Eh, the universe is largely horrible. Vast expanses of nothingness, where most everything will kill you, and not even with intent but out of sheer indifference. Most animals live on the edge of death and human animals are now far into the process of killing off the biodiversity of the Earth, with ever more inventive and effective means. When, that is, they are not killing each other, or simply sucking dry some parts of the Earth to furnish others. Nature is mostly waste, indifference, and catastrophe. What order there is is mostly just a temporary harnessing of chaos, destined to be undone in the long run. It takes a great deal of self-blinding to see 'simplicity, efficiency, and beauty' as diffuse throughout the cosmos. — StreetlightX
Stop using terms you don't understand. — StreetlightX
Nothing's 'difficult to understand'. You're simply absuing words is all. — StreetlightX
BrianW         
         If you analyze the universe from a mathematical or a scientific perspective then it's a veritable masterpiece. — TheMadFool
Hanover         
         
Streetlight         
         
Shamshir         
         What's not symmetrical?Horrible only to the extent required by symmetry which is mathematical. — TheMadFool
Hanover         
         People are too easily impressed. Then they get ideas. Like God. Which only adds to the misery of the universe. It's awful — StreetlightX
Streetlight         
         God hasn't added to the misery of the universe though, as it seems the theists are preaching a more joyful existence than their opposites, certainly in this thread at least. — Hanover
Hanover         
         Even joy is miserable in the pessimist's view of the universe.There's nothing inherently good about joy. — StreetlightX
Streetlight         
         
Jacob-B         
         So, it took the ultra-fine balancing of fifty or so constants and ratios to create life on one planet in an insignificant solar system in an unremarkable galaxy. Any outcome that relied on such complex balancing is unstable by definition and would not bode well for the future of Life. — Jacob-B
PoeticUniverse         
         There's a book I haven't had the time to read: Just six numbers by astronomer Martin Rees. — TheMadFool
PoeticUniverse         
         It's in the vertebral column. No, wait, that's a design flaw. — S
S         
         Nor in the eye, for which design we'd flunk our engineering course. — PoeticUniverse
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