A scientist reported that he figured out how God created everything and that he could duplicate all of God's activities with a simple lump of dirt. The world rejoiced at the thought of finally coming to the God vs. no-God conclusion and the challenge was on. The trouble was, he couldn't make the dirt on his own.
Big bang, evolution, a lucky cosmic shot, etc... it all had to start somehow. The trouble with the human mind is that we can't grasp much beyond our understanding of physics (and I doubt we ever will or are supposed to) - but obviously there is much more to it than what the contemporary theories offer. Try to just fathom no universe or any semblance of any sort of "existence" of anything. It sure is hard to comparatively measure a void inside of a void, isn't it?
So you have 2 choices... *something* (God)has always existed in some form that allowed for the beginning of what we generally understand as life.
-or-
Nothing was there, a void inside a void inside a void... and then (impossibly), the void was filled. But that traps us into the linear thought that there HAD to be a chronological beginning as opposed to an infinite existence.
Clearly I'm no mathmetician... but barring the *theoretical* fun (much of which may be true)of astrophysics, wormholes, buttholes, etc., how does a line measure out? A perfectly straight line has no ends, right? In that regard, it is certainly possible to assume or believe that there is an infinite God who started all of what we know (and more) as life.
Ice crystals perforating cells was an issue in the past... has this been address? (No, I didn't RTFO yet, I thought someone would mention it).
...sniff... Linux babies. Wipe your tears and keep trying to match MS for usability.
You are so busy and time is a rare commodity... but yet you have a friggin Tivo. Retard. Go watch some TV.
A scientist reported that he figured out how God created everything and that he could duplicate all of God's activities with a simple lump of dirt. The world rejoiced at the thought of finally coming to the God vs. no-God conclusion and the challenge was on. The trouble was, he couldn't make the dirt on his own. Big bang, evolution, a lucky cosmic shot, etc... it all had to start somehow. The trouble with the human mind is that we can't grasp much beyond our understanding of physics (and I doubt we ever will or are supposed to) - but obviously there is much more to it than what the contemporary theories offer. Try to just fathom no universe or any semblance of any sort of "existence" of anything. It sure is hard to comparatively measure a void inside of a void, isn't it? So you have 2 choices... *something* (God)has always existed in some form that allowed for the beginning of what we generally understand as life. -or- Nothing was there, a void inside a void inside a void... and then (impossibly), the void was filled. But that traps us into the linear thought that there HAD to be a chronological beginning as opposed to an infinite existence. Clearly I'm no mathmetician... but barring the *theoretical* fun (much of which may be true)of astrophysics, wormholes, buttholes, etc., how does a line measure out? A perfectly straight line has no ends, right? In that regard, it is certainly possible to assume or believe that there is an infinite God who started all of what we know (and more) as life.