"Michio Kaku on God" on the side

if we can only ask what god is, what more do we really want to know? what type of questions can we even ask, and therefore what answers can we even get? what dimension of "question-asking" are we at, or how much/what can one infer another is asking through a particular question? will advancement in human communication create a different dimension of asking questions? will natural language play a part in this? can we breed a language, or languages (naturally, of course), to be able to ask the RIGHT questions? is this where simply intrigue (or perhaps intelligence) plays a part in the types of question we ask? beyond the realm of culture/society, why do speakers of certain languages, talking about the same topic, ask different questions and (hence?) arrive at different conclusions regarding the same questions?

if we found Him (that's the only time i'm ever capitalizing this), would there be a need, desire, interest (, obligation?) for the guy who created us to talk to us? from how blindly human i am, i wouldn't give a shit about those things i made that one day in my m u l t i v e r s e (the megaverse of universes).

do humans even know what questions we are to be asking? but isn't that always the question: questioning our methods(?)... how can we enhance the whole questioning process? does our 'creator' or reason for way of living have anything to do with what we should do, how we should live, what we should want to know?

LET ME KNOW !


Michio Kaku on God - YouTube

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