| Philip Morrison, John Billingham, John Wolfe - 1977 - 204 páginas
...believed that man was the center of the Universe, and that astronomy should reflect that anthiopocentric belief. They may ultimately be right about man, though...billions of directions as it evolved, including billions oflife forms and billions of kinds of intelligent beings. I will go even further. There conceivably... | |
| Robert Lefavi - 1999 - 184 páginas
...Anderson It is precisely because I believe theologically that there is a being called God, and that God is infinite in intelligence, freedom, and power, that I cannot take it upon myself to limit what God might have done.-Fr. Theodore Hesburgh In my search for answers about true spirituality, I realized... | |
| George Basalla - 2006 - 248 páginas
...religious faith and the existence of other inhabited worlds. He explained his position in these words: "It is precisely because I believe theologically that...cannot take it upon myself to limit what He might have done'.'1 The italics are Father Hesburgh 's, but Christian philosophers first used this argument to... | |
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