Part 3. There's always poser about things when we don't know how they work. On the timeline of history - since the start of time man has believed strongly in God or gods. The rapid development of the sciences ever since the Renaissance from about 1350 - 1650 AD, increasing through the Age of Reason from 1650 - 1750, which bloomed in the time of Rationalism - 1750 AD onwards until now; removed a lot of the puzzle of life. Many simple humans came to close that science explains'all' things that matter, and that God is no longer necessary.
The actuality is, there is far more that we do not understand than what we do. We only know a tiny part of all there is to know; in reality the more we learn, the more we realize we do not know - while discoveries answer some questions, they usually create more questions due to the greater depth of understanding in that field of study. There are such a lot of natural and strange things that science can't explain; so how can we confidently say that God is unimportant to life and the of origin of all things? Scientists tell us that we only know a fraction of all there is to know - about ten percent.
If there are ten facts you will need to understand, to know how an automobile works; consider if you knew the answer to just one question, are you licensed to work on an automobile? Why then, do we feel so qualified to dismiss God, when all we all know is about ten percent? In the fragment we do know and in the midst of the mysteries of nature and metaphysics, somehow there is no puzzle left as to how everything works. Sounds self-contradictory. It definitely does not look very rational. It's feasible for God to live in the ninety percent that we do not know about.
Some say to me "There is no God!" There is a basic issue in such a statement - so as to know that there's no god you would need to have 'all data' and that's impossible for any one person. For somebody to announce that God does not exist, he'd have to be God, to grasp that there wasn't any God.
Saying that God does not exist might seem tough to some and to others it may sound intellectual but it doesn't explain the existence of such a extremely complicated universe at every level. The water molecule was alleged to be one of the first molecules because it was a elementary cell, now it has been discovered with enhanced technology that it is highly complicated molecule. That is just water what about a budding flower? What about the human body? What about the human brain? What of the human brain For those who actually desire to hear, science - cosmology, zoology, botany, chemistry, biology and archaeology, now has much more evidence of God than of natural evolution.
The actuality is, there is far more that we do not understand than what we do. We only know a tiny part of all there is to know; in reality the more we learn, the more we realize we do not know - while discoveries answer some questions, they usually create more questions due to the greater depth of understanding in that field of study. There are such a lot of natural and strange things that science can't explain; so how can we confidently say that God is unimportant to life and the of origin of all things? Scientists tell us that we only know a fraction of all there is to know - about ten percent.
If there are ten facts you will need to understand, to know how an automobile works; consider if you knew the answer to just one question, are you licensed to work on an automobile? Why then, do we feel so qualified to dismiss God, when all we all know is about ten percent? In the fragment we do know and in the midst of the mysteries of nature and metaphysics, somehow there is no puzzle left as to how everything works. Sounds self-contradictory. It definitely does not look very rational. It's feasible for God to live in the ninety percent that we do not know about.
Some say to me "There is no God!" There is a basic issue in such a statement - so as to know that there's no god you would need to have 'all data' and that's impossible for any one person. For somebody to announce that God does not exist, he'd have to be God, to grasp that there wasn't any God.
Saying that God does not exist might seem tough to some and to others it may sound intellectual but it doesn't explain the existence of such a extremely complicated universe at every level. The water molecule was alleged to be one of the first molecules because it was a elementary cell, now it has been discovered with enhanced technology that it is highly complicated molecule. That is just water what about a budding flower? What about the human body? What about the human brain? What of the human brain For those who actually desire to hear, science - cosmology, zoology, botany, chemistry, biology and archaeology, now has much more evidence of God than of natural evolution.
About the Author:
Neil Baulch of bibletimelinesite.com asks the question that 'If we only know Ten percent of ALL there's to know, how can so quite a few well-informed folks assert that there's no God? And takes exception the lack of objectiveness of that assertion.