19,000 protein-producing genes in humans: Study

it is just not possible for all these 19000 genes to come up through selection of the fittest

question of hen or egg came first
that question occurs only to atheists
for others who believe in god the answer is already known
both came together
as it was the plan of creator who is called god
thank god-darwin was not in charge of creation
he would have made a mess of it
he missed the later discoveries of 20th and 21 st centuries
still some say darwin's theory guided it all
let it be
cant make intelectually blind see
as they have genetic abnormalities of recognition of a creator
call it A CREATEROPHOBIA
MAY BE A GENETIC (MALFORMATION) OF 'GOD AREA' IN FRONTAL LOBE
SUCH RARE CONGENITAL/GENETIC/MALFORMATION/AND A GENETIC PROBLEM  ARE CONDONED


Distinct “God Spot” in the Brain Does Not Exist, MU ...

munews.missouri.edu/.../0418-distinct-“god-spot”-in-the-brain-does-not-...
Apr 18, 2012 - Scientists have speculated that the human brain features a “God spot,” one distinct area of the brain responsible for spirituality. Now, University ...

Neurotheology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurotheology
The inability of the adult brain to retrieve earlier images experienced by an infantile brain creates ... As Beauregard has said, "There is no God spot in the brain.
 ================================================

Distinct 'God spot' in the brain does not exist, study shows ...

www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/04/120419091223.htm
Apr 19, 2012 - Scientists have speculated that the human brain features a "God spot," one distinct area of the brain responsible for spirituality. Now ...

There is no God-spot new research claims but instead ...

www.dailymail.co.uk/.../There-God-spot-new-research-claims-instead-spi...
Apr 21, 2012 - Scientists have speculated for years that the human brain features a 'God spot,' one distinct area of the brain responsible for spirituality.
 ===============================================

The majority of adults believe in God - FamilyFacts.org

www.familyfacts.org/charts/635/the-majority-of-adults-believe-in-god
... of adults believe in God. Three in five adults say they have no doubt that God exists. Altogether about nine in 10 adults believe in God or some higher power.

Majority of Americans Believe in God - Gallup.Com

www.gallup.com/video/109111/majority-americans-believe-god.aspx
Jul 28, 2008 - A large majority of Americans (78%) say they believe in God and 15% say they don't believe in God, but do believe in a higher power. ... may not be limited to: A8, Accountability Index, Business Impact Analysis, BE10, CE11, ...
===============================================
MAJORITY IS NEVER WRONG IN WHAT THEY BELIEVE
===================================================
 

Percentages of people in European countries who said in 2005 that they "believe there is a God"[76]

Percentages of people in European countries with no belief in a spirit, god, or life force (Eurobarometer 2005)[76]
Eurobarometer Poll 2010[75]
Country "I believe
there is a God"
"I believe there is some
sort of spirit or life force"
"I don't believe there is any sort
of spirit, God or life force"
Malta Malta 94% 4% 2%
Romania Romania 92% 7% 1%
Cyprus Cyprus 88% 8% 3%
Greece Greece 79% 16% 4%
Poland Poland 79% 14% 5%
Italy Italy 74% 20% 6%
Republic of Ireland Ireland 70% 20% 7%
Portugal Portugal 70% 15% 12%
Slovakia Slovakia 63% 23% 13%
Spain Spain 59% 20% 19%
Lithuania Lithuania 47% 37% 12%
Luxembourg Luxembourg 46% 22% 24%
Hungary Hungary 45% 34% 20%
Austria Austria 44% 38% 12%
Germany Germany 44% 25% 27%
Latvia Latvia 38% 48% 11%
United Kingdom United Kingdom 37% 33% 25%
Belgium Belgium 37% 31% 27%
Bulgaria Bulgaria 36% 43% 15%
Finland Finland 33% 42% 22%
Slovenia Slovenia 32% 36% 26%
Denmark Denmark 28% 47% 24%
Netherlands Netherlands 28% 39% 30%
France France 27% 27% 40%
Estonia Estonia 18% 50% 29%
Sweden Sweden 18% 45% 34%
Czech Republic Czech Republic 16% 44% 37%
European Union EU27 51% 26% 20%
Turkey Turkey (EU candidate) 94% 1% 1%
Croatia Croatia (joined EU in 2013) 69% 22% 7%
Switzerland Switzerland (EFTA) 44% 39% 11%
Iceland Iceland (EEA, not EU) 31% 49% 18%
Norway Norway (EEA, not EU) 22% 44% 29%

Czech Republic

In 2001, the Czech Statistical Office provided census information on the ten million people in the Czech Republic. 59% had no religion, 32.2% were religious, and 8.8% did not answer.[77] Next census in 2011 provided following figures: 34.2% not religious, 20.6% religious and 45.2% no answer.[78]

France

Main article: Irreligion in France
In France, about 12% of the population reportedly attends religious services more than once per month. In a 2003 poll 54% of those polled in France identified themselves as "faithful," 33% as atheist, 14% as agnostic, and 26% as "indifferent."[79] According to a different poll, 32% declared themselves atheists, and an additional 32% declared themselves agnostic.[80]

