we dont know and mabey we will never know
2007-12-15 13:57:44
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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If you believe that creatures were created, you won't find it hard to believe the world was created. Now the universe is a bit larger. But if you don't want to question the first two creations, you just might agree that the universe was created too. Its just a small stretch in a small mind.
2007-12-15 21:53:55
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answer #2
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answered by Wayne P 4
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http://www.philsoc.org/2003Spring/2159minutes.html has a good summary of how far science has progressed in its modeling of the unfolding of our universe.
Absolutely nothing comes of absolutely nothing. There has always been a Some Thing.
Whether this Thing is Mindful, or eternal Matter, is discernable for those who rise to the level of Plotinus' One Mind Soul-individuation, e.g. a Yogananda ("Autobiography of a Yogi," http://www.yogananda-srf.org ), a Mark Prophet ("Climb the Highest Mountain"), an Ann Ree Colton ("Men in White Apparel" and "Watch Your Dreams"), an O. M. Aivanhov ("Light Is a Living Spirit" and "Hope for the World: Spiritual Galvanoplasty"), an Eknath Easwaran ( http://www.easwaran.org ), a Free and Wilcock ("The Reincarnation of Edgar Cayce?", http://www.divinecosmos.com ), a Nobelist such as Brian Josephson ( http://www.tcm.phy.cam.ac.uk/~bdj10 ), and the like.
If one reads such, and others' work such as Dr. William A Tiller's "Psychoenergetic Science" http://www.tiller.org and Dr. Elizabeth Mayer's "Extraordinary Knowing," one is able to relate to the present scope of genuine research.
Further, if one practices insight meditation, prayer, dream diary, Bible study, and the like, one may progress on a personal basis, as well as on the more impersonal scientific and philosophic knowledge bases.
On a more popular basis, http://www.coasttocoastam.com radio (click on "Affiliates" button for local station) offers the occasional guest who speaks to such questions (e.g., Michio Kaku, "Hyperspace").
cordially,
j.
2007-12-15 20:39:07
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answer #3
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answered by j153e 7
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One of the primary questions of philosophy is: Why does anything exist? Why not just nothing?
And when I've thought about it, it seems that it makes sense that there has always been an endless void - nothing.
Of course this isn't a comforting thought, but it could be that all existence is a manifestation of eternal nothing.
2007-12-15 20:30:22
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answer #4
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answered by the Boss 7
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Planets take millions of years to develop.
They consist of the minerals found from comets and asteroids, which are solid materials flung far from space from other plants that went into supernova.
Because of the suns gravitational pull, our planets formed.
The planets were bombarded with asteroids and meteorites, which also carry bacterias, germs, enzymes, and so forth.
So essentially, that's how life on this planet started.
"God" was created at a time when the human race was in anarchy. And when you have floods, lightning, death, earthquakes, and volcano's as "proof" of a god, who's going to argue your point?
Just like Jesus........Mary was probably raped. And being that she was unmarried, she called the God bluff. So who's going to kill the mother of God's child?
2007-12-15 21:18:55
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answer #5
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answered by Ella 7
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