God.Originally posted by: episodic
This - humans existence?
Is there a greater meaning?
Should there not be?
Or are we just all wormfood. . .
Originally posted by: bobbybe01
I'm speechless.
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Value wise, we are just like any other lifeform on Earth. But we are more intelligent and are now smart enough to question our own existence. It's no surprise that some people have found a way to "justify" our existence with grandiose stories of God creating us in his image and all that nonsense.
Face it, we're life that sprung up on big ball of dirt out in space. This probably happens all over the universe, but the distances involved are so great that we'll never get to meet them (an alien could be a plant or an bacterium)
Originally posted by: episodic
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Value wise, we are just like any other lifeform on Earth. But we are more intelligent and are now smart enough to question our own existence. It's no surprise that some people have found a way to "justify" our existence with grandiose stories of God creating us in his image and all that nonsense.
Face it, we're life that sprung up on big ball of dirt out in space. This probably happens all over the universe, but the distances involved are so great that we'll never get to meet them (an alien could be a plant or an bacterium)
So no grand design eh?
Originally posted by: MadCowDisease
Originally posted by: episodic
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Value wise, we are just like any other lifeform on Earth. But we are more intelligent and are now smart enough to question our own existence. It's no surprise that some people have found a way to "justify" our existence with grandiose stories of God creating us in his image and all that nonsense.
Face it, we're life that sprung up on big ball of dirt out in space. This probably happens all over the universe, but the distances involved are so great that we'll never get to meet them (an alien could be a plant or an bacterium)
So no grand design eh?
If you'd like to read the massive bodies of literature on evolutionary processes and natural selection you'd understand that it isn't goal-oriented, which is what "grand design" suggests.
