RE: Life in the Lab -- Fox and the Nobel Prize

Pim van Meurs (entheta@eskimo.com)
Sat, 8 May 1999 18:23:08 -0700

That is illogical, we have certainly not detected all material entities.

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From: Moorad Alexanian[SMTP:alexanian@uncwil.edu]
Sent: Friday, May 07, 1999 6:07 AM
To: Pim van Meurs; Ami Chopine; asa@calvin.edu; evolution@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: Life in the Lab -- Fox and the Nobel Prize

If God were material, then we would have detected him in the lab. Man is the
detector of God and man is not only matter.

Moorad

-----Original Message-----
From: Pim van Meurs <entheta@eskimo.com>
To: 'Moorad Alexanian' <alexanian@uncwil.edu>; Ami Chopine <amka@vcode.com>;
asa@calvin.edu <asa@calvin.edu>; evolution@calvin.edu <evolution@calvin.edu>
Date: Thursday, May 06, 1999 10:52 PM
Subject: RE: Life in the Lab -- Fox and the Nobel Prize

>How do you know ?
>
>----------
>From: Moorad Alexanian[SMTP:alexanian@uncwil.edu]
>Sent: Thursday, May 06, 1999 12:28 PM
>To: Ami Chopine; asa@calvin.edu; evolution@calvin.edu
>Subject: Re: Life in the Lab -- Fox and the Nobel Prize
>
>God is not a material entity. Moorad
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Ami Chopine <amka@vcode.com>
>To: asa@calvin.edu <asa@calvin.edu>; evolution@calvin.edu
><evolution@calvin.edu>
>Date: Thursday, May 06, 1999 1:40 AM
>Subject: Re: Life in the Lab -- Fox and the Nobel Prize
>
>
>>Is God alive?
>>
>>
>>>
>>> Death is an essential feature of something that is alive. If it does not
>>> die, then it was not a material entity that was previously alive. Moorad
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>