Hello. In my opinion to find this answer you would have to dig within your very essence. Or travel to the end of reality itself. This question to me has many different answers. Like, I once came to the complete understanding that humanity itself does not truly matter at all. Just because there is no-one on the earth doesn't mean that it stops spinning. People in essence waste time trying to answer this. I wrote a story about the three realms. The realms of Thought, Light, and Dark. This is a quote from it. " The realm of Thought is where the thinkers of the question go." This question has no one answer. I like that you ask this but it is just another part of a temporary existence.
2007-03-30 13:05:07
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answer #1
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answered by mind-scaper 4
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The best answer to the question of life, the universe and everything, is the answer that is provided by the questioner, for it is the only one with actual relevance to the self.
2007-04-01 20:29:57
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answer #2
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answered by judson d 2
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42, duh. It's not only the best Ultimate Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything, it's the ONLY one. You're obviously referring to the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, so anybody who says something besides 42 is seriously wrong and doesn't know what he/she's answering. The Ultimate Question was never found, though, so nobody knows what they're answering when they answer 42 (but everybody knows it's the right answer). We'd really need to find out what the question is.
2007-03-30 20:23:06
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The question is too vague for any answer to be possible. what ABOUT life? what ABOUT the universe? what ABOUT everything? what do you want to know and what do u want to use it for? without any of this provided its all nonsense.
you hitchhiker guide to the galaxy people need to remember that 42 was discovered to be the ultimate answer, but that the REAL hard part was figuring out what the ultimate question was! After much to-do, the ultimate question was finially discovered to be :what is 6 times 7? So it was all correct, simple, and useless. Thats the point of the book.
2007-03-30 19:34:09
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Life is here and now created for all the human race. The universe is what we see when we look up at the moon and stars and space. Everything on Earth provides the rest for us.
Humanity is what we are but a division was made and now we live with the consequences of these choices and decisions made for us. Freedom does not exist for only one human but for the entire human race.
2007-03-30 19:42:26
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answer #5
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answered by Lesha a Canadian. 3
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I think Bono put it well:
"We're One, but we're not the same"
So, in one word: One.
In a number: 1.
The idea that all things, no matter how distant or different, are One. The universe is One.
John Lennon described a goal greater than any religion managed to:
"You may say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join up, and the world will be as one."
One is the answer.
2007-03-30 19:52:17
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answer #6
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answered by bedros 3
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I wasn't aware that life, the universe, and everything was a question. It just seems to be something that is.
2007-03-30 19:41:10
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answer #7
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answered by Answerer 7
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42
2007-03-30 19:31:17
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answer #8
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answered by Ands 7
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This kind of thinking falls under the essentialist camp.
Anti-essentialists take issue with understanding the ways of the universe in terms of prototypes, or essences.
The question of life is difficult to narrow down, even quantum physists admit that such discoveries are not within our life-times.
2007-03-30 19:37:50
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answer #9
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answered by poweranni 7
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42
2007-03-30 19:32:38
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answer #10
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answered by Pathfinder 1
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