lol

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Ok i think i understood a few words thereKillerSam wrote:The unstoppable force could change the shape of the unmovable object. Applying a force to the object does not have to move it.Pedsdude wrote:The unstoppable force. The unmovable object could be dead.
Also, the immovable object would by definition need to have an infinite inertia, which would mean infinite mass, and hence the object would collapse under its own gravity.
The force wins.
Which egg?Soviet wrote:While we're at it, the egg came before the chicken.
So who's to say chickens used to not lay eggs, and then one was genetically mutated and happened to lay a primitive egg?KillerSam wrote:If you look at how species are developed, there are a series of genetic mutations which happen randomly. Some get passed on if the mutation has advantageous phenotypes. Over time groups of the same species are seperated by a physical boundary (mountains, river e.t.c) and so evolve differently to meet their surroundings, and the groups change independantly of each other. The point at which animals from the 2 groups can not produce fertile offspring they are different species.
I was under the initial impression that the egg must be a chicken egg.In biology, the term egg is biologically ambiguous and the theory of punctuated equilibrium, for example, does not support a clear division between a chicken and the closest ancestors of that chicken. Both of those factors tend to contribute to the circular nature of the question (causing problems similar to either a hasty generalization or a fallacy of definition). Below are a few different definitions that could be assumed and their logical outcomes.[6]
* If the egg is not necessarily of any specific type: Then it could be said that the egg came first, because other animals had been laying eggs long before chickens existed, such as the dinosaurs. In biology, egg is used as a general term in this way.
* If only an egg that will hatch into a chicken can be considered a chicken egg: Then a re-consideration of the original question suggests: Some animal other than a chicken laid the first chicken egg which contained the first chicken. In this case the chicken egg came before the chicken. In reality, many scientific theories suggest that this would not have been a simple event. For example, the theory of punctuated equilibrium theorizes that the actual speciation of an organism from its ancestral species is usually the result of many mutations combined with new geographical surroundings, called cladogenesis.
* If only an egg laid by a chicken can be considered a chicken egg: Then a re-consideration of the original question suggests: The first chicken (which hatched from a non-chicken egg) laid the first chicken egg. In this case the chicken came before the chicken egg. Again, this would not necessarily be a straightforward event.
Thats only true if your believe in god making the world and everything :Saicaramba wrote:
Oh, ye, the chicken came before the egg, because god created the chicken, not an egg.
Just as god created adam and even, and not 2 babies.
In a perfect environment it is more likely to have a direct 100% accurate hit than it is possible to have an immovable object or unstoppable force due to the constraints posted above (inertia for example), so if we allow for the possibilities of having these objects and force exist in a paradox, why should we not allow for a 100% accurate hit?aicaramba wrote:because in a real world envoirment its very, very, very unlikely that some Ãs directec at an object with such precision.
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