I don't rightly know, but when you have infinite space, energy, and time something is bound to happen.
2007-04-19 18:54:54
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answer #1
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answered by Existentialist 3
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"How did the world created?"
How did learn English?
Are you a Christian? If so, why are you asking this question? You obviously already have a belief on the subject. So I'm inclined to believe you are just trying to start a religious war on Yahoo.
Why can't you just allow people with differing beliefs have them without your need to argue?
2007-04-20 01:57:33
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answer #2
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answered by dlfinefrock 3
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It has been part of human history to attribute things to a god or gods that people lacked an understanding or knowledge of.
I don't know why you posed the question. It must, therefore, be the act of a god. I don't know why people died in Virgina, or why he pulled the trigger, therefore, it must be the act of a good.
2007-04-20 01:59:27
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answer #3
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answered by guru 7
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The atheist position is that existence as we know it is a purely physical phenomenon, controlled by inherent properties of matter and energy. The universe came into existence in a Big Bang when a block of condensed proto-matter exploded due to repulsion between its fundamental particles. The fragments developed into clouds of matter of various densities, whose gravity caused some to aggregate into disks, then stars and planets, while voids developed in the spaces between swept clear by the aggregation. Stars became nuclear fusion reactors due to the gravity of their masses drawing their contents together with great heat and pressure. Gradually, heavier and heavier elements were formed by early stars, which, upon reaching a certain age, exploded, scattering their heavy elements in space to be swept up in the formation of new stars. Our sun and our planet were formed of this modified material by momentum and gravity, its composition dictated by its distance from our sun. As the earth material aggregated, it heated inside and cooled at the surface, from compression and radioactive nuclear decay. The distance of the earth from the sun makes water a liquid here most of the time, making the development of life inevitable due to aqueous chemistry, the abundance of nitrogen and oxygen, heating by the sun, and the electrical activity of the atmosphere due to interaction between water, air and land at the prevailing temperatures. Inevitably, living things competed with each other for resources, those who succeeded in having more offspring replacing those who did not, and as life became more varied, the variety itself created opportunities for more variety. Periodically, asteroids traveling through space struck the planet, wiping out much life and allowing the rest to differentiate anew, creating a succession of forms. Finally, the life form able to change its environment for its own benefit to the detriment of its competitors become dominant - Homo sapiens, thinking man. Looking around, seeking an explanation for the phenomena around him, primitive man conceived of God as the power behind the scenes, not knowing how the observed world is derived purely from its own inherent properties. In this scenario, no supernatural or external consciousness is required to account for all that exists.
There are many unanswered questions in this scenario. For example, where did the block of proto-matter come from? How could a solid, hyper-dense block form out of material so strongly repulsive between its particles that they are still moving apart at near light speeds, six billion years after the initial Bang? Why does the water molecule have an internal angle that makes ice float, the only known crystalline solid which floats in its own liquid, a property without which life as we know it could not exist? Why are eight electrons chemically stable, such that the elements exhibit periodic chemical behavior, another critical fact for the existence of life as we know it? Why are the electronegativities of metals, key to much of modern technology, only partly related to this periodic behavior?
The atheist view is no more provable than the theistic view, which provides that the answer to all unanswerable questions is "God's Will." On a purely scientific basis, the question "does God exist?" cannot be answered, because, by definition, no experiment can be constructed that would compel God to reveal Himself, the failure of which would disprove His existence. The third alternative is called Agnosticism, which states, "I cannot know whether God exists, and do not choose to take a position pro or con on unprovable faith alone." Science by itself is agnostic. Individual scientists may be atheists, agnostics, or theists, as a matter of personal preference.
2007-04-20 02:43:06
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answer #4
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answered by vdpphd 4
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Here's a question for ya...who created god? maybe you should answer that one before you try and figure out what created the earth.
I'm going to cheat and tell you who created god.....are you ready?..... it was man.....
2007-04-20 01:56:42
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answer #5
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answered by Morganna 5
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"Gods" were invented long after humans appeared on Earth.
However, as the universe has an architecture, then there must be or muse have been an "architect".
Identify it and YOU become your own personal god.
2007-04-20 03:42:07
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answer #6
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answered by jacquesh2001 6
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If I was atheist I would want to know how you think everything has only been here for 5,000 years?
2007-04-20 01:55:27
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answer #7
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answered by gnomes31 5
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It just happened.
Now you explain, if god created everything WHO CREATED GOD?
2007-04-20 01:50:52
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answer #8
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answered by Weatherman 7
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I don't know. Is that a bad answer? Because it's the truth. What I DO know, is whatever any religion has said to explain it ISN'T true.
2007-04-20 02:01:07
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answer #9
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answered by Frank 6
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Trillions of years and a random assemblage of space debris.
2007-04-20 01:50:32
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answer #10
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answered by me 1
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