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Where did everything come from?

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  • S Stan Shannon

    I think it is obvious that at some point our intuitive sense of "cause and effect" breaks down when trying to understand where everything comes from in a rational way. I doubt that science will ever be able to provide a truly satisfactory answer to that, and, whether you are religious or not, you have to accept that something outside of, and independent of, the "cause and effect" universe we find ourselves inhabiting had to "act" to start the process the led to the big bang which led to us. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."

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    Richard Stringer
    wrote on last edited by
    #12

    Stan Shannon wrote: whether you are religious or not, you have to accept that something outside of, and independent of, the "cause and effect" universe we find ourselves inhabiting had to "act" to start the process the led to the big bang which led to us. No I don't. Religion is simply an organized method of saying "I don't know" - to be gentle. 500 years ago almost everything that we take for granted in our everyday existance today would fall under the term "miracle". I don't and won't start a religious vs science war because neither side would/could be convinced of anything. Richard In a world of pollution, profanity, adolescence, zits, broccoli, racism, ozone depletion, sexism, stupid guys, and PMS, why the hell do people still tell me to have a nice day? --Unknown

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    • S Stan Shannon

      I think it is obvious that at some point our intuitive sense of "cause and effect" breaks down when trying to understand where everything comes from in a rational way. I doubt that science will ever be able to provide a truly satisfactory answer to that, and, whether you are religious or not, you have to accept that something outside of, and independent of, the "cause and effect" universe we find ourselves inhabiting had to "act" to start the process the led to the big bang which led to us. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."

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      Paul Watson
      wrote on last edited by
      #13

      Stan Shannon wrote: I doubt that science will ever be able to provide a truly satisfactory answer And neither does religion (not saying you said it did, just finishing your sentence so as to be fair to all). regards, Paul Watson South Africa PMW Photography Gary Wheeler wrote: It's people like you that keep me heading for my big debut on CNN...

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      • S Stan Shannon

        I think it is obvious that at some point our intuitive sense of "cause and effect" breaks down when trying to understand where everything comes from in a rational way. I doubt that science will ever be able to provide a truly satisfactory answer to that, and, whether you are religious or not, you have to accept that something outside of, and independent of, the "cause and effect" universe we find ourselves inhabiting had to "act" to start the process the led to the big bang which led to us. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."

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        El Corazon
        wrote on last edited by
        #14

        Although this "might" be true, it is not required to be true. There is an "unknown" spot through which we have not found out information. In each generation that "unknown" spot moves farther and farther out. Although the assumption is true that we probably can never know everything, the assumption that everything we do not know is somehow automatically the presence of the supernatural is a poor assumption. It "may" be true, again it is not automatically required to be. Science pushes the limits of the unknown each time. I expect eventually religion and science will coincide, that is only my belief and no other's; and no other is ever required to agree with me. I disagree with the act of putting all unknowns into one basket and calling it by a single name and trying to say accept what I believe. No one is ever required to another's view of the supernatural. From there flows all kinds of evils throughout history that we do not want to repeat again. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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          The Islamic view[^] the article probably has more than what you want but it provides a good idea with background knowledge. islamtoday.com itself is one of better[best] sites in english that I found that gives an understanding of the foundation, and other related topics and writing by knowledgable scholars. Though some articles dont seem to be completed yet. Quran Translation Islam Basics Islamic lectures

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          Rob Graham
          wrote on last edited by
          #15

          An argument founded on invalid principles. The Rational Proofs for the Existence of Allah The following are established facts and principles that all rational people agree upon: 1. The invalidity of determination without a determining factor. 2. The invalidity of an infinite sequence. 3. The invalidity of the vicious circle. 4. The law of causality. None of the mentioned are either established facts or "something all rational people agree on" The argument for the first is specious at best, since it makes the addition presumption that the universe "came into existance" and ignores the posibility that there was no equivalent to a "beginning". The second is absurd. There are many examples of infinite sequences. Proving that something is finite is more difficult. Again flawed by the assumption that there is something analogous to "the beginning' of reality. the third makes the same error as the first, and makes the additional presumption that having assumed a "beginning" that there must be 'divine causality'. the fourth: The determination of things and the order that exists in the universe both indicate that there was a cause for – and wisdom behind – that determination and order. is at best an outrtageous assumption. Quantum mechanics strongly suggests that things are fundementally indeterminate, not determinate, and the assumption - again - that determinism requires an intelligent actor ("the same argument used by Christian fundamentalists who call it "intelligent design") is without foundation. Utterly unconvincing. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg

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          • S Stan Shannon

            If God didn't make everything, where did everything come from? "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."

