| </span><blockquote><span class="smallfont">Quote:</span><hr size="1" />Originally Posted by (bugsbunny04,)
Another point: The universe had to have been created by a supreme being. Ever look at the periodic table? Seven periods of elements. 118 elements could exist theoretically (113,115,117 have not actually been manufactured yet to my knowledge but I'm sure some bored bastard is working on it). 92 occure natually. Yeah, you guessed it, 210 is a divisible of seven. Number of f-block families you would have if they were where they arguably should? 14, divisible by seven. Number A groups that have unstable outer energy levels (this means A groups excluding Noble gases, or more to the point, groups whose members are very reactive because of the number of valence electrons) yessiree they sure is seven of them. I'm not mentioning the number seven because of its proported divinity, but because of its repetition. How could something that organized (I'm refering to chemistry in general here) be a random occurance? <hr size="1" /></blockquote><span class='postcolor'>
Let's see, when the universe was formed, initially there were 3 elements, infact lithium it self is only about 1% of all elements. The rest are produced by fusion within a star and the heavier metals are produced when it supernovas.
</span><blockquote><span class="smallfont">Quote:</span><hr size="1" />Originally Posted by
Another point: Ever look at properties and states of matter and energy relationships in SI units? Do you really think that such relationships (I'm refering to chemistry in general) could be a random occurance? <hr size="1" /></blockquote><span class='postcolor'>
Please elobarate. And can I just point out we ourselves created the SI units, they don't exist outside of our minds, our obsession with quantisation has lead to it.
</span><blockquote><span class="smallfont">Quote:</span><hr size="1" />Originally Posted by
Ok, lets talk astronomy. Yeah, I'm sure constellations are a random occurance too. Yeah, right. c= 3.00 x 10^8 m/s for no particular reason? And the H in a star fusing to form He and emitt huge amounts of energy does all this at a controlled rate instead of exploding all at once for no particular reason. Sure it does.
How can a scientist who knows anything about odds not believe in God?<hr size="1" /></blockquote><span class='postcolor'>
Too much bullsh*t already, we already can sustained controlled fusion for a period of 1 second...you might say so what, but the sun itself is a fusion reactor, it is THE only way to produce enough energy and to last long enough.
Physicists work with observations, facts not fairy tales and invisible sky pixie. |