Rediscovering God-bookcover

By: Joseph Proietto

Rediscovering God

Pages: 208 Ratings:

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Book Description

This book defends the existence of God, but not the God described in the Bible. First, it discusses two serious errors in the Bible. The first is that God made Adam first and then later made Eve. What science proves is that the template for the human body is without doubt female. Men are only modified women. The other serious error in Genesis is that God wanted to destroy Sodom and Gomorrah because of the sin of homosexuality. Read the evidence that homosexuality is genetic or epigenetic and hence created by God.

The book shows that if you want to be an atheist, you have to believe that: 1. All of the matter in the Universe came from nothing. 2. That, there must be an infinite number of Universes. 3. That, in a Universe where entropy (a measure of disorganization) rules, the dirt of the Earth self-organized into the most complex structure in the known Universe, your body.  A hint about the incredible complexity of the human body is given in the book.

Because a subatomic particle changes its behaviour based on whether it is being observed or not, Pantheism is the possible nature of God. The author is a big fan of the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, but because the God that created the amazing Universe we live in and then humanity would not require blood to be spilled to appease the disobedience of a primitive man, it is unlikely that Jesus was God.

Joseph Proietto graduated from the University of Melbourne as MB BS in 1973. In 1985, he was awarded a PhD from the same university. In 1982, he was made a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians. He did his postdoctoral studies in Geneva, Switzerland in the Laboratoires de Recherche Metaboliques. On his return to Australia, he worked in the University of Melbourne, Department of Medicine at the Royal Melbourne Hospital. While there, he was awarded a 5-year Wellcome Fellowship from the Wellcome Trust in the UK and was eventually promoted to Professor with a personal Chair. He then moved to the Department of Medicine at the Austin Hospital as the inaugural Sir Edward Dunlop Medical Research Foundation Professor of Medicine, a position he held until his retirement in 2014. He was awarded the Kellion Award of the Australian Diabetes Society for outstanding contribution to diabetes research and The Willendorf Award of World Obesity for his outstanding contribution to obesity research.

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