Sentences with phrase «what aliens are»

«For a co-op shooter, we actually have a very extensive story about what the aliens are doing, why they're here, and what they are.»
(GRADE 6 US Common Core Aligned) Students have to use their algebra skills to discover what the aliens are planning to turn all of humankind into!
This time, the struggle is not against the aliens, but an internal one as Banks attempts to understand what the aliens are attempting to communicate, and the visions she is experiencing.
«You have to make some assumptions about what the aliens are doing in all these calculations, unfortunately, and the data set that we have with alien activity is fairly sparse,» says Shostak.
Like a person trying to communicate with a bug, we may not be able to comprehend what aliens are at all.
Pace what Aliens is all about as the action never stops.
Handling your character isn't a complete mess, but the fast paced action doesn't fit the tone of what Aliens is to me.
Another puzzle element comes in when you fight certain enemies and «boss» monsters: they often can only be killed with a particular weapon, and finding out which weapon is effective on what alien is part of the fun of Cerberus.

Not exact matches

«What they are saying is you are a perpetual alien in your own country and you are not a true American,» he says.
Keaton's character, Adrian Toomes, is used to explain a key plothole from 2012's «The Avengers»: What ever happened to all of the alien weapons and tools left on Earth after the film's end battle?
Who knows, maybe [it will be] discovered by some future alien race thinking, «What the heck, what were these guys doWhat the heck, what were these guys dowhat were these guys doing?
What does it mean to encounter something that's alien?
What it's about: Finally, the characters in the Marvel Cinematic Universe came together in «The Avengers,» with Iron Man, Thor, Hulk, Captain America, and Black Widow fighting off Loki and his alien army.
What it's about: Aliens are invading Earth, and the only hope is fighter pilot captain Steven Hille AKA Will Smith.
What it's about: Optimus Prime befriends an «inventor,» played by Mark Wahlberg, who helps him and the other Autobots fight off alien robots.
(There's also some reference to an alien Batboy on the same cover, but I don't know what thats about..)
You assume that god absolutely 100 % does not exist and so without doing any further investigation decide that now the aliens AND the humans must not be that intelligent, you confirm your own conclusion (see what I did there?)
First of all a «god» would not call his creations Earthlings, that is what an alien species would say.
What did they think???? Perhaps these STRANGE ALIEN LOOKING men were putting a curse on the plane in their own special ALIEN language???? Get a grip people!
What would be shocking however is if this alien race had an incredibly similar story to that found in the bible complete with a single god, a jesus, some miracles, some parables, etc.... It would be the similarity of religions between alien races in this hypothetical that would truely shock me and at least make me question if that would be a solid point of evidence for the religious.
The kind of people who swear that what the saw in the sky was an alien UFO, rather than something more realistic (flock of birds, planes, helicopters, falling star, kites, etc..)
Which things being without number in our mind itself, (the nature of which mind is incapable of being seen,) not to mention others, the very faith whereby we believe, or the thought whereby we know that we either believe any thing, or believe not, being as it is altogether alien from the sight of those eyes; what so naked, so clear, what so certain is there to the inner eyes of our minds?
The aliens are clearly bad, but it's the characters, themes of good and evil, the manipulation of the media and what humanity really is that you'll want to return to.
An astronomer does not «see God» in science by finding some new and rare piece of data that proves God exists as if God were like an alien visiting from another planet, which would be a childish and materialistic understanding of what God is.
So what is so more hilarious about God being this alien life bringer as opposed to just saying that life here on Earth began elsewhere out there?
Theo What did you imply by saying, «Just look at Stephen Hawking and how he believes that life ion this planet was seeded bt aliens.»?
Taken that the reality is an invisible God that isn't evident to everyone, and a plain declaration in the Bible that God is supposedly so alien that no human could possibly know his mind, I frankly find it puzzling how any believer can have confidence in what this being actually thinks without falling to wishful thinking, can you?
Believing aliens seeded Earth with life is very different from what he actually said.
What Hawking was saying was that he felt that it was possible that life on this planet came from aliens... How is that any different?
What is God and his angels and demons if not completely alien to us and our world?
«We are forever getting confused into thinking that scripture is mainly about what we are supposed to do rather than a picture of who God is» (Resident Aliens, 85).
I also don't want to theorize what sort of religion these space aliens have, I was just choosing islam because that's a religion I have no intention of ever converting to, but in this highly unlikely event, it could change my mind.
If you feel your culture is under threat, however, or is going to be swamped by what you regard as alien influences, or if you want to have some control over the degree to which another culture influences yours — then you may develop a mentality of resistance.
But the pattern of appropriation is what I would want my students to notice most, for it is the typical and fundamental gesture of Christian humanism: to respond to the world by taking it over, by embracing it, by showing that no beauty, intelligence, or goodness is alien to Christianity or incompatible with it.
For example I might believe full force that Xenu sent little aliens down here and if that's what I'm convinced is accurate, then I'm a Scientologist regardless of if I attend a church or participate in any established organization directly.
Now, National Geographic is just doing what makes sense, putting our communication with the aliens in...
No it has not been proven where did you see that on an alien special on a & e, Read up on it those other religions did not have Jesus as a Savior and did not have men writing 1000s of years apart talking about the same events, and phrophecizing about things that happened in later chapters written hundreds of years later... and in no bok any where was there a man like Jesus, who spoke the words that Jesus spoke and died for people who hated Him like Jesus did, and spoke the parabales and life lessons like Jesus did... look at what Jesus spoke... read it nowhere has there been a better teacher of life then in His words.
Okay atheists what if (and I do mean «what if» there were aliens that could communicate with us by altering the magnetic fiends around us.
I was merely attempting to acknowledge that every utterance and every act of the early Church is not consistent with what I will insist was a widespread spirit of openness toward alien thinkers.
Yet, given what we know about the formation of solar systems and the biology of life, combined with the fact that there are billions of galaxies each containing billions of stars, I find it perfectly plausible that alien life could exist.
To judge the two realities by a supposed knowledge of what is «really» real, gained by some means alien to both, is to abandon the perspective of the history of religions.
Yet what most strikes me in this passage is the use of the Greek word paroikos, which can be variously translated as stranger, exile or alien.
Until we can contact aliens from another planet who also believe in the exact same God you do what are we to assume but that God is a doctrine of this world alone?
An alien, an outsider who incurred the hate and fear of both the masses and the authorities, Jesus was executed because of who he was as much as for what he did.
Over the centuries, these «alien citizens,» still far from their true home in the New Jerusalem that is history's promised consummation, have followed the course of Christian fidelity in accepting responsibility for the well - being of what is their home in time before the End Time.
Certainly, in so far as he confesses his faith in God he is committed to a belief in the One who may properly be called supernatural and superhistorical — for God is not to be located in the spheres of what, by the use of certain limited and limiting frames of reference, we call nature and history — but such a belief does not relegate God to some alien sphere of splendid isolation and inaccessibility.
Although the proper attribution of necessary existence to God does not show that God exists (unless we are prepared to allow that reality must have some significant correspondence to what is presupposed in our attempt to find ultimate meaning in reality — an assumption which, as I have suggested, may not be easy to justify but is probably impossible to avoid in such metaphysical thought), it does show that God is either the ground of and compatible with all that is and all that is actually possible or is totally alien to all reality.
That is precisely what they are doing when they call for brushing aside the considerations of «this age» in favor of the alien standards of the Kingdom of God.
Also, what if next week, we're visited by aliens (which is more likely than being visited by Jesus, BTW): does that mean god created them?
To an alien life form living on another planet billions of light years from us the death of an 8 year old human, while tragic to us, might be linked by what Einstein called «s p o o k y action at a distance» to an alien birth making it one of their most joyous occasions.
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