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            Rob Graham
            wrote on last edited by
            #16

            The first problem with this question is the assumtion that things "came from" anywhere. It ignores the possibility that there is nothing analogous to a 'beginning', and that 'things' simply have always been. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg

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            • R Richard Stringer

              Stan Shannon wrote: whether you are religious or not, you have to accept that something outside of, and independent of, the "cause and effect" universe we find ourselves inhabiting had to "act" to start the process the led to the big bang which led to us. No I don't. Religion is simply an organized method of saying "I don't know" - to be gentle. 500 years ago almost everything that we take for granted in our everyday existance today would fall under the term "miracle". I don't and won't start a religious vs science war because neither side would/could be convinced of anything. Richard In a world of pollution, profanity, adolescence, zits, broccoli, racism, ozone depletion, sexism, stupid guys, and PMS, why the hell do people still tell me to have a nice day? --Unknown

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              Stan Shannon
              wrote on last edited by
              #17

              Richard Stringer wrote: No I don't. Religion is simply an organized method of saying "I don't know" - to be gentle. 500 years ago almost everything that we take for granted in our everyday existance today would fall under the term "miracle". I don't and won't start a religious vs science war because neither side would/could be convinced of anything. But all of that is entirely beside the point. Forget religion, the point is that "cause and effect" cannot be traced to a primal cause. It is a classic chicken or egg problem, which came first? I'm not saying that you need to invoke a conscious, devine entity of some kind, but "something" must exist outside of our cause and effect universe. There must be some way to have an effect that does not have a cause. Whether or not someone chooses to think of that causeless effect as God is entirely a personal matter. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."

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              • S Stan Shannon

                Richard Stringer wrote: No I don't. Religion is simply an organized method of saying "I don't know" - to be gentle. 500 years ago almost everything that we take for granted in our everyday existance today would fall under the term "miracle". I don't and won't start a religious vs science war because neither side would/could be convinced of anything. But all of that is entirely beside the point. Forget religion, the point is that "cause and effect" cannot be traced to a primal cause. It is a classic chicken or egg problem, which came first? I'm not saying that you need to invoke a conscious, devine entity of some kind, but "something" must exist outside of our cause and effect universe. There must be some way to have an effect that does not have a cause. Whether or not someone chooses to think of that causeless effect as God is entirely a personal matter. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."

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                El Corazon
                wrote on last edited by
                #18

                The classic chicken and the egg problem is a matter of perspective.... in each successive generation you find farther back the chain, more information, and farther back the chain you go. You could easily close the loop in quantum physics using the quantum flux associated with very energetic and dense structures where time gets "iffy" to assume the beginning is the end, and the end the beginning. Oscillation as the core of universe propigation. It would be no more or no less possible than automatically assuming you must have causeless systems. The fact that you want to draw a line in the sand and say you must agree is still a problem. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                • R Rob Graham

                  The first problem with this question is the assumtion that things "came from" anywhere. It ignores the possibility that there is nothing analogous to a 'beginning', and that 'things' simply have always been. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg

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                  Stan Shannon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #19

                  I don't think it ignores it. I meant to provoke the obvious question of what it means for something to have a 'beginning' or to be 'beginningless'. Perhaps our entire concept of 'time' is purely an illusion - simply a by-product of the way the universe engineered our minds. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."

