Did a God or Gods create the universe? EDITED
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May I?
From a Christian perspective... God created the Universe, is Jesus a creation of God too? Before the existence of time?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Council_of_NicaeaDo you know how many people suffered and died because of silly questions like these?
Another Wittgenstein's quote then.
"Make sure that your religion is a matter between you and God only"To search God is like searching for a purpose in the Universe.
Is this what we're talking about? A purpose?
Because, if God is a before time creator or the universe just jumped out of nothing, these aren't much different sentences. -
I've read through and am still on the fence but deep down think that God as portrayed by most religions is delusionary. But at the end of the day I may find out or never find out!
I have, give or take a few, 5,840 of them left before I find out. To explain, I'm 61 and at 60 for men life expectancy is approx. 16 years here in Ireland. Kinda puts things into perspective for me. Might even start a count down, day by day, for a laugh
If we can't laugh about it we are in trouble. If God exists I would hope that he and the bunch around have a good sense of humour otherwise it will be very boring for me spending the rest of eternity is such an atmosphere. Then again, there is always the 'other' place according the the Christian faith at least.
On the subject of Hell, I wonder how many other religions have such in their beliefs?
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@marian said:
If god is perfect then anything he created is perfect, then humans are perfect.
If humans are created in the image of god and since humans are imperfect then god is also imperfect.Humans (Adam and Eve) were created perfect. But within that perfection was the characteristic of freewill which by definition allows for both good and evil decisions. At some point they chose evil and from then on instilled in mankind a sinful nature - a proclivity towards sin. Man wasn't created imperfect, essentially man chose imperfection.
I should also point out here that we're probably using very different definitions of the work 'perfect.' The idea of 'perfect' as it exists in western culture today - this idea of being free from fault and defect - is fairly recent. Going back to the Hebrew roots of the Bible the word 'perfect' meant something more like mature, complete, or lacking nothing.
@unknownuser said:
I don't particularly feel or see the love of this god. If god is love and he's perfect why did he flood the world and killed everything on it. Where is the compassion there? Why didn't he forgive. Or where is the compassion or love for the tribes that god sanctioned the Jews to exterminate together with their children and animals?
Aside from Noah the inclination of everyone's heart was evil all the time. That's not a good world to grow up in. If mankind hadn't been purged, it's reasonable to conclude that after Noah was gone, there would be no good in the world. To forgive that isn't merciful but would be evil of the highest degree.
Likewise God is rightfully the judge of mankind. He didn't tell Israel to destroy all of their enemies but did order certain peoples to be wiped out. In each case we find that God is using Israel as a tool of His judgement as these were terribly evil people - sacrificing children to false gods by burning them on alters and the like. Note that most Christians believe in some form of an 'age of accountability' which means the children who were killed were saved from growing up into a deplorable lifestyle and facing ultimate punishment but would have instead been redeemed as they'd yet to reach this age.
@unknownuser said:
Why does he need us to glorify him? Why??
He doesn't. He wants us to glorify him for the same reason a good parent wants their child to show them respect and honor. It's not because the parent selfishly needs respect and honor from a 10 year old girl, but because the girl's life will be more fulfilling and rich and peaceful if she learns those characteristics which lead to respecting and honoring her parents.
@unknownuser said:
I certainly don't want to worship him or any other person or deity in life or in death. Where is the pleasure in being a humble servant for eternity?
That's a choice we all have to make. One thing I sincerely admire is that you've obviously thought about it and made a conscious decision. There are many folks on both sides of our discussion who have simply gone with the flow and never even considered the question.
@unknownuser said:
God/s and the concepts that suround him/them are completely crazy. I have a better chance of understanding quantum physics then the reasons why people belive such things.
The Bible says that, "the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God." That's speaking specifically about what Christ did on the cross but it's not totally untrue in a larger sense as well. It also says in Proverbs, "there is a way that seems right to a man, but in the end it leads to death."
We can know a great deal about God and what He's done, but there is still a huge gap and it should come as no surprise that there remain a number of mysteries and sometimes he does things that completely surprise us. We see this throughout the Bible where God does the unexpected and sometimes inexplicable so you're in good company.
@unknownuser said:
I can't see why these would ever comfort anyone.
They aren't meant to. Contemporary Western Christian culture often falls into the idea that the point of God is to make us comfortable. On the contrary, living a life devoted to God is often dangerous, unsettling, and disturbing. Christian history is full of people being martyred for their faith, being beaten, being shipwrecked during missionary journeys, moving across the world to spend their lives serving the poor, diseased, and oppressed, giving away all that they own, etc. You don't become a Christian because it's easy or comfortable, but because it's true and the life is fulfilling.
-Brodie
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@solo said:
@unknownuser said:
@solo said:
So he was lonely and wanted (avoided using the word "need") something to love then?
Sounds pretty silly to me, but then again all religions do.
No. He's a creator and a giver, those are simply his characteristics. So what does a creator/giver do? He creates beings to give to. It's a bit more complex than that no doubt but the point is that he wasn't simply 'lonely' and wanted someone to talk to or filling some unmet need. The Christian God is a trinity which in itself has a sort of community which in itself would preclude a sense of loneliness.
-Brodie
Really, and that explanation works for you, makes any sense?
There's plenty about God and Christianity that puzzles me, but I don't spend much time wondering about this one.
-Brodie
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@tig said:
Brodie
How can you state in one breath that God is perfect and unique and then come along with that old chestnut of the 'Trinity' - that was itself invented by men to bodge over the issue of one God split into - the father, the son and the holy ghost [aka spirit] - where three is one and one is three - doh what ? It makes no sense at all.. there is supposed to be one God [or there isn't one God] ... so why make God out of just three distinct parts [which was in fact devised to incorporate a divine Jesus into the mix, and to cover various older pagan beliefs too] - if you want to consider God as both a single indivisible entity and 'several aspects'... then why not take ALL of the aspects of creation, with it's undeniable awe and wonder, that would make your God multi-faceted, but still 'one', and not just use these 'three' weaker compromises [nothing against Jesus and co but why fudge the issue like this for over a thousand years !] - this whole Trinity thing only got started to be legitimized after the Council of Nicaea et al [when MEN decided what the official line would be - I suspect that God wasn't actually there at the meeting [probably!]]; which was after many hundred years of Christians 'happily' having only the 'One True God' of the Old Testament [even now the Unitarian Christians want just one God, I believe !... and most mono-theist religions also expect 'oneness' from a deity]
I can accept that the core tenets of Christianity do have a positive role to play in the lives of many; BUT I am still aghast at how Christians can believe the cant of their church, when it defies simple common-sense and logic...
Sorry if I offend anyone, I'm just telling it as it is...
In honesty, for all the discussion I'm down for, I'm not sure the trinity is really one of them. Not because I take offence to the question or anything. It's just far too nuanced of a doctrine than I'm willing to dive into here - having to deal a lot with defining words, digging into history, and quoting scriptures.
Here's a good but brief explanation of what it is as I think your main issue is a misunderstanding of the trinity and how it's derived in scripture http://carm.org/trinity
-Brodie
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Brodie, my apologies for bad grammar; I meant the chances against intelligent life evolving, not chances of it evolving. It is, of course far less likely than winning the lottery (which is what I meant). Nevertheless the numbers still stand.
Of course there are more factors involved in creating conditions for life than a planet's distance from its sun. When did I say there weren't? It was Spence's Mormon quote that seemed to set such great store in the 'godlike' precision of earth's orbit.
It was precisely in countering that claim...that the earth is somehow a 'chosen planet' that I gave the figures indicating how many other such planets there may be in the universe.How can that possibly by irrelevant, as you claim? Inconvenient, maybe; irrelevant, certainly not. You appear to be rather fond of declaring things to be irrelevant without any obvious justification.
I'm not really interested in what statistics you have seen that counteract my figures. My figures are the most recent available and the ones used by the world's leading cosmologists.
@unknownuser said:
You're the one that pointed out the similarities, not me. You seem to be suggesting that the evolution of the eyes is completely different so the fact that they ended up so similar argues against a common designer. I don't see how. A theist who doesn't believe in macro evolution would simply suggest that the human and the octopus currently have similar systems which perform similar functions and how you want to construct a theoretical evolutionary tree to support a preconceived theory is irrelevant.
There we go with the irrelevant again.
I didn't point out the similarities, I pointed out the superiority, in many ways, of the octopus eye to our ownSo you originally claimed that this supposed similarity (which I didn't point out) could be proof of a common designer. Now you're saying that their dissimilarity could also be proof of a common designer? Is there any condition that wouldn't be proof of a common designer...or is that presupposition built-in?
The fact that you claim that a theist can argue a common designer regardless of the relationship between the two optical systems only goes to prove that theists don't argue at all. They do, indeed, simply claim that God did it....period. That's not an argument.
It's not necessary to construct an evolutionary tree...theoretical or otherwise; close study of the developing young of either species can clearly demonstrate the eye forming as an offshoot of the brain or a hollowing-out of the epidermis.
I'm not sure which preconceived theory you are referring to. If it's evolution itself then that is immeasurably less preconceived than the presupposition of a deity, There is a mountain of utterly conclusive evidence for evolution, there is non whatsoever for the existence of God.
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@alan fraser said:
Brodie, my apologies for bad grammar; I meant the chances against intelligent life evolving, not chances of it evolving. It is, of course far less likely than winning the lottery (which is what I meant). Nevertheless the numbers still stand.
Of course there are more factors involved in creating conditions for life than a planet's distance from its sun. When did I say there weren't? It was Spence's Mormon quote that seemed to set such great store in the 'godlike' precision of earth's orbit.
It was precisely in countering that claim...that the earth is somehow a 'chosen planet' that I gave the figures indicating how many other such planets there may be in the universe.How can that possibly by irrelevant, as you claim? Inconvenient, maybe; irrelevant, certainly not. You appear to be rather fond of declaring things to be irrelevant without any obvious justification.
I'm not really interested in what statistics you have seen that counteract my figures. My figures are the most recent available and the ones used by the world's leading cosmologists.
@unknownuser said:
You're the one that pointed out the similarities, not me. You seem to be suggesting that the evolution of the eyes is completely different so the fact that they ended up so similar argues against a common designer. I don't see how. A theist who doesn't believe in macro evolution would simply suggest that the human and the octopus currently have similar systems which perform similar functions and how you want to construct a theoretical evolutionary tree to support a preconceived theory is irrelevant.
There we go with the irrelevant again.
I didn't point out the similarities, I pointed out the superiority, in many ways, of the octopus eye to our ownSo you originally claimed that this supposed similarity (which I didn't point out) could be proof of a common designer. Now you're saying that their dissimilarity could also be proof of a common designer? Is there any condition that wouldn't be proof of a common designer...or is that presupposition built-in?
The fact that you claim that a theist can argue a common designer regardless of the relationship between the two optical systems only goes to prove that theists don't argue at all. They do, indeed, simply claim that God did it....period. That's not an argument.
It's not necessary to construct an evolutionary tree...theoretical or otherwise; close study of the developing young of either species can clearly demonstrate the eye forming as an offshoot of the brain or a hollowing-out of the epidermis.
I'm not sure which preconceived theory you are referring to. If it's evolution itself then that is immeasurably less preconceived than the presupposition of a deity, There is a mountain of utterly conclusive evidence for evolution, there is non whatsoever for the existence of God.
I'm not aware of any serious Christian who would argue against the evolution of a species. Life from nothing is another matter, and even if that were true, I would argue that the step from a single celled organism that evolved from the primordial ooze to male and female is a greater stumbling block to the evolution theory. It is unnecessary, inefficient and too complicated for it to have evolved as the best way to reproduce.
I find it interesting that Dawkins will state categorically that the world was not created by God but will suggest that life may have been seeded here by extraterrestrials (interview in Expelled - no intelligence allowed) or that it had something to do with crystals. That sounds even more far fetched to me.
At the end of the day, there are serious minds on both sides of the issue. There is no proof either way.
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@unknownuser said:
Humans (Adam and Eve) were created perfect. But within that perfection was the characteristic of freewill which by definition allows for both good and evil decisions. At some point they chose evil and from then on instilled in mankind a sinful nature - a proclivity towards sin. Man wasn't created imperfect, essentially man chose imperfection
-Brodie
Brodie, An interesting thing I observed in the video that prompted me to start this topic was that Eve ate an apple from the 'Tree of Knowledge', then got Adam to follow suit.
Wiki
In the Book of Genesis, the tree of the knowledge of good and evil or the tree of knowledge (occasionally, the tree of conscience, Hebrew: ืขึตืฅ ืึทืึทึผืขึทืช ืืึนื ืึธืจึธืข, Etz haDaat tov V'ra) was a tree in the middle of the Garden of Eden. (Genesis 2:9). God directly forbade Adam (Eve having not yet been created) to eat the fruit of this tree. A serpent tempted Eve, who was aware of the prohibition against eating the forbidden fruit of the tree of knowledge (Genesis 3:1-6). The serpent had suggested to Eve that eating the fruit would bestow wisdom upon them. Eve and then Adam ate the forbidden fruit, and they became aware of their nakedness (Genesis 3:6-7). After confronting their disobedience, God banished the couple from the garden in order to deny them access to the Tree of Life, which would have bestowed immortality onto them. God cursed both the snake and the ground, obliging Adam to survive through agriculture "by the sweat of his brow." He told the woman that her childbirth pains would be greatly increased and that the man would rule over her. God set guards (Cherubim) at the east side of the garden to protect the way to the tree of life from Adam, Eve, and their descendants. (Genesis 3:14-24)
What I have always found strange about this bible story is that God created Adam and Eve with inquiring minds but it would seem that he wanted them to remain ignorant pets, all be it immortal ignorant pets. For me living in a World however wonderful and not being allowed to explore and learn would be akin to living in a dark gloomy prison cell. Am I missing something in this story?
Mike
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Mike, the story of the Tree is not about ignorance, it's about obedience. Adam and Eve were allowed to explore anywhere and eat anything except the fruit from the one tree. They had no rules except one, and they broke it.
Again, the popular notion of Christianity misses the point that we're to follow God with our heart, soul AND mind. That means think, test, probe, question etc.
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Pete, almost all major religions have a flood story so it's likely that it did happen.
One of the problems with arguing about things like this is the idea that the Bible is scientific history. It's not. It's redemptive history, the story of the fall and God's desire for reconciliation. To read more than that into it is problematic.
Christians believe that the Bible is inerrant. To many that means that there are no errors in the version that you pick up at the local bookstore. That's not the case though. It's inerrant in the original language to the people it was written to. We don't have the complete context.
For instance, take the phrase "don't drink and drive". We all know what it means. But, imagine someone 2,000 years from now who speaks another language deciphering the phrase. With no idea of the context they will get an inaccurate idea of the meaning of the phrase.
So it is with the Bible. It's about context. Sure there are things that don't make sense to us. But, it's likely that they did make sense to someone at the time it was written.
At the end of the day, Jesus summed everything up when asked "what is the greatest commandment?" He replied, "love the Lord your God with all your heart and soul and mind and the second is this: love your neighbor as yourself".
That's it. Nothing else matters. You can believe the world was created over millions of years or in 6 24 hour days, but it doesn't matter.
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@dropout said:
I find it interesting that Dawkins will state categorically that the world was not created by God but will suggest that life may have been seeded here by extraterrestrials (interview in Expelled - no intelligence allowed) or that it had something to do with crystals. That sounds even more far fetched to me.
If you can quote that farrago of lies with a straight face you've disqualified yourself as any sort of serious commenter.
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To me, the story of Adam and Eve with the tree is a nice myth about mankind gaining cosciousness (i.e. evolving from the animal World). The snake (or Evil or Devil or Lucifer) is a similar mythological figure as Prometheus in the Greek mythology. In fact, "Lucifer" means "The one who brings life" - just like Prometheus.
Now obviously the two figures are valued differently in the two "religions" since Prometheus is a positive hero. I think if you guys want to stick to the original, more abstract topic, these details should be sorted out. As well as different Ancient debates about the Holy Trinity and things like that. Everybody is somewhat looking at this topic from a certain religion's point of view.
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@tim said:
@dropout said:
I find it interesting that Dawkins will state categorically that the world was not created by God but will suggest that life may have been seeded here by extraterrestrials (interview in Expelled - no intelligence allowed) or that it had something to do with crystals. That sounds even more far fetched to me.
If you can quote that farrago of lies with a straight face you've disqualified yourself as any sort of serious commenter.
Did you watch the movie? It's biased, yes, and they obviously want to make him look bad, but these are Dawkins own words.
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I agree with your comments Brodie.
I would only add the idea of all religions - that this world, this life is not the only one, and not the end. With this belief in hart one can find peace, even when "suffering" in materialist thinking terms (not having money to by new ipod . Having this in mind, new horizons of thinking are opening, and man becomes really free, like free Google SketchUp . This is true freedom.@unknownuser said:
Okay, lets for the sake of shits and giggles assume God DID create everything known and unknown..... WHY?
Needed an ant farm? was lonely? cruel bastard that wants to see his creatures suffer?Why you created your son?
@unknownuser said:
So he was lonely and wanted (avoided using the word "need") something to love then?
Sounds pretty silly to me, but then again all religions do.A mouse looking at two people in love, having romantic dinner, going to cinema , talking a lot, but not having sex...it would look pretty silly to him...the same with us looking at God.
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@unknownuser said:
If you can quote that farrago of lies with a straight face you've disqualified yourself as any sort of serious commenter.
Of all the interesting comments, opinions and suggestions in this thread I find this the most astonishing. Why does taking Dawkins ideas seriously disqualify a person as a commenter?
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@dropout said:
I'm not aware of any serious Christian who would argue against the evolution of a species. Life from nothing is another matter, and even if that were true, I would argue that the step from a single celled organism that evolved from the primordial ooze to male and female is a greater stumbling block to the evolution theory. It is unnecessary, inefficient and too complicated for it to have evolved as the best way to reproduce.
I'm not aware of any either....in the UK or anywhere else in Europe; but I think you'll find that figures suggest that most Christians in the USA don't believe in Evolution. Here's one.
[flash=640,390:2irshqga]http://www.youtube.com/v/l1msS71xL00?version=3[/flash:2irshqga]
You then seem to argue against evolution yourself, saying that the path from single celled organism to male and female is some kind of stumbling block. In the contrary the path is both clear and demonstrable in organisms living today, quite apart from those in the fossil record. Male and female may seem to be superficially complex and inefficient, but if it was truly so then the engine that drives evolution would have us all breeding like snails. Evolution doesn't have an agenda, it just goes with what works best. The simple fact is that sexual reproduction, requires input from two distinct organisms, engendering a much wider gene pool, leading to greater experimentation and mutation, leading to greater bio-diversity...which is what evolution is all about. It's exactly the same principle that requires (ideally) breeding populations of more than one pair...in fact the more the merrier. Such populations are far less susceptible to being entirely wiped out by disease or inbred genetic defects.
I wasn't arguing in favour of abiogenesis, although I may have given that impression. Abiogenesis, for those unfamiliar with the term, is the scientific theory dealing with the possibility of life self-starting, given the right environmental conditions.
To date, no convincing process has been laboratory demonstrated for this....although it could be that the missing factor is countless aeons of time, which is going to prove a little difficult to replicate.However it is certainly the case that many organic compounds including the basic building blocks for life, such as amino acids, have been found in objects originating in deep space, obviating any chance of earthly contamination. So it's not an unreasonable hypothesis; and certainly has a lot more going for it than the entirely unsupported notion that life was started by magic by a divine being for whom there is absolutely no evidence at all.
I was responding to an original point which suggested that the position and orbit of the earth around the sun was fine-tuned to such a degree that it was strongly indicative of an intelligence behind it. The point I was making was that there are so many stars in the universe that, even after playing devil's advocate in a very enthusiastic way, the likelihood is that there are still going to be millions of planetary sytems left in which those conditions conducive to life exist. To quote:
@alan fraser said:
Even if you make astronomically huge conservative calculations about the number of suitable stars having suitable planets for intelligent life to develop on, that still leaves millions of possible contenders.
I'm referring to planets which have the potential for life to develop. I'm not saying it has. We may well have such bodies in our own solar system, like the icy moons of Jupiter and Saturn; especially Saturn's moon Enceladus. I doubt it would be anything more than microbial, given the distance from the sun; but you never know. The abundant life that is found here on earth in the deep oceans around the geothermal vents known as Black Smokers appear to exist entirely without input from the sun, deriving all energy ultimately from algae feeding on the minerals and organic compounds issuing from the vents. Enceladus is similarly geothermal.
Your attribution to Dawkins is, I'm afraid, as disingenuous as the earlier attribution to Darwin in a post by someone else. I've seen the original interview with the moronic Ben Stein. It's here. Stein is far more concerned with making Dawkins look uncomfortable by asking totally irrelevant non-sequiturs than he is with getting to the bottom of anything. He persists, embarrassingly, in trying to get Dawkins to put a precise percentage on his disbelief in God...as if that is of any significance whatsoever, as Dawkins has already admitted it's only a very small chance that God exists.
Dawkins admits that life could have come here from other worlds. He has no choice as an honest scientist. Science cannot rule out any possibility....which is why science deliberately avoids pointless debates about subjects which are non-falsifiable...such as "Is there a god?". That's an entirely different thing from admitting that he supports the idea of extra-terrestrial involvement.
He is even honest enough to admit that he is only 99% certain there is no God (for the above reason...it's non fasifiable). I guess that technically makes him an agnostic rather than an atheist...something he has admited to in another interview.
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@srx said:
So I don't think this "human logic" of superman, or man - god kind of thinking can give us answers:
so for God to dare to punish us when we do exactly what he knows we will do with his 'gift', is frankly unacceptable double-think.It simply is not our level of existence.
To prove with our pure mind YES, there is God, or to prove NOT there isn't...we can not do that. We can only believe.
Again Dostoevsky made experiments with his heroes to find the answer. The sense of good and evil deep rooted in all of us made him believe in creator. He searched inside.
you might become surprised if you know that in the scripture i believe in, there is confirmation about big bang, supernova, nebulae, smokes cycles theories. whatever they may call it in scientific terminologies.
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@unknownuser said:
you might become surprised if you know that in the scripture i believe in, there is confirmation about big bang, supernova, nebulae, smokes cycles theories. whatever they may call it in scientific terminologies.
I'd like to know more about it.
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@irwanwr said:
you might become surprised if you know that in the scripture i believe in, there is confirmation about big bang, supernova, nebulae, smokes cycles theories. whatever they may call it in scientific terminologies.
That would be the qur'an, right? Well... some claim the same things about the bible.
In most cases if not all, these claims are total hogwash, they are often based on some dubious wording in the books which can easily be interpreted however you want.
For these claims to be true they would have to have predictive power in the scientific sense and contributed to science in the past, but that is not the case. It's easy to interpret the books now with hindsight and new scientific knowledge in all the ways you want.
I'm more impressed by the predictions that Jules Verne makes in his books than anything in the so called holy scriptures. -
@srx said:
I'd like to know more about it.
i don't know the details really. but there are few things i could remember.
as they were old literatures i read quite a while ago.
one of them is this "La Bible le Coran et la Science" by Maurice Bucaille.
i don't know where the translated hardcopy is now.
you may be able to look for free pdf of it on the web. as i'd do too now.
cause this discussion remind me of ithere's a link with some short explanation of the big bang theory.
Creation of the Universe
[Edited]
using the same google search i've just checked this one too.
and it might be interesting as well. i've never seen this site before though.
Science In Quran
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