am satisfied to believe that life arose spontaneously, without the aid of any "higher intelligence."
2007-03-13 01:04:35
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answer #2
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answered by Alfred W 1
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Peace of recommendations is nearly a boat on gentle water ... there's a stillness and centeredness that creates the peace. insanity is nearly a boat in a hurricane ... there's no stillness and no centeredness and hence no substrate upon which to construct peace (particularly actually: with schizhophrenia, there's a neurotransmitter imbalance interior the recommendations which does no longer enable the sufferer to reveal screen out unimportant stimuli, and that they are tossed approximately each which way and have no center to relax in). very oftentimes, as quickly as we predict of we'd desire to appreciate deep questions, our real time table is to locate stable floor under our ft, a good sense of secure practices. searching for secure practices is a very basic psychological coping mechanism, yet no longer inevitably an invaluable one. for occasion: some years in the past, a brilliant twister went by way of a trailer courtroom on the edge of our city. there have been human beings residing on the alternative element of city, miles removed from the twister, who had submit nerve-racking rigidity sickness afterwards ... in straight forward terms because of the fact their fake sense of secure practices were rocked. as quickly as we permit pass of our desire for this reassurance, this sense of "secure practices" in existence, and as a replace stay our existence because it comes up, we start to locate peace. Oh, that's lots extra beneficial than that. yet that's the start.
2016-10-18 06:30:20
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Of course. Life comes from intelligent conscious being and Life certainly does not come from chaos. Any amount of chaotic big bang or fusion of chemicals is not going to bring life into existence.
One who thinks otherwise is thinking out of poor fund of knowledge. They can be made rich by getting proper knowledge from proper persons who are in knowledge. Otherwise they will remain in madness and think ignorance
is bliss.
2007-03-13 15:33:33
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answer #4
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answered by Gaura 7
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everything around us is "co-incidence"
if fish were growing on trees in place of apples, we'd not not think it's illogical because we'd have no comparisons
so... there's order in mobile chaos at some time.... always...
2007-03-13 01:23:17
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answer #5
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answered by ♫ Nightingale 3
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Actually, no, it is not madness, and I can explain why, if you are willing to think deeply for about 5 minutes. Chaos is commonly thought of as "disorder" and this is basically correct, but there is more to the story. What is "disorder"? It is simply a bunch of elements existing in such a way that their arrangement cannot be described in any way more simply than to just list all of the elements and explain how each one fits into the whole collection. Imagine sprinkling some ink on a sheet of paper then trying to tell someone to recreate the pattern on a different piece of paper. If all you can do is measure the distance from each dot to every other dot, etc. then the arrangement of dots is random. Compare this to a pattern of dots that form a square. In this case you only need a couple of measurements to locate the square on the paper and say how big it is. This is a highly ordered set of dots. Now the question is, can you get highly ordered patterns of dots from a bunch of randomly distributed dots? The answer is yes, and you can very easily prove this for yourself by following the link I have provided below and investigating John Conway's "Game of Life" for a few minutes. What you will find is that random distributions of dots often transform into interesting patterns, as if by magic.
How does this work? To understand the principles of self-organization in detail you would need to study the mathematics of chaos and complexity, but the basic idea is that a few extremely simple rules applied recursively to a few randomly distributed elements can generate infinite complexity. Of course you won't see infinite complexity when you play the Game of Life on your computer because you are limited to a small playing area, but if you pay attention you will notice that a lot of the patterns move to the edge of the screen and would keep going if the playing field was not so small.
Now of course this is just a game, so you might wonder what this has to do with real life? Well, let me tell you. Mathematicians have proven that Conway's Game of Life is a complex system. What this basically means is that the Game of Life can, in principle, be used to model any computational system, no matter how complex it might be. So if your brain is a computational system, then the Game of Life could be used to model the activity of your neurons from the day you were born until the day you die. This would not be practical to do, but the point is that it would be mathematically possible. My deeper point, however, is that all of the complex neural activity that has gone on in your brain throughout your life can be modeled by applying some relatively simple rules to a chaotic system. Even if you introduce quantum uncertainty, you could still understand the emergence of order from chaos – you would just have to speak in terms of probabilities rather than strict determinism. (In other words, if it turns out that the brain is not a computational system in the ordinary sense, this would not necessarily mean that the Game of Life couldn't model it. It would just mean that we couldn't use the model to make precise and reliable predictions about the dynamic evolution of particular systems. We could, however, still show how complex patterns of behavior can develop.)
And finally, you might be wondering how applying rules to dots tells us anything about he real world. Well, the laws of nature can be thought of as rules, and the elements of matter can be thought of as the "dots" in our game. In the Game of Life the computer supplies the energy for the patterns to form, but in the real world what we need is a system that is pushed out of "thermodynamic equilibrium". The term "thermodynamic equilibrium" just means a system without much usable energy. If you leave your cup of hot coffee sitting on your table for an hour, it will cool off to room temperature, and this is an example of equilibrium. But before the coffee cools off, the difference in heat can be put to practical use. You could, for example, use it to warm up your cold hands. The surface of the earth is a system that is pushed far away from thermodynamic equilibrium because the sun pours a bunch of energy into it every day (not to mention geothermal energy, chemical energy, etc.) This means that there is a bunch of energy available to "build stuff." All you need is some basic elements (atoms), some basic rules of interaction between the elements (laws of nature), and some energy to drive the system (the sun, etc.) and voila! – you have the basic ingredients for creating infinitely complex patterns.
Now according to Einstein, matter is really just a form of energy. So can you guess what life is? It is complex patterns of energy. And what is energy? Good question, but one thing we know is that it is the basic stuff of motion, in other words, change, and thus it is the essence of PROCESS. Life is energy in process. Since science does not have any deep explanation of exactly what energy is (aside from just accepting it as the basic stuff of existence - the ultimate "given" in all of our logical arguments), it turns out that you can be as mystical as you want about life and the deep question of why we are here. The evolution of life from chaos takes nothing whatsoever away from the ultimate mystery of Being, nor does it prevent you from following almost any sort of spiritual path you want to follow. Order from chaos is a beautiful, natural, utterly spontaneous fact of reality. For those of you who believe in God, you are free to say that God is energy (or God created energy, if you just can't get passed the whole notion of God as a Creator) – in which case the spontaneous order from chaos is just a rational way of describing the divine tool of creative process.
2007-03-13 01:49:47
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answer #6
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answered by eroticohio 5
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life create chaos
2007-03-13 02:08:12
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answer #7
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answered by hari prasad 5
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We agree dear friend.
Love and blessings Don
2007-03-13 00:56:25
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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