N
ngill09
Guest
What I mean to say when I say his calculation is dishonest is that he appears to be doing a much more sophisticated version of the argument that “If we suppose the population rate doubles every 150 years, and if we suppose that there were 8 people 4,000 years ago, that gives us 7 billion today!” In short, he picked the basis for counting time arbitrarily so that it would come out to 6 days, and in order to do so he also has to sort of fudge the numbers on our geological history.By the early universe, I mean the universe right after the Big Bang; the very beginning of time and space.
As to your dilemmas, I already addressed the issue of the word “water” in the beginning of Genesis. The issue of plants vs. sun and stars is a complex one that I cannot explain adequately, I would have to refer you to Schroeder’s book “The Science of God” for an in-depth treatment of that topic. It has to do with the very earliest plant life, i.e. algae, emerging prior to the clearing of Earth’s atmosphere. It sounds like complete hooey when I say it, but he gives a much more cogent explanation with reference to both science and ancient Biblical commentary.
As to his calculation, I invite you to read (and reread if necessary) the article I linked previously. It took me a few reads to fully grasp what he was saying, but once you get it, you can check the math for yourself and it works out. The error I was making, and which I suspect from your phrasing you may be making to, is to think about this measurement as being progressive in perspective. What I mean to say is that, just as we now measure past time from a fixed perspective looking back into the past, Genesis 1 (according to both ancient Jewish and Christian source) measures time from a fixed perspective looking forward from the beginning of the universe. To borrow Dr. Schroeder’s example, if someone were to stand at that point in time/space and send a signal to someone in the present every second, we would only receive a signal every 1,000,000,000,000 seconds. Coupled with the fact that “each time the universe doubles in size, the perception of time halves as we project that time back toward the beginning of the universe,” the calculations all add up.