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                  • R Rob Graham

                    An argument founded on invalid principles. The Rational Proofs for the Existence of Allah The following are established facts and principles that all rational people agree upon: 1. The invalidity of determination without a determining factor. 2. The invalidity of an infinite sequence. 3. The invalidity of the vicious circle. 4. The law of causality. None of the mentioned are either established facts or "something all rational people agree on" The argument for the first is specious at best, since it makes the addition presumption that the universe "came into existance" and ignores the posibility that there was no equivalent to a "beginning". The second is absurd. There are many examples of infinite sequences. Proving that something is finite is more difficult. Again flawed by the assumption that there is something analogous to "the beginning' of reality. the third makes the same error as the first, and makes the additional presumption that having assumed a "beginning" that there must be 'divine causality'. the fourth: The determination of things and the order that exists in the universe both indicate that there was a cause for – and wisdom behind – that determination and order. is at best an outrtageous assumption. Quantum mechanics strongly suggests that things are fundementally indeterminate, not determinate, and the assumption - again - that determinism requires an intelligent actor ("the same argument used by Christian fundamentalists who call it "intelligent design") is without foundation. Utterly unconvincing. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg

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                    A A 0
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #20

                    Your response shows me that either[or a combination] a) you won't be convinced even if it was convincing b) you didnt read the article well and think about it c) you went in with the idea whatever this is must be wrong. Now in terms of of the specifics you mention, in regards to 1) all I give you is this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_the_Universe[^] Oh by the way this is addressed in so many places but thats not the point. 2-3) I don't get it are you trying to say that we shouldnt assume the universe has a beginning? In terms of 4) What does your response of Quantum mechanics have to do with it? You might as well just said Darwinisim or some other thing like that. Quran Translation Islam Basics Islamic lectures

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                    • 7 73Zeppelin

                      "God" is a rather naive attempt at explaining something far more complex than you or I are capable of understanding in our lifetimes. In short, God (and consequently religion) is a simplistic cop-out. That is all I will discuss in regard to this thread because should I continue, I will rile up the religions types and they will accuse me of spreading hatred of religion. Instead, I'll mellow myself out with several of these: :beer: :beer: You may now release the 1 vote hounds...

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                      Jorgen Sigvardsson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #21

                      Amen to that. :) -- Schni Schna Schnappi! Schnappi Schnappi Schnapp!

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                      • R Rob Graham

                        If God made everything, then what made God? Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg

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                        Jorgen Sigvardsson
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #22

                        Man made God, and God made Man. Can you dig it? ;) -- Schni Schna Schnappi! Schnappi Schnappi Schnapp!

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                        • S Stan Shannon

                          Richard Stringer wrote: No I don't. Religion is simply an organized method of saying "I don't know" - to be gentle. 500 years ago almost everything that we take for granted in our everyday existance today would fall under the term "miracle". I don't and won't start a religious vs science war because neither side would/could be convinced of anything. But all of that is entirely beside the point. Forget religion, the point is that "cause and effect" cannot be traced to a primal cause. It is a classic chicken or egg problem, which came first? I'm not saying that you need to invoke a conscious, devine entity of some kind, but "something" must exist outside of our cause and effect universe. There must be some way to have an effect that does not have a cause. Whether or not someone chooses to think of that causeless effect as God is entirely a personal matter. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."

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                          Richard Stringer
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #23

                          Stan Shannon wrote: the point is that "cause and effect" cannot be traced to a primal cause. It is a classic chicken or egg problem, which came first In the beginning - before the big bang - "first" had no meaning. There was no such thing as time. Consider for a moment that causality could be construed as a simplistic way of looking at entropy. Stan Shannon wrote: There must be some way to have an effect that does not have a cause Why ? Can you perform some type of "work" without changing the energy level in the system ? Remember that there is a signifigent difference between the philosophical definition of "cause and effect" or causality and the the definition that a physicist would use ( any review of the state of quantum physics would demonstrate that ) . Richard In a world of pollution, profanity, adolescence, zits, broccoli, racism, ozone depletion, sexism, stupid guys, and PMS, why the hell do people still tell me to have a nice day? --Unknown

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                          • R Rob Graham

