B
buffalo
Guest
The flood story does not say all life was killed.
great, no problem.Well if we’re going by the flood story in the Bible I can simply point out that no humans were around 65 million years ago. You also need a plausible mechanism as to why massive amounts of water were appearing everywhere.
well thats easy too. water was not appearing everywhere. the water was always there in the oceans. to flood a continent you don’t just create new water you just sink or move the continent. and don’t tell me thats impossible.You also need a plausible mechanism as to why massive amounts of water were appearing everywhere.
Quick search on google shows that we do in fact have ways to calcuate the rare of radioactive decay. I believe it’s called the Isochron method.equally some might argue that radioactive decay rates of an atom are impossible to predict. a radioactive atom might decay in 1 second or it might take 100 years or mor, or anything. and this is the basis used for calculating the age of rocks.
(C)
When did the first radioactive materials form on earth?Quick search on google shows that we do in fact have ways to calcuate the rare of radioactive decay. I believe it’s called the Isochron method.
No idea. Not something I study. Does it matter? I would assume around the same time the universe formed.When did the first radioactive materials form on earth?
Peace,
Ed
it looks to me like it has the same problem. an atom decays but when the atom decays cannot be predicted.Quick search on google shows that we do in fact have ways to calcuate the rare of radioactive decay. I believe it’s called the Isochron method.
and recently we have learned that radioactive decay rates vary.Quick search on google shows that we do in fact have ways to calcuate the rare of radioactive decay. I believe it’s called the Isochron method.
When the church canonizes a saint a very thorough examination is done. When someone has a legitmate question, one can not just answer by saying “God did it” correct me if I’m wrong but doesn’t that lead to the God of Gaps fallacy?Every time the Church canonizes a saint, she chooses to do so when Science cannot explain
a (therefore miraculous) healing. That you cannot believe that the Flood happened because
“there wasn’t enough water” is very sad.
From Genesis Ch 7. “The flood continued upon the earth for forty days. … Higher and higher on the earth the waters swelled, until all the highest mountains under the heavens were submerged. The waters swelled fifteen cubits higher than the submerged mountains. All creatures that moved on the earth perished.”
From Genesis Ch 8. “The fountains of the abyss and the floodgates of the sky were closed.” So, there was water besides that which is in the ocean, as I can see it.
So, all creatures on the earth died and “all the highest mountains” were submerged.
I don’t believe there is any room here to say that the flood was only a local flood, but a world
wide flood.
Yes, a very thorough examination is done and, therefore, the argument from ignorance does not apply. But, the Church calls it a miracle (as I understand it) when medical scienceWhen the church canonizes a saint a very thorough examination is done. When someone has a legitmate question, one can not just answer by saying “God did it” correct me if I’m wrong but doesn’t that lead to the God of Gaps fallacy?
I don’t believe in the God of Gaps theory because it basically says that, if it can’t be explained by science, then it didn’t happen. I believe in God’s omnipotent intervention (miracles) in the word/universe.Yes, a very thorough examination is done and, therefore, the argument from ignorance does not apply. But, the Church calls it a miracle (as I understand it) when medical science
can’t explain it. This may be a theological argument but it is not done in ignorance and it is
truth as best we know it, which is as much truth as God can require of us, which is the best
we can do, which is enough, I believe.
What the God of the gaps theory actually says is that, if we can’t explain it by science, then we shouldn’t say it’s God. This is very wrong and deifies science.I don’t believe in the God of Gaps theory because it basically says that, if it can’t be explained by science, then it didn’t happen. I believe in God’s omnipotent intervention (miracles) in the word/universe.
A new earth, signifies a New Church, The earth means church because there is where the Holy Word of God is. The old earth will be gone, and a new one will take its place. Meaning a New Church.Hi everyone, there has been a question that has been on my mind for awhile now and I was hoping if anyone could help me. For the past few months I have been reading the scripture more but one day this question popped into my mind and that is, “Just how old is the universe?” I still haven’t been able to completely understand that question or its answers. So if anyone could shed some light it would be much appreciated.
\
Thanks you all in advance!
One must consider that there will always be at least one gap or by definition we would be God. Taking that as a starting point humans must realize we cannot know everything, there will always be gaps.I don’t believe in the God of Gaps theory because it basically says that, if it can’t be explained by science, then it didn’t happen. I believe in God’s omnipotent intervention (miracles) in the word/universe.
Wow. I don’t even know where to begin with the mistakes and spurious assumptions this paper, but I’ll try:
First, the assumption that a single result from a single measurement overturns all others. If I measure a given volume of water five different ways, and get measurements of 1.0l, .99l, 1.02l, .89l, and 40ml, the author's assumption would have me throw out the measurements that agree - those near 1l - and treat only the 40ml measurement as accurate. To me, this shows a reversal of normal investigative and experimental procedure: The author is looking for a date of less than ~65Myr for the samples in question, so he discards all measurements that don't agree with his preconception. A proper scientist would look at the measurements and discard the outlier as an error, just like in my water measurements above.
Second, the idea that C14 dating can even return valid results in samples older than 50Kyr. His "rebuttal" makes the assumption that the returned date is valid, but the entire point is that if one does get a result from a sample older than 50Kyr, that result cannot be trusted. Again, if multiple other methods give results that agree within their margins of error, then the outlier must be discarded as an error. If 10 people describe the perpetrator of a crime as a white male over 6 feet tall and one other person says it was a black female dwarf under 4 feet tall, the outlying "measurement" must - assuming everyone is telling the truth to the best of their ability - be discarded.
Third, the fact that, except in exceptionally rare cases, dinosaur "bones" are not actual bone at all. When a fossil forms (and this is part of the reason why they are so rare), the organic material is slowly replaced by minerals, and it is these minerals which are the fossils. The bones themselves have (again, in the vast majority of cases) long since gone to dust or dissolved.
God gave us a universe filled with wonder and the intellect to understand some portion of how He created and sustains it. God says, "Fiat lux", and we observe the echoes of the Big Bang. God says, "Let Us make man in Our image", and we see the progression of life on earth from single-cell algae to humankind across the span of billions of years. science and Scripture are not enemies, and they do not contradict each other - viewing each through the lens of the other gives us (in my humble opinion) an even more complete picture of God's Glory and Might.
For the ancient Greeks, lightning was simply the arrows of Zeus. Today, we know that it is the result of billions of subatomic particles simply seeking their base energy state. As Catholics, we can see God's divine power in the ordering of His creation through the fact that we can understand what the lightning is, and marvel at how His power can be shown so spectacularly by the action of some of the smallest particles in existence.
We cannot read Genesis in a vacuum. Look at the first chapter of St. John's Gospel - it's another creation account. If we were to read it in the way that several people insist we must read Genesis, then absolutely nothing happens between the creation of man and the emergence of St. John the Baptist as a Prophet. Knowing what happens in between these events doesn't make it false, it simply completes the picture presented by that chapter - a picture necessