Upchurch
Papa Funkosophy
Oh, baby, have I ever! Spent two semesters in college on Gravity alone. The short answer is that gravity is a fourth dimensional warping of spacetime by mass and energy.hammegk said:
Takes a lot of forms, anyway, & within uncertainty limits is neither created nor destroyed, yup. What is Gravity? Do you ever wonder?
Whatever they are, they don't know actual science.{Or, conversely, are F (&W) totally insane?![]()
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Great, but where did it go? Are you suggesting that life is conserved, and if so how, or that life can be distroyed? I'm suggesting the latter since there is no evidence that it goes anywhere.A meaningful question once you have concluded "matter makes life". But again, that is The Question we are discussing, isn't it?
Actually, it is another try at the question, "What do you know of that is more quintessentially 'energetic' than life?"This is another try at The Question, isn't it?
I guess I need some clarification. When you said, "'Life'is also interesting to contemplate: it seems to me it is more akin to 'energy' than 'matter'" and then asked the question above, I assumed that you considered life to something that is directly comparable to energy. Indeed, you asked me to compare it to something else that has energy.
What properties, exactly, do you think energy and life have in common?
So... why call the god-of-the-gaps (i.e. God is that which science hasn't explained yet) "God" at all? Why not just call it the "yet unknown" and continue the pursuit? This is the position I take as an atheist. Really, the only thing I take on blind faith is not the doctorine that everything that is knowable can be known and that which isn't knowable (e.g. the Uncertainty Principle) is at least understandable. Or, in other words, there are know unsolvable mysteries, only unsolved ones.I only point out that "necessary" is not "sufficient", and I foresee a never-ending god-of-the-gaps problem for science. And, we are yet far far away from that point.![]()
But I digress. My appologies.