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hindu gods

So is it a Trinity or a 330millionity?

I won't have anything to do with any religion that prevents me from eating steak (or ham or lobster for that matter).
 
Whatever is taught in any religion is for our benefits not in God's benefits, who is 'Omni Potent'. Complex molecules in any food may be acidic & take more time to digest than foods with simpler molecules. It depend upon the availability & necessity(not luxuary). It is not related to killing, as both botanical & zoological material have life. But it is taught like that so we first ingest simplest molecules which will be digested easily without any manifestations(sins). It is also seen that where these simple foods are not available then complex molecules are taken, but some time gap is kept to digest fully or detoxify the manifestations(sins) by fasting effects.

God bless!
 
1) Kumar, just stop posting, please.
2) I thought "robot" was from the Russian "robotat," "to work."
 
I'm a bit surprised there are only 3.3 x 10^8 different hindu gods. I always supposed they have infinite many gods.
 
LFTKBS said:
[B\]
2) I thought "robot" was from the Russian "robotat," "to work." [/B]


Well I suppose dictionary.com is as good a place as any for etymologies.

From that site:

Word History: Robot is a word that is both a coinage by an individual person and a borrowing. It has been in English since 1923 when the Czech writer Karel apek's play R.U.R. was translated into English and presented in London and New York. R.U.R., published in 1921, is an abbreviation of Rossum's Universal Robots; robot itself comes from Czech robota, “servitude, forced labor,” from rab, “slave.” The Slavic root behind robota is orb-, from the Indo-European root *orbh-, referring to separation from one's group or passing out of one sphere of ownership into another. This seems to be the sense that binds together its somewhat diverse group of derivatives, which includes Greek orphanos, “orphan,” Latin orbus, “orphaned,” and German Erbe, “inheritance,” in addition to the Slavic word for slave mentioned above. Czech robota is also similar to another German derivative of this root, namely Arbeit, “work” (its Middle High German form arabeit is even more like the Czech word). Arbeit may be descended from a word that meant “slave labor,” and later generalized to just “labor.”
 

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