                            An argument founded on invalid principles. The Rational Proofs for the Existence of Allah The following are established facts and principles that all rational people agree upon: 1. The invalidity of determination without a determining factor. 2. The invalidity of an infinite sequence. 3. The invalidity of the vicious circle. 4. The law of causality. None of the mentioned are either established facts or "something all rational people agree on" The argument for the first is specious at best, since it makes the addition presumption that the universe "came into existance" and ignores the posibility that there was no equivalent to a "beginning". The second is absurd. There are many examples of infinite sequences. Proving that something is finite is more difficult. Again flawed by the assumption that there is something analogous to "the beginning' of reality. the third makes the same error as the first, and makes the additional presumption that having assumed a "beginning" that there must be 'divine causality'. the fourth: The determination of things and the order that exists in the universe both indicate that there was a cause for – and wisdom behind – that determination and order. is at best an outrtageous assumption. Quantum mechanics strongly suggests that things are fundementally indeterminate, not determinate, and the assumption - again - that determinism requires an intelligent actor ("the same argument used by Christian fundamentalists who call it "intelligent design") is without foundation. Utterly unconvincing. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg

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                            DavidNohejl
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #24

                            Rob Graham wrote: The Rational Proofs for the Existence of Allah bah. Tomas proved that God can't exist (or at least can't be almighty, but that's pretty much by definition). Assumption: God is almighty. Following this assumption, s/he can create mountain too high that even s/he can't climb it. But that is in contradiction with assumption. QED. ;P David Never forget: "Stay kul and happy" (I.A.)
                            David's thoughts / dnhsoftware.org / MyHTMLTidy

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                            • R Rob Graham

                              The first problem with this question is the assumtion that things "came from" anywhere. It ignores the possibility that there is nothing analogous to a 'beginning', and that 'things' simply have always been. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg

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                              Richard Stringer
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #25

                              Rob Graham wrote: It ignores the possibility that there is nothing analogous to a 'beginning', and that 'things' simply have always been. It ignored that premis because it is unsustainable. The universe is not static and there are many experiments that demonstate this fact. The existance of time , entropy, expansion etc.. all point to a "beginning". Richard In a world of pollution, profanity, adolescence, zits, broccoli, racism, ozone depletion, sexism, stupid guys, and PMS, why the hell do people still tell me to have a nice day? --Unknown

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                              • R Richard Stringer

                                Stan Shannon wrote: the point is that "cause and effect" cannot be traced to a primal cause. It is a classic chicken or egg problem, which came first In the beginning - before the big bang - "first" had no meaning. There was no such thing as time. Consider for a moment that causality could be construed as a simplistic way of looking at entropy. Stan Shannon wrote: There must be some way to have an effect that does not have a cause Why ? Can you perform some type of "work" without changing the energy level in the system ? Remember that there is a signifigent difference between the philosophical definition of "cause and effect" or causality and the the definition that a physicist would use ( any review of the state of quantum physics would demonstrate that ) . Richard In a world of pollution, profanity, adolescence, zits, broccoli, racism, ozone depletion, sexism, stupid guys, and PMS, why the hell do people still tell me to have a nice day? --Unknown

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                                Stan Shannon
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #26

                                But all of your questions assume a quantum universe - a universe that obeys a set of physical principles which we have managed to grasp intellectually. What universe caused that universe? Even if you argue that guantum physics allows something to come from nothing, where did that principle come from? (I've studied Quantum physics as far as three semesters of calculus will allow me to go, so I'm not going to pretend that I can go beyond a very limited appreciation of the subject - but I can say that I cannot help but feel that quantum physics will prove to be scientifically invalid during the course of this century.) "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."

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                                  Your response shows me that either[or a combination] a) you won't be convinced even if it was convincing b) you didnt read the article well and think about it c) you went in with the idea whatever this is must be wrong. Now in terms of of the specifics you mention, in regards to 1) all I give you is this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_the_Universe[^] Oh by the way this is addressed in so many places but thats not the point. 2-3) I don't get it are you trying to say that we shouldnt assume the universe has a beginning? In terms of 4) What does your response of Quantum mechanics have to do with it? You might as well just said Darwinisim or some other thing like that. Quran Translation Islam Basics Islamic lectures

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                                  Rob Graham
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #27

