@bigdoggproblem saidOkay, I think I see your point (hopefully), and I tend to agree with what you said. I believe what is seen was made by what isn't; this doesn't lessen the mysteries of life. Since as we connect to the cause of the all, the mysteries deepen even more since He is endless.
I want to be very careful here. Sometimes we cannot get all the way to the "truth" of the matter; sometimes we must be content with knowing a bit more than we used to know.
For questions of "why does the physical world behave the way it does?" - I think science is the best tool we have for answering such questions.
Even for questions of "why do human beings behav ...[text shortened]... learned so much about physics, but, the more we learn, the more we realize how much we do not know.
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This is a great video which I didn't know where to place.
Galveston, your thread seemed a good place.
The speaker seems to be a criminologist or detective of some type. He's the author of a lecture called
Cold-Case Christianity with J. Warner Wallace
How the Origin of Life Points to the Existence of God
@sonship saidHe is a good speaker and his book is good too.
This is a great video which I didn't know where to place.
Galveston, your thread seemed a good place.
The speaker seems to be a criminologist or detective of some type. He's the author of a lecture called
Cold-Case Christianity with J. Warner Wallace
How the Origin of Life Points to the Existence of God
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4uRWk06Wo0