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8 answers

You shouldn't, there's no evidence that a god exists and whilst there is also no evidence that a god doesn't exist there is evidence against certain common conceptions of god (probably including the one you were bought up with if you were raised as religious which I suspect you were) and if there's no evidence either way then it is a rule of logic to not believe unless there is a good reason (and lack of disproof isn't a good reason, nor is any of the lies about religion somehow correlating positively with morality).

2007-12-05 21:15:11 · answer #1 · answered by bestonnet_00 7 · 0 3

If I take the finite view of the universe and consider it's equal and opposite reaction which would produce similar reactions on all axis, to include interacting wave pattern interactions. You would wind up with even more displacements because of the Net effect of the interactions and reactions. The question is displacements in what? It can't be suspended or floating in NOTHING, and the minute you call it nothing it becomes something. This could continue in a never ending cycle.

Thing is, when you start seeing things with a depth which can not be ever measured to its end or a concept which can never be solved (even arrogance at the depths of perceived stupidity, both when facing each other take on limitless proportions), you are then standing in the shadow of a concept which close to understanding God. Always bigger than you thought, and smaller than you can imagine. Limitless, which is why neither science nor anyone else will ever be able to measure just how big, the Universe (or everything known to exist) really is, thus INFINITE. If you can measure that you can measure God. That's why I love God so much!! And even that's nowhere near as big as God really is... How big is your god?

2007-12-06 05:49:47 · answer #2 · answered by HotDockett 4 · 0 1

You don't HAVE TO believe in God. It's your choice.
I don't know what your concept of god is, but if it is the God of Abraham (Judaism, Christianity and Islam), then why is he small when he created the universe? Size would be irrelevant, and power would be infinite, so small in what way?

2007-12-06 08:12:26 · answer #3 · answered by dontpanic66 3 · 1 1

What if God exists beyond the 11th dimension of the Membrane Theory of the universe?

2007-12-06 06:09:59 · answer #4 · answered by an 4 · 0 2

Why?
Why not?
If God exists, what evidence have you got that he/she/it is small?
Do you mean smaller than the universe?
Why can't God be bigger than the universe?

2007-12-06 06:00:46 · answer #5 · answered by falzoon 7 · 1 1

SO YOU THINK YOU UNDERSTAND HOW BIG THE UNIVERSE IS ? AND WHY SHOULD YOU BELIEVE IN SOMETHING AS SMALL IN GOD YOU SAY ? HOW ABOUT THE ENTIRE UNIVERSE C0LLAPSING BECAUSE OF ALL ITS INPURE AND UNSTABLE ELEMENTS THAT CONTINUALLY FAIL BY TRYING TO EVOLVE INTO SOMETHING THAT THEY BELIEVE IS POSIBLE, BUT ONLY SUCCEED TO DESTROY ITSELF. WHILE GOD STILL LIVES ON.

2007-12-06 05:40:26 · answer #6 · answered by GETX2 2 · 2 2

who said god exist?

2007-12-06 05:10:06 · answer #7 · answered by HMONG 2 · 1 1

Much as I don't mind pot-stirring, this belongs in "Religion".

2007-12-06 05:55:40 · answer #8 · answered by Choose a bloody best answer. It's not hard. 7 · 0 1

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