Not sure why, but I'm going in. I should probably just pull out my Bingo card instead.
Scientists are still working on the details there. That's the definition of science - admitting that we don't know everything, and working to try and find the answers, rather than just inventing an answer with no logical basis and assuming it's true.
If you want to understand more of this stuff, I recommend Stephen Hawking's books. I recently read "A Brief History of Time", and plan to read " A Briefer History of Time" as a followup. Educating yourself is always better than dismissing something because it's too complex for you to understand immediately.
Yup, things had to fall into place pretty perfectly for life to exist on Earth. It's a highly improbable phenomenon. You seem to think that it's so highly improbable that it couldn't have happened without outside intervention. Let's look at the math on that.
Think of it this way. Best estimates from scientists are that there are 70 sextillion (7 with 22 zeroes after it) stars in the universe. If you think about it, with that many different stars, the odds of at least one having a planet that's perfect for human life are actually pretty high. That's just a LOT of chances for blind luck to make things fall into place perfectly.
Think of it this way, if you played the lottery that many times, even if it was the lottery with the worst chances in the world, you should win trillions of times. The chances of you not winning at least once would be significantly lower than the chances of someone with only one lottery ticket winning the jackpot.
Yet you believe in things that can't be observed or proven, while discounting the work of thousands of scientists who would be more than happy to show you the proof behind their work, if you would take the time to learn.
(April 4, 2014 at 12:20 pm)super spidey man Wrote: How do you explain the start of the big bang? there has to be and unCaused first cause. The beginning of the big bang in a split second threw in the existence of time,laws,matter,physics, everything are universe lives with today.
Scientists are still working on the details there. That's the definition of science - admitting that we don't know everything, and working to try and find the answers, rather than just inventing an answer with no logical basis and assuming it's true.
If you want to understand more of this stuff, I recommend Stephen Hawking's books. I recently read "A Brief History of Time", and plan to read " A Briefer History of Time" as a followup. Educating yourself is always better than dismissing something because it's too complex for you to understand immediately.
(April 4, 2014 at 12:20 pm)super spidey man Wrote: If the sun was to far away from the earth we would freeze to death, If we were to close the sun we would burn up.If the oxygen level wasn't perfect we would either suffocate or have fires everywhere. DNA is extremely complex everything is designed on a razors edge, life demands for a brilliant designer its the only logical way. And in the explosion of the big bang it wasn't just random chaos everything was guided into place, what did you guys think everything just happen to be perfect??
Yup, things had to fall into place pretty perfectly for life to exist on Earth. It's a highly improbable phenomenon. You seem to think that it's so highly improbable that it couldn't have happened without outside intervention. Let's look at the math on that.
Think of it this way. Best estimates from scientists are that there are 70 sextillion (7 with 22 zeroes after it) stars in the universe. If you think about it, with that many different stars, the odds of at least one having a planet that's perfect for human life are actually pretty high. That's just a LOT of chances for blind luck to make things fall into place perfectly.
Think of it this way, if you played the lottery that many times, even if it was the lottery with the worst chances in the world, you should win trillions of times. The chances of you not winning at least once would be significantly lower than the chances of someone with only one lottery ticket winning the jackpot.
(April 4, 2014 at 12:20 pm)super spidey man Wrote: I don't have near enough faith to be an Atheist.
Yet you believe in things that can't be observed or proven, while discounting the work of thousands of scientists who would be more than happy to show you the proof behind their work, if you would take the time to learn.
That's MISTER Godless Vegetarian Tree Hugging Hippie Liberal to you.