                                  A.A. wrote: a) you won't be convinced even if it was convincing b) you didnt read the article well and think about it c) you went in with the idea whatever this is must be wrong. None of the above. It was simply a very flawed argumnet. 1: from your cite:Calculating the age of the universe is only accurate if the assumptions built into the models being used are also accurate. Translation: The age of the universe is a "best guess" based on our present model of its construction. A fundamental assumption not mentioned is that "age" is a meaningful concept when applied here. Basically, 'age" is only an analogy for the time required for light to reach us from from a point that our current understanding says is a singularity. A.A. wrote: 2-3) I don't get it are you trying to say that we shouldnt assume the universe has a beginning? Exactly. Our brains are hard-wired to presume that things must have a beginning and end (as we do). It is just as reasonable to assume that the concept of a beginning is just as inappropriate here as discussing the 'beginning' of a circle. Without that assumption, most, if not all, arguments for devine creation fall apart. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg

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                                  • R Richard Parsons

                                    Ok I'm looking for somewhat real answers here. I'm a christian and of course I know where the Bible says everything comes from but what about all the other religions out there? Where do they say everything comes from? -Richard

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                                    Brit
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #28

                                    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creation_Stories#Creation_within_various_belief_systems[^] While it's not mentioned in the article, a lot of the old, extinct religions said that the earth/universe was created out of the corpse of the slain enemy of a god. The Native American creation stories tended to involve animals (e.g. a turtle went down into the ocean, picked up a bit of soil, brought it back to the surface where he and other animals formed dry ground). ----------------------------------------------------- Empires Of Steel[^]

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                                    • R Richard Parsons

                                      Ok I'm looking for somewhat real answers here. I'm a christian and of course I know where the Bible says everything comes from but what about all the other religions out there? Where do they say everything comes from? -Richard

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                                      brianwelsch
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #29

                                      You might want to check out the Man/Universe links here[^] for some basics. Some more info can be read on http://www.comparative-religion.com/[^] Not sure these sites will delve too deeply into answering your question, but they might show you where to look. BW


                                      I want pancakes! God, do you people understand every language except English?
                                      Yo quiero pancakes. Donnez moi pancakes. Click click, bloody click pancakes!
                                      -- Stewie Griffin

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                                      • S Stan Shannon

                                        I think it is obvious that at some point our intuitive sense of "cause and effect" breaks down when trying to understand where everything comes from in a rational way. I doubt that science will ever be able to provide a truly satisfactory answer to that, and, whether you are religious or not, you have to accept that something outside of, and independent of, the "cause and effect" universe we find ourselves inhabiting had to "act" to start the process the led to the big bang which led to us. "Capitalism is the source of all true freedom."

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                                        Rob Graham
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #30

                                        Stan Shannon wrote: whether you are religious or not, you have to accept that something outside of, and independent of, the "cause and effect" universe we find ourselves inhabiting had to "act" to start the process That is precisely the assumption I disagree with. It may be a correct one, or it may not, but it cannot, by itself, support your argument. It is only an assumption that has at least one clear alternative (its inverse). At the quantum level, "cause and effect" becomes pretty suspect, and the assumption that there had to be a "start" could well be flawed. What's on the 'other side' of the singularity (big bang)? Just because we can't measure past it (beyond it?) in no way proves that nothing exists past the limit of measurement. IMO, introducing a requirement for an intelligent actor only confuses the issue, introducing the need to explain the origin of that intelligent actor. If you arue that the actor simply always existed, then I can argue with equal justification that the universe simply always existed, and eliminate any need for that actor. Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg

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                                        • 7 73Zeppelin

                                          "God" is a rather naive attempt at explaining something far more complex than you or I are capable of understanding in our lifetimes. In short, God (and consequently religion) is a simplistic cop-out. That is all I will discuss in regard to this thread because should I continue, I will rile up the religions types and they will accuse me of spreading hatred of religion. Instead, I'll mellow myself out with several of these: :beer: :beer: You may now release the 1 vote hounds...

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                                          Rob Graham
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #31

                                          Well, at least one 1 hound found you anyway. :beer: Anger is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed. Carl Sandburg

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