Germany

Main article: Irreligion in Germany

2008 map of Christian denominations in the states of Germany.Majority of population is:
  member of the Roman Catholic church
  member of the Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD)
  either member of the Roman Catholic church or the EKD with Roman Catholic the largest
  either member of the Roman Catholic church or the EKD with EKD the largest
  mainly not religious, largest Christian minority is EKD
Eastern Germany is perhaps the least religious region in the world.[81] [82] Atheism is embraced by young and old, though even more so by younger Germans.[83] One study in September 2012 was unable to find a single person under 28 who believed in a god.[84] The popular explanation for this is the aggressive atheist policies of German Democratic Republic's Socialist Unity Party of Germany. However, the enforcement of atheism only existed for the first few years. After that, the state allowed churches to have a relatively high level of autonomy.[85] Also, the same high numbers of atheists don't exist in the other European countries that have a history of Soviet occupation, except for the Czech Republic and Estonia. Another explanation could be the secular movements during the Weimar Republic which were strongest in the states of Thuringia and Saxony. Also, it was the Protestant areas of the Eastern Bloc that tended to turn irreligious under Communist rule the most. The most atheist parts of the former Soviet bloc were usually once the most Protestant (East Germany, Estonia, and most of Latvia), and the Czech Republic is the only one that was once mainly Catholic (although having the largest Protestant share following the above three).
Christianity still has a notable presence in the rest of Germany, though far less than in America. There is an atheist majority in Hamburg.

Norway

Main article: Irreligion in Norway
A 2006 survey in the Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten (on February 17), saw 1,006 inhabitants of Norway answering the question "What do you believe in?". 29% answered "I believe in a god or deity", 23% answered "I believe in a higher power without being certain of what", 26% answered "I don't believe in God or higher powers" and 22% answered "I am in doubt". Still, As of December 2010, 78% of the population are members of the Norwegian state's official Lutheran Protestant church. All Norwegians with at least one parent who is a member are automatically registered as members at birth, so the vast majority of the members have done nothing actively to join, effectively creating an opt-out system where membership is not considered a serious statement of faith in Christianity, and one where many keep themselves enrolled for the sake of possibly wanting to have a ceremony in the church at some point in their life, without this necessarily implying belief.[86]

Russia

Main article: Irreligion in Russia
According to a surveys of Levada Center, 22% of those surveyed self-described as non-religious, agnostic or atheist, with 69% describing themselves as Orthodox (and 5% Muslims) in Russia. Although just 10% regularly (at least once a month) attend church, the fact that there has been a substantial increase in the Orthodox proportion of the population, along with the fact that those who identify themselves Christian are more likely to go to church, suggests that atheism and irreligion has greatly waned in Russia since the Soviet collapse.[87]

Spain

Main article: Irreligion in Spain
In Spain, 73.6% are believers (catholic and others), 16.5% are non-believers and 7.6% are atheists (according to the February 2013 poll of the public Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas).[88]

Sweden

Main article: Irreligion in Sweden
Several studies have found Sweden to be one of the most atheist countries in the world. 23% of Swedish citizens responded that "they believe there is a God", whereas 53% answered that "they believe there is some sort of spirit or life force" and 23% that "they do not believe there is any sort of spirit, God, or life force". This, according to the survey, would make Swedes the third least religious people in the 27-member European Union, after Estonia and the Czech Republic.

Switzerland

According to a study carried out by doctor in political science Simon Geissbühler, Swiss atheists tend to be more left-leaning, even accounting for age and income, than the average Swiss population.[89]

United Kingdom

A poll in 2004 by the BBC put the number of people who do not believe in a God at 39%,[90] while a YouGov poll in the same year put the percentage of non-believers at 35% with 21% answering "Don't Know".[91] In the YouGov poll men were less likely to believe in a god than women, 39% of men and 49% of women, and younger people were less likely to believe in a god than older people. In early 2004, it was announced that atheism would be taught during religious education classes in England.[92] A compilation of some sociological studies indicates that roughly 30-40% of the British population does not have a belief in God and only 8% self identify as convinced atheist.[93]

Oceania

In the Australian 2011 Census of Population and Housing, in the question which asked "What is the person's religion?" 22.3% reported "no religion", which is a growth of 7% since the 2001 Census. This question was optional and 9.4% did not answer the question.[94] There are often popular and successful campaigns to have people describe themselves as non-mainstream religions (e.g. Jedi).
In 2006, the New Zealand census asked, "What is your religion?" 34.7% of those answering indicated no religion. 12.2% did not respond or objected to answering the question.[95][96] The New Zealand Atheist Bus Campaign of 2009 is largely regarded as one of the most successful atheist campaigns of all time.[citation needed]

Africa

Main article: Irreligion in Africa

Egypt

Main article: Irreligion in Egypt
The true number of atheists in Egypt is unknown as they are not counted on the census but atheists communicate with each other via the internet.

Ghana

Main article: Irreligion in Ghana
Atheism in Ghana is difficult to measure in the country, as many citizens claim Christian faith.[97] Many Atheists in Ghana are afraid to openly express their beliefs due to real or imagined threats of intimidation.[98]
In the Ghana census taken in 2010, Christians make up 71.2% of the population, Islam 17.6%, Irreligion 5.3%, Traditional religion 5.2%.[99] Other faiths include Hinduism, Buddhism and Nichiren Buddhism, Taoism, Sōka Gakkai, Shintoism and Judaism.

SHOWS ABOUT 20 TO 29 % OF PEOPLE ARE ATHEISTS IN EUROPE [CHRISTIAN ORIGIN]

MUSLIMS AND HINDUS MAJORITY ARE RELIGIOUS

 

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