More like trial and error. I observed and researched. Then came to my conclusion.There isn't one... the inverse and or in other words you can create whatever you believe yourself but will not fit for everyone.
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More like trial and error. I observed and researched. Then came to my conclusion.There isn't one... the inverse and or in other words you can create whatever you believe yourself but will not fit for everyone.
Is it too far fetched to use the plural purposes? I’m posing as a question threw the lens of history. Noting the accomplishment by various individuals small and large. With many aiding the few exceptional individuals we hear most about.I think there can be more than one purpose to a life. I am thinking every person has to sort that out for themselves what that may be for them. Now, we can generalize and say things like "passing along wisdom" or "to love and be loved", but for some, neither of those may apply.
I do agree that many of us struggle with their purpose in life. I know for some, if they did have a purpose, and it is removed for one reason, or another, it can absolutely destroy a person psychologically.
I don't think that it is far-fetched at all. When I say this, do consider the nearly infinite contexts and perspectives of everyone who has ever lived. Consider all the religious influences, all the cultural influences, all the socio-economic influences, and all the wisdom accumulated through time. I may have my purpose(s) in my life. You have yours. As a Christian, your personal belief system will most certainly be different than a non-Christian, and as such, you have a view of life and the purpose of life through that lens. Even within the Christian religion, historically, culturally, socio-economically, from one society to the next, it is likely to be somewhat similar, but also likely somewhat different than your views.Is it too far fetched to use the plural purposes? I’m posing as a question threw the lens of history. Noting the accomplishment by various individuals small and large. With many aiding the few exceptional individuals we hear most about.
I would still say love primarily from what I know and have learned. But, certainly with other reasons. I’m somewhat a skeptic on extraterrestrial life. But, that’s because of a possibility I’ve glimpsed. A theory I’m working on where it could exist at a later time in more than one universe/dimensions.If you believe in God, the almighty and wise creator, well then, you have to widen your focus beyond that of human beings on Earth. Certainly, we have to consider all the life in the entirety of the cosmos. As human beings on Earth, we are not a singularity, but more likely one of an infinite amount of examples of life. What is the purpose of life on the broader, more generalized perspective? Chew on that one for a while. What was God's intent and purpose for creating life, not only on Earth, but throughout the cosmos, in all its forms?
The latest science and imaging would suggest that the universe is still expanding. OK, let us assume for a moment that this is true. Expanding outward into what? This implies that there is something outside the universe to expand into. What is on the other side? Is God on the other side? Is He not finished with His creation? It would seem so. Countless stars in the universe, countless planets orbiting these stars, and none of them except Earth have life? That is almost a mathematical and theoretical impossibility. I am not God, but one might logically think that God likely had more in His plan than Earth and the humans on it. I would never have the arrogance to think that we are a singularity. The mind of The Creator would logically have a significantly larger plan.I would still say love primarily from what I know and have learned. But, certainly with other reasons. I’m somewhat a skeptic on extraterrestrial life. But, that’s because of a possibility I’ve glimpsed. A theory I’m working on where it could exist at a later time in more than one universe/dimensions.
It’s the timing though. I don’t think it’s time yet for extraterrestrial life to exist.
Unless it begins with us. Maybe we’re the foundation for extraterrestrial life to begin later.The latest science and imaging would suggest that the universe is still expanding. OK, let us assume for a moment that this is true. Expanding outward into what? This implies that there is something outside the universe to expand into. What is on the other side? Is God on the other side? Is He not finished with His creation? It would seem so. Countless stars in the universe, countless planets orbiting these stars, and none of them except Earth have life? That is almost a mathematical and theoretical impossibility. I am not God, but one might logically think that God likely had more in His plan than Earth and the humans on it. I would never have the arrogance to think that we are a singularity. The mind of The Creator would logically have a significantly larger plan.
The latest science and imaging would suggest that the universe is still expanding. OK, let us assume for a moment that this is true. Expanding outward into what? This implies that there is something outside the universe to expand into. What is on the other side?
Given our location within our galaxy and in the universe, and the sorts of timelines that it takes for the universe to expand at the rates that it is, we certainly are not the "center" nor "origin point". Which implies there are galaxies with solar systems with planets much older and younger than ours, and with at least the potential for life. Again, I would never be arrogant enough to think that humans on Earth are the slightest bit "special". Furthermore, that sort of thinking might also imply that God, as we have become to know Him, might be more "local" and perhaps not overseeing the entirety of the universe. I highly doubt that within the vastness of it all, He decides to "park his butt" here and just watch over Earth. That's some small thinking.Unless it begins with us. Maybe we’re the foundation for extraterrestrial life to begin later.
Just a thought.
This is the problem with trying to wrap ones mind around this idea of the "Big Bang". So, as I understand, "everything" was located into a singularity and then it exploded outward. Well, "everything", no matter how compacted, no matter how dense, still occupies a space. All this "stuff" is made up of "something". This also implies there was "something" outside it. If the created objects actually have a mass and they are traveling away from each other, this implies that distance also exists, which means that as this happens, it is occupying "a space" that it didn't before. What is that "space"? It certainly is "something". It can't be "nothing".Haha, yeah, it messes with your mind a bit, but it's not expanding into anything. Because as far as we can tell it IS everything. I think when you hear the word "expanding" the temptation is to think of it as an object, which then raises the question of where that thing actually exists. So don't think of it as growing, think of it as the distances between things is getting larger.
Maybe.Aliens created us like test tube babies… placed us on earth and now we’re essentially their entertainment ant farm to look at and study.
This is the problem with trying to wrap ones mind around this idea of the "Big Bang". So, as I understand, "everything" was located into a singularity and then it exploded outward. Well, "everything", no matter how compacted, no matter how dense, still occupies a space. All this "stuff" is made up of "something". This also implies there was "something" outside it. If the created objects actually have a mass and they are traveling away from each other, this implies that distance also exists, which means that as this happens, it is occupying "a space" that it didn't before. What is that "space"? It certainly is "something". It can't be "nothing".
I just love these discussions.It's super weird to wrap your mind round, indeed. You have to be careful not to use words that kind of infer conditions that we don't think existed. So "located" infers dimensions outside the singularity, which as it was the entirety of everything. Likewise "outward", there's nothing outside to expand into.
The trouble is we are creatures of this universe at this time, which means all the analogies we have are imperfect because, well, they use things in the current universe in our sphere of understanding. Here's a couple.
So take a chess board. There's 64 squares. That is where the game happens. Asking what is outside the universe is like asking what happens on the 65th square of the chessboard. There is none. Saying "but 65 comes after 64" is correct, but that is all there is for the game, just that chessboard.
And for the idea that time started at the beginning of the universe, asking what happened before is like listening to a song and asking which note came before the first. There was none, the song is a whole, there's no bit of the song before the start. There are no prior notes.
I just love these discussions.
Speaking of imperfect analogies, the examples you gave don't really work. 64 squares is 64 squares. A song has a beginning and an end. However, when we are discussing the origins of the universe, it's on a whole different level. However, to oversimplify: "Something" does not just magically occur from "nothing". There has to be "building blocks" of "something", and we have gone to great lengths to discover these subatomic particles. How far down can you go with it? Even the smallest particles are made of "something", and that "something" is made of "something" else, so on and so forth. Furthermore, if "something" has a mass, it occupies a space, which also means it has a location within a space. So, if we are talking about a Big Bang, then whatever materials, that "everything" had to come into existence by some force(s). The materials, those building blocks had to come from somewhere. Which also implies a timeline beforehand. Again, I think we are limiting ourselves.
He was always here. As I understand it in the void. Where nothing was.God certainly did not come from nothing,
This thinking is human as we understand things and reckon them. Humans know of beginning and endings. God is neither of these words. He is outside of their definition.If we were to entertain this idea of God, as we have become to know Him, then how does God come into existence?
Truth.It would appear that God has a life of His own, the thinking, the planning, the creation, the overseeing, etc.
Not this.His knowledge and wisdom was either bestowed upon Him from "someone" or
Certainly this.He lived a life of his own.
God himself said there are no others in Heaven and even in the beginning there was only him. Genesis speaks of it. As does other parts of the Bible.Certainly, this may suggest that He was not alone, that perhaps there were others like Him.
He oversees it all from beginning to end. I suspect at the same time.Furthermore, that sort of thinking might also imply that God, as we have become to know Him, might be more "local" and perhaps not overseeing the entirety of the universe.
We are to God. Hugely so. Each and everyone that ever was and ever will be.Again, I would never be arrogant enough to think that humans on Earth are the slightest bit "special".
No it doesn't. I think that's just how we intuitively see it because of our everyday experience. But that's not how physics works.This implies that there is something outside the universe to expand into