If you want or need it to be so,theres not much harm in believing.
We,or many of us,need incredible and different facts and ideas to really 'bring out the best in us'.
I mean our incredible and beautiful world has all the qualities that are valuable and good;even and despite the fact that there are 'cold,dull and boring personalities',even things too i guess.
Keep on keeping-on finding those not-too-rare things and knowledge items that are so exciting.Its a lovely life,i agree.
2007-12-28 01:18:59
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answer #1
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answered by peter m 6
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It is possible since there is such randomness when the ice crystals grow on a particle of dust. There are infinite possibilities for the ice to grow, and the theory is this will lead to infinite snowflakes with a microscopic chance of coming out even slightly similar. No one can really test this theory since it is simultaneously snowing in various places across the world at any moment. It is impossible to capture every snowflake to look at under a microscope so it's nice to simply think that no two falling snowflakes are alike. I'm sure in the millions of years the earth has been here atleast two were alike.
2007-12-28 00:31:21
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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Well, anything like that is possible. Since we haven't seen every snowflake that has fallen ever since the Earth had it's first snow. So it can happen but it's most likely to not happen. Most likely for the fact that how the snowflake is made is pretty much random.
2007-12-28 00:32:15
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answer #3
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answered by joshrocks7890 1
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Well,there is no such thing as"the same",as there are no paralele lines anywhere on the planet;there will always be slight imperfections and when you will find two identical snowflakes,we will all have to kill ourselves,because we will have reached perfection.And why would anyone want to live afetr that?To live in the remaining imperfection?
That's the beauty of life,and the only good reason to live
2007-12-28 00:36:58
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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yes it is tru, snow flakes might just look like a lil lump of whiteness, but are actually very complex crystals which spread out in millions of different ways and therefore are very extremlyt unlikcly to be repeated. but seing dat how long the world existed it might have been possible dat milllions of years ago a snow flake looked exactly the same as 1 laying on a montain right now
2007-12-28 00:30:46
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I have collected over 100 trillion snowflakes and have yet to find two that are alike. However, they all have the same cold, dull, boring personality.
2007-12-28 00:29:28
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answer #6
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answered by Warren W- a Mormon engineer 6
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Perfectly identical is merely a concept based on which we have created Maths ('Two' is the beginning of Maths and you need a pair of identical ones to make two)... it is not a reality in this universe.
2007-12-28 01:00:29
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answer #7
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answered by small 7
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Ha, I was going to answer why not because no 2 people are exactly alike. Then I finished reading your question and saw that we thought the same thing. LOL
2007-12-28 00:32:17
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answer #8
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answered by DJ 6
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Nature unfolds uniquely and spontaneously every moment. No two cells in your body are identical. Everything is unique but in relationship.
2007-12-28 02:34:54
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answer #9
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answered by @@@@@@@@ 5
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It has to be true. On a molecular level, no two objects are Identical, ever.
2007-12-28 00:34:15
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answer #10
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answered by Gee Whizdom™ 5
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