- 01 May 2016 12:29
#14675503
That is because true life comes from God and we do not fully understand God. I believe Christians normally believe in both spiritual and physical life. For physical life the Holy Bible says the life is in the blood.
But for both spiritual and physical life, it seems to be the opposite of death. And physical death is usually defined as the termination of all biological functions that sustain a living organism. But then we run into the problem of what we define as living. Today we normally define plants as living, but the Holy Bible only refers to them as food for living creatures and never refers to them as dead plants or something that can be killed, but only as withering away.
Today we can program computers and robots so that they act like they are living, but we don't define them as living, st least not yet.
ingliz wrote:What is life? We cannot produce a satisfactory definition of life; a definition that would allow us to reliably distinguish things that are alive from things that aren’t.
That is because true life comes from God and we do not fully understand God. I believe Christians normally believe in both spiritual and physical life. For physical life the Holy Bible says the life is in the blood.
But for both spiritual and physical life, it seems to be the opposite of death. And physical death is usually defined as the termination of all biological functions that sustain a living organism. But then we run into the problem of what we define as living. Today we normally define plants as living, but the Holy Bible only refers to them as food for living creatures and never refers to them as dead plants or something that can be killed, but only as withering away.
Today we can program computers and robots so that they act like they are living, but we don't define them as living, st least not yet.
The more I study science, the more I believe in God.
- Albert Einstein
- Albert Einstein