Exactly! Random life is as impossible as a random web page.
Spot on.
2007-05-24 10:04:47
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Let me put it to you another way: Randomly recombining the molecules of an unbroken egg will not create a cracked egg with albumen spreading radially across the ground, before drawing to a halt.
No, it will create something totally unrecognisable, possibly something not visible to the naked eye - possibly an unfortunate explosion, but not a neatly cracked egg. However, apply gravity, friction, fixatropics... in other words, drop that egg in a world ruled by the laws of physics, chemistry & biology, and you will have the result you're looking for. Does that mean you need God to drop the egg? For that matter, does the egg need to be dropped? No, you can even have the egg fall by accident and it will still be shaped by the laws of physics.
Similarly, reproduction obeys the laws of biology, physics and chemistry to result in the world you see today. Claiming that evolution is pure chance is a vastly oversimplified view of the world around you.
Also, the analogy you drew between DNA and binary reminded me of a fascinating set of projects in the last few years involving the use of Natural Selection rules to write software. One example is the "Genetic Programming" project in which yielded software competitive with conventional human created ones - even converging on patented ideas and formulating new patentable ones.
2007-05-24 07:35:35
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Randomly generated DNA or binary code would generally create just random chains.
However, DNA that stemmed from simple chains, competed with each other, replicated into similar chains, which again competed for resources, and so on, would eventually be shaped by the environment into more and more complex chains as the fittest survived and the weakest died off.
That's the basic fault into your premise. DNA wasn't just created, as is, randomly. It was shaped through millenia of bumping up against the environment and other organisms. This process is not just random and it does not require a sentient being to drive it either.
2007-05-24 07:17:14
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answer #3
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answered by nondescript 7
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Yes, as microprocessors are built using transistors and logic gates which can only possibly work on binary (base 2), all bibles in electronic format must be processed in binary, regardless of whether they are encoded in ASCII, unicode, extended ASCII, or anything else.
2016-05-17 04:56:09
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answer #4
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answered by gail 3
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An intelligent designer wouldn't give wings to ostriches, blind eyes to cave fish, or toenails to people. Dolphins would be able to breathe water. An intelligent and all-powerful designer should never make mistakes like conjoined twins either.
2007-05-24 07:20:50
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answer #5
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answered by Robin W 7
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Your knowledge of binary exceeds your knowledge of genetics. The usual simplistic, inane, clutching at straws to find a justification for God rhetoric.
2007-05-24 07:17:07
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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OK let's say your right, then how did the God of Abraham come about ? Did he/she/it create it's self ?
2007-05-24 07:22:10
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answer #7
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answered by coonrapper 4
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I say your logic is afu and btw who/what/he/she/it created the "God of Abraham"? Did you just pull that out of your a__ or have you believed this for a while?
2007-05-24 07:22:15
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=Asy8Nt8vRvMAQxoq6qab.J7sy6IX?qid=20070524083022AAdBiJ0
2007-05-24 07:18:47
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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I'll buy it.
2007-05-24 07:16:54
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answer #10
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answered by James, Pet Guy 4
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