<drift@lost.net> wrote in message
news:qf0r205srh6ofc9q4vvu2sadac7mfs0bcv@4ax.com...
On Fri, 13 Feb 2004 00:20:30 GMT, "jabriol" <jabriol@borijan.org>
wrote:
Many rational people accept the existence of things they cannot see. In
January 1997, Discover magazine reported that astronomers detected what
they
concluded were about a dozen planets orbiting distant stars.
"So far the new planets are known only from the way their gravity
perturbs
the motion of the parent stars." Yes, for the astronomers, the visible
effects of gravity constituted a basis for believing in the existence of
unseen heavenly bodies.
Related evidence-not direct observation-was an adequate basis for
scientists to accept what was yet invisible. Many who believe in a
Creator
conclude that they have a similar basis for accepting what they cannot
see.
As I said many times over. it is not the evidence per se. It is how the
evidence is interpreted and by whom and his level of authority and how it
affects your life.
Believe in things that do stuff. Here's a few examples: The wind that
blows your hat off. Heat from radiators that keep you warm.
Electricity that makes your microwave work. The microwaves that heat
the food. The software in this and many other computers, including
yours, that enable you to read this. All invisible but they work every
time and produce real results.
really?
we live in a world that on its own, recycle air,water, food, nothing goes to
waste in nature, it works everyday.
you can do the same thing with an aquarium. and you say that our planet..
the perfect biosphere just happen by chance?
.