What? Does the car say, is there a car manufacturer?
2007-07-22 02:02:03
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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If there is one, he's pretty shy, unless you like to see earthquakes and such as acts of god. Those who say that god only wants those who have belief, and therefore doesn't want to show himself in a recognizable way, are mentally disturbed.
No-one will ever know if there's a god, because something that doesn't exist can never be proved not to to exist.
I think god is an imaginary friend. As friends don't harm you, they made up the devil as well, to blame him for the bad stuff.
From scientific point of view our universe is probably just another event in another, or much bigger universe, and there are probably many more universes, that come out of an event in the bigger universe, like black holes and supernova's occur in ours. Very likely our universe is fact in some way a part of, or the leftovers of a black hole. There's still no god in the story so far.
In the end, god is what you want it to be.
Additional:
Icemaiden even claims there are thirsty fish in the seas. How low can someone go to prove their point (god)? She's obviously not an atheist, because being an atheist demands some thinking.
2007-07-22 09:20:30
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answer #2
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answered by Caveman 4
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Acccording to what I have learned on this forum, not only is there a god on this planet, there are at least 3,000 of them. Belief in a god is something every individual has to decide for themselves. However... "God" is a concept, a concept is an idea, ideas are real, therefore if only as an idea, God exists. As to what you believe, you have to decide for yourself.
2007-07-22 09:08:05
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answer #3
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answered by Paul Hxyz 7
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That's up to you to decide, if you need something in your life to make you not so terrified of dying or being on earth with no point except to breed so badly then join the masses. Personally I dont need someone to evaluate my every move,every decision, or someone to lie to me about "the great beyond". Death sucks, its gonna happen. People die young sometimes, its not because sinned or because "it was their time" something happened that killed them. That's my opinion.
2007-07-22 09:08:02
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Considering all the arguments going on over this very subject, this is a very silly question to ask here.
If you really want to know, I recommend you study religion, science and anything else you think is relevant, and then make your own decision because no one can or should make it for you.
2007-07-22 09:07:51
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answer #5
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answered by HP 5
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I don't know if i believe in a god but i know there is something out there like a spirit.
it's like the fish that was thirsty- how can he be thirsty when the fish lives in the sea ? it's a bit like a spirit-it is everywhere not just one person called god
2007-07-22 09:14:00
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answer #6
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answered by icemaiden 2
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are there gods? are there physical objects? do we all share a reality? fully or just in part? does belief create reality? how about modify it? how about select what we accept/experience from the myriad possibilities?
i think this question falls under "using mind to grasp mind"
2007-07-22 09:10:53
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answer #7
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answered by haas 3
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“Objective” moral values can only be explained if God exists and
what gives life “intrinsic” worth without God?
The various arrangements and combinations of “letters” in DNA provide all the information needed to instruct a single human fertilized egg to grow, multiply, and shape itself into a fully recognizable baby. Each of the cells in that baby contains a copy of that DNA with all the information to operate the human body for a lifetime. DNA is the most compact information storage system in the world; no computer of human invention can approach the quantity and complexity of information it contains.
DNA even contains the instructions to devise the cellular machinery to decode its instructions. Without a mechanism to decode the information, the DNA blueprint would be useless. Even if DNA had managed to evolve the decoding mechanism to read it would have had to evolve at precisely the same time. This scenario is impossible because the instructions for building the decoding unit are contained in the DNA itself.
A vicious cycle.
The real "vision" part of vision is not in the eye but in the brain; it is an image that is transferred electronically from the eye to the brain. The image is conveyed by means of a code that can instantly convey all that you can see, including millions of different colors. This image changes each time your eyes move and must be constantly refreshed. The image, like an image on a computer screen, cannot be transported all at once, but must be conveyed "pixel by pixel" if you will. There are at least 12,000,000 pixels. So, as your eyes move, there is a stream of code describing 12,000,000 constantly changing pixels flashing at the speed of electricity down your optic nerve. The end point is your brain, which receives the code that defines each of the pixels at any given moment, analyzes this code and creates a three dimensional, full color, moving perception of reality that we call vision.
Observed changes in living things head in the wrong direction to support evolution from molecules to man (macro-evolution).
Selection from the genetic information already present in a population (for example, DDT resistance in mosquitoes) causes a net loss of genetic information in that population.
The immense complexity of the human brain, its creativity and power of abstract reasoning, with capacities vastly beyond that required for sheer survival, is perhaps the most ‘obvious’ evidence for intelligent creation.
At the molecular level, the organization that characterizes living things is inherently different from, for example, a crystal arrangement. The function of a given protein, for instance, depends upon the assembly sequence of its constituents. The coded information required to generate these sequences is not intrinsic to the chemistry of the components (as it is for the structure of a crystal) but extrinsic (imposed from outside).
During reproduction, the information required to make a living organism is impressed upon material substrates to give a pre-programmed pattern, by systems of equal (or greater) complexity (in the parent organism/s) which themselves had the same requirement for their formation. Without pre-programmed machinery, no spontaneous, physico-chemical process is known to generate such information-bearing sequences—this requires the operation of outside intelligence.
2007-07-22 09:10:03
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answer #8
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answered by G 4
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Rather depends on your definition of "god."
2007-07-22 09:03:36
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answer #9
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answered by jonjon418 6
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There is no evidence for a god, a heaven, a hell, an afterlife, or any other religious beliefs.
2007-07-22 09:03:15
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answer #10
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answered by Lionheart ® 7
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Definitely!
2007-07-22 09:21:02
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answer #11
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answered by Uncle Thesis 7
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