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In a perfect world.... What is a perfect world to you?

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We have all heard the saying, but what would be 'perfect' to you?

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  1. nothing is perfect. dammit


  2. NO McDonald's

    No Sicknesses or Illnesses.

    FREE PARKING

    FAST METABOLISM.

  3. hmmm im a student of sociology,so i would say perfect world would be a world where there are no caste differences and everyone are equal.

  4. if my divorced parents could still get along, just for, us, the kids sake. so we dont have to be stuck in the middle anymore. so my kids, thier grandchildren could have one birthday party instead of 2.

  5. A world with perfect harmony, and Love!! We are all so blessed!!  xoxoxo

  6. Perfect World:

    Id have no war, no raisum, no sterotypes...

    Basically Id have peace all around the world, everyone got on with everyone and there was no name calling.

    Hope it helped, thanks x

  7. perfect world = perfect happiness

    perfect world = I would have the strongest mental armour and nothing would ever hurt me.

  8. If I win the lottery.  Then I'd be so self centred, I wouldn't care about the world's problems anymore, thus, making them go away.

  9. To have a great life have what you want and TRUST GOD IN YOUR DOINGS

  10. this one =)

  11. peace happiness and everyone living happily

  12. Perfect would be that everyone believes in God and we all live according to his word.

  13. prefect!to be prefect

  14. Religious acceptance regardless of what faith someone chooses and the end of racism. With these two things sorted......the world should heal itself quite quickly.

  15. God expressed it so simply, "Treat others as you want to be treated".  If we all adhered to that for 24 hours, there would be no violence, misdeeds, or hurt done to anyone - hence, a perfect world.  Such a simple command, but impossible for man to do.  How sad!!

  16. too much to write here lol but i definitely know what my perfect world would be :) i think everyone does though.

  17. A perfect Being must not exist because our world is imperfect.

    Three Intrinsic Elements to the Argument

    Examining the argument, we notice a few things that are true of the person who gives it.

    (1) The first has something to do with desire. Intrinsic to this argument, for the person who offers it, is the desire for a perfect world. There is [implied] the legitimate desire on the part of the arguer for a world free of car bombings, drive-by shootings, terrorism, plague, injustice, theft, famine, racism, birth defects, natural disasters and the like.

    (2) The second intrinsic element to the argument is this: The person who gives it can imagine a perfect world. For the arguer, there is an imagined world that differs from our real world (the "imperfect" one that generates the argument). This imagined world is a "perfect" world because it must be, by implication of the argument, free of anything that makes this world imperfect. Any amount of evil and suffering (even a small amount) could be used to argue against a perfect God who is a perfect Governor over the universe.

    Thus the arguer must have some notion of what a perfect world would be like. ("The reason I know that this is an imperfect world is because I can imagine a perfect one.") If s/he did not, then an imperfect world would not be used in the argument. It is the mental concept of a perfect world (juxtaposed with the imperfect world we live in) that fuels the argument. "I can imagine a perfect world. This is not a perfect world. Therefore, a perfect Being does not exist. For if such a Being did exist, this would be a perfect world."

    (3) We must realize that the argument (mentioned at the start) shows that the person (the arguer) does desire and can imagine a perfect world. That is not all, for the argument also shows that, according to the arguer, a perfect world is possible.

    If I said, "I do not believe in good directors because all the movies I see are poor," it obviously shows that I believe that good movies are possible. If I did not believe good movies were possible, I would have to change my argumentation to, "I do not believe in good directors because good movies are not possible." Concerning the problem of evil, the argument would then be: "I do not believe in a perfect Being because a perfect world is not possible" -- but that is not the argument used.

    If a perfect world were not possible in the mind of the arguer, an imperfect world would not be held up as an argument against God's existence. The argument hinges on the existence of our imperfect world, a contrast to a more perfect world. If our imperfect world were the only world possible, then it could not be held up as evidence against the existence of God, since a perfect world would not be possible. It would be similar to saying, "I do not believe in God because there are no four-sided triangles." If only an imperfect world were possible, God would be being held accountable for an impossibility. He would be expected to achieve a perfect world, a world that was not possible. Obviously, by implication of the argument, the arguer believes that a perfect world is possible.

    As we examine the argument against God's existence due to our imperfect world, we discover three significant beliefs for those making the argument, intrinsic to the argument itself:

       1. A perfect world is desirable.

       2. A perfect world is imaginable.

       3. A perfect world is possible.

    The Possibility of a Perfect World?

    We must wonder: Where do this desire, this imagination, and this belief in possibility come from? We can understand desiring and imagining a perfect world. What is harder to fathom, however, is why we would think one possible. For example, I could desire to fly like a bird. I could even imagine it in my mind. But would I think it possible? No. Desirable? Yes. Imaginable? Yes. Possible? No.

    Yet that is where we find ourselves. Whether people realize it or not, any argument against the existence of God using our imperfect world as its proof implies that the arguer thinks a perfect world is possible. God would not be called into question for an impossibility. In effect the arguers are saying, going back to a previous example, "A good director [God] must not exist because there are no good films [we live in an imperfect world] -- and because I believe in the possibility of good films [the possibility of a perfect world]."

  18. Perfect for me would be everyone finding their one true love. As long as there's love there's hope.

  19. if the moon was made out of cheese

       and Gas was back to a dollar a gallon!!

  20. there would be alot of beer and boobies.  thats all i really know....

  21. I would have the perfect boy.. He would love me for who i am, and not what he wants me to be!

    I woulkd get everythink i wanted... And have the most amazing friends :)

  22. Hate to get serious on you Hun, but a couple of our kin messed that up for us some time ago.

    I guess we're looking for something better just around the corner.

  23. A beautiful lass, a doona, an ocean, and a sunset.

  24. Where everyone is nice, no racism, no bullying, no wars, etc.

  25. where there shall be no exploytation.

  26. There would be no sin.

  27. Zero GOD or religion

    NO pain or suffering.

    No judgement.

  28. Laws are just and perfect and everyone follows Gods moral law and everyone lives in peace never being harmed by anyone else because no one is selfish, arrogant, stupid, greedy, power hungry, evil, etc.  (Won't happen in this life)

  29. endless alcoholic beverages. legalized marijuana. and everyone has to obey rules except me.

  30. my perfect world:  having the best, easiest, most fabulous :D job ever,  (or just being in college), my crush = boyfriend:D,  having a ton of money

    my dad being here (he's currently in onther continent , he lives there)

    or just being famous

    lol i think that'd be perfect

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