If so kindly explain.
2007-08-01
10:37:49
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13 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Arts & Humanities
➔ Philosophy
Thank you for your veiws Mr Frank. However, the be all and end of my universe, has nothing to do with your christian god, I think man created him not the other way round. The answer to this question will be something different to every one. In my opinion there are no right and wrong answers or only one way to look at things.
2007-08-01
23:30:18 ·
update #1
I know what an atom is thanks romansis.
2007-08-01
23:32:16 ·
update #2
kikeonga
I think if it was that highly polished I would be more likely to see my face than the universe. which however vain I maybe even I do not reguard to be the centre of the universe, godlike maybe, just kidding people. lol.
2007-08-02
04:40:51 ·
update #3
Sure you can....
if it is highly polished with a morror like surface, just look at it closely and you will see the entire universe reflected in it.
g-day!
2007-08-01 12:18:19
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answer #1
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answered by Kekionga 7
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OK in lay mans terms i shall try to explain as a layman is all i am
to see the universe in 1 grain of sand i think is a mete fore for the idea that all things are connected so if u look at it like this if we view the world as all things are equal and have an equal part to play then we come to the view that what is the make up of 1 thing is also the make up of all things to go more simple the grain of sand exsisits because the universe exsisits if there was no universe the grain would no longer exsist and if there was no grain of sand what makes the universe a whole would not exsist for all is connected and has its part to play i hope u understand my meaning
2007-08-04 23:42:45
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answer #2
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answered by luckyflocker 1
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there could be many universes in one grain of sand, how big does a universe have to be? By this i mean the universes in the grain of sand would be too small for us to live in but relative to the people who live in these universes the size would appear to be the same as our universe appears to us. Ever seen "Men in Black" when at the end the aliens are playing marbles with the galaxies? This is kind of what i mean. Something is only as big or small as it appears to the person/ thing it is perceived by or in comparison with
2007-08-02 19:14:42
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answer #3
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answered by James W 2
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Yes u can first of all electrons and photons come to mind. Billions of atoms molecules and gravitionic forces racing around each other. Simple cell organisms attach to the granule remind me or grass on the ground. Chemical compounds making up this grain remind me off the very building blocks of the human body DNA. The color of the sand would be the tribe the beach the area of the world.
Most of all the fact that you ask such a question would remind me of a creator not a creation. God's wisdom expands space, time, and even mans wisdom and only his love could help me see this through a grain of sand. Thank you!
Peace
2007-08-01 16:14:36
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answer #4
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answered by Mr. Frank 3
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Depends what you think about when looking at the grain of sand. When I look at the grain of sand, I see how the world evolved and took placed, and how that grain of sand became a grain of sand and how it landed in that location, and what will happen to the grain of sand.
2007-08-01 11:13:54
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, when We read that poem in school, I truly believed the author had captured the overwhelming story of a tiny grain of sand.
In my youthful mind at the time, I had pictured boulders in the early stages of the world slowly over time breaking into little pieces of rocks, then stones, then finally to a miniscule grain of sand. What has it seen, numerous days and nights , winds rain snow, earth upheavals?
2007-08-01 10:53:20
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answer #6
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answered by QuiteNewHere 7
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No. Just because our universe may, in fact, be just one of many universes and really not worth much at all, it is still difficult to place all of the relevance of the cosmos as we know them into something so mundane and irrelevant.
Hope that helped.
2007-08-01 14:05:44
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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well!!!! if a bird took one grain of sand from the Sahara,, one grain a year to America,, till the Sahara was empty of sand then after all that time maybe just maybe we may see the universe in the last grain of sand....
2007-08-01 12:28:09
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answer #8
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answered by joseph born again 2
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Yes, you can. Blake knew what he was talking about. You can see the universe in everything that surrounds you, because it is reflected in every single part that constitutes the whole.
2007-08-01 10:45:18
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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No. It's just a bit of sand!
2007-08-01 10:47:17
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answer #10
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answered by Jude 7
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