The question is as meaningful as the knowledge and honesty of the person who attempts an answer for it. You can substitute the word "laws" for whatever you want, e.g., mathematical laws, randomness, historical events, etc. Whatever you want!
Moorad
________________________________
From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu on behalf of skrogh
Sent: Tue 9/25/2007 12:17 PM
To: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: RE: [asa] EU proposed regulation of creationism and ID
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Alexanian, Moorad [mailto:alexanian@uncw.edu]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 25, 2007 11:09 AM
> To: skrogh; asa@calvin.edu
> Subject: RE: [asa] EU proposed regulation of creationism and ID
>
>
> Certainly, there are mathematical models that are used to describe the
> time development of the very early universe. I have published works on
> the very early universe using such models. Of course, what laws are
> thought to be necessary is part of the question itself. You fill in the
> blanks what you mean by laws.
How predictable a response is that. Why should I define it? You brought it
up. You define it. Why this obfuscation?
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8:02 AM
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Received on Tue Sep 25 13:09:41 2007
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