God created it that way
2007-03-13 03:27:06
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answer #1
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answered by SteveA8 6
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The answer you seek is found by inference. It is similar to a person seeing a car moving down the road that has never been seen by the observer before, and the observer infers that it must have been made by mankind, even though it was not seen being made.
What we observe in "nature" has obviously been formed by a process we know nothing about other than speculation. There was no human being present when the universe was formed. There is, though, further insight that may be of interest to you other than what is visual. It has to do with what mankind is composed of, and the duration of this existence.
In the physics trilogy there are three expressions that describe the basis of our existence. These are: E = mc2, m = E/c2, and c2 = E/m, the last being that of a field of physical time, or that of a field of gravity. The single value that does not change in these three is the "c2" one. The reason for this is that it is "time" that is the basis of our existence. Everything in the universe moves from "present time" toward that of becoming the "past" at the same speed. All that ever physically exists to mankind is the very present. There is nothing else, and this value is shown to move at the speed of light (how quickly the present becomes the past).
The ramification of this passage of time becomes that of magnitude, "everything had to be "created" in order to exist as a common value." Were the total universe to unravel into its lowest form it would become energy - single dimensional energy. Thus our entire universe is one-dimensional in construction. We are able to infer that to construct three dimensions from a single dimension requires an act by The Creator.
http://360.yahoo.com/noddarc there is a short writing "The Limitation of Time" that may be of interest. Click on "blog" then on "list view" and scroll down. I think it is #43.
2007-03-13 06:00:24
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Why the laws of fundamental physics are the way they are is not known. There is some hope that they are somehow derived from mathematics---that mathematics requires that reality be ordered in some particular way.
To say that "God did it" begs the question---the idea that a powerful, intelligent superbeing designed our Universe only leads to the question of where that god came from. The idea of a "self-creating God" further begs the question. You can think that if you like, but it isn't really an answer. Many people seem to like that answer, because they then go on to imagine that God cares about their everyday life, intervenes on their behalf, and will ultimately reward them. There is no real evidence for this.
2007-03-13 04:58:34
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answer #3
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answered by cosmo 7
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Why do you insist on imagining that the "secrets" of Nature were created by a "who"? This extremely narrow-minded view prevents you from finding the real truth for yourself. Try typing "God is imaginary" in any search engine and see what you find.
2007-03-13 03:09:41
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answer #4
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answered by Diogenes 7
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I guess someone just got the idea from Sir Isaac Newton. You should give credit to Newton too.
2007-03-13 03:05:20
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answer #5
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answered by popcorn 2
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For several millennia, we have been (at least most of the people are) giving credit where it belongs for creating this wonderful thing called gravity: God.
2007-03-13 05:08:20
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answer #6
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answered by ramshi 4
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Gravitation came with the universe.
2007-03-13 03:15:33
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answer #7
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answered by Gene 7
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God, and after that Newton.
2007-03-13 17:57:48
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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everything in the world is created by 'GOD'
2007-03-13 04:33:01
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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