Author Topic: You definition of god(at Chairboy's request)  (Read 2048 times)

storch

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You definition of god(at Chairboy's request)
« Reply #90 on: July 13, 2004, 12:34:53 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Chairboy
Fair enough, and I can't understand why YOU possibly believe in your faith, but to each his own.  

It seems shortsighted to say that Science will never explain the origin of everything.  Two hundred years ago, many said man would never fly.  75 years ago, many said that man would never fly faster then the speed of sound.  40 years ago, many said man would never be able to fit powerful computers into a home.

Science is on a continuing march, and as long as humans retain their monkey curiousity, we'll learn more.  Who's to say that we won't dot the i's and cross the t's?  I say that, because minds greater then mine have already worked out a framework that survives informed scrutiny.


well perhaps you are right, but then again what kind of faith would i have if i didn't profess the same thing about yours that you profess about mine. n'est pas?

regards

Offline AKIron

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You definition of god(at Chairboy's request)
« Reply #91 on: July 13, 2004, 01:12:39 AM »
Science is nowhere near explaining all of the mysteries of even our observable universe. The nature of our existence may never be understood through any vehicle other than our imagination and/or faith.  To illustrate my point, anyone remember "The Incredible Shrinking Man" from the '50's? As the man shrank into seeming nonexistence he realized  that the universe was still a wondrous place and that he would still have a part in it no matter how small he became. Sure, it was fiction born of imagination, but it poignantly addressed the feelings that most of us have regarding our seemingly insignificant existence when considered in the context of a possibly infinite universe. Why we try to understand it at all is as much a mystery as the cosmos itself.  I think there is room for both science and religion in a universe such as ours.

While I'm waxing metaphysically, anyone consider that the notion of curved space might imply that the infinitely small becomes the infinitely large? What if those theoretical vibrating strings are actually universes or maybe just mere galaxies? And not just tiny galaxies but our galaxies including the one we call the Milky Way.
« Last Edit: July 13, 2004, 01:28:56 AM by AKIron »
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Offline Roscoroo

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You definition of god(at Chairboy's request)
« Reply #92 on: July 13, 2004, 01:37:03 AM »
Yea but who's gonna explain this ....?
Roscoroo ,
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