To believe the earth is 6000 years old is pathological and antisocial. Real Christians don't believe the earth is 6000 years old.
Well, the Ha'mara season starts earlier every year ...this is about DS9 and not Christianity (Which I am a firm believer in and follower of)
Well, the Ha'mara season starts earlier every year ...this is about DS9 and not Christianity (Which I am a firm believer in and follower of)
I have no idea. We know that the Ferengi purchased warp technology (DS9 "Little Green Men") but we don't know when...except that it was clearly before 2151 (ENT "Acquisition")Now, all that said...they did seem to take a long time to go into space in a major way. They only started using lightships as late as Earth's 16th century, so they were evidently content to take their time jumping out into the dark.
Weren't the Vulcans and Ferengi slow to expand into deep space?
This presumes the person you are addressing has one.I'm not going to argue religious doctrine w you or anyone else on a Star Trek fansite. Read your bible. Nowhere in the bible does is say the earth is 6000 years old. That's something people made up. Read your bible.
This presumes the person you are addressing has one.I'm not going to argue religious doctrine w you or anyone else on a Star Trek fansite. Read your bible. Nowhere in the bible does is say the earth is 6000 years old. That's something people made up. Read your bible.
No, different species are created at different times. And no, it makes no comment on the immutability of creation. The idea that creation should be perfect--that it would be the same at all times--came from the Neo-Platonists, and religious thinkers appended it to their interpretation of religious texts.It's true the Bible doesn't say specifically the Earth is 6000 years old, but it does say that all species that exist now always existed and no new can come into existence, no?
alright I can't ignore it any longer: Texas has some of the best educational standards in the nation if you account for schools that actually have good attendance. Ironically, well for atheists anyway, they are usually the religious schools. They have higher standards and don't contribute to the average educational standard in Texas because they aren't public schools, but they are so common as to be in every town and city of more than 10,000 people. Those public schools who have less are of a quality depending on your area. The further south you go - in other words, the closer to Mexico - the worse their attendance, academic standards, and overall performance is. So contrary to that cartoonishly simple evil redneck, it is another demographic entirely that is responsible for the average education in Texas. Before anyone tells me that I'm being prejudiced or that they know lots of smart immigrants, I'll say first that I know a lot of smart ones too. Go and ask them to explain averages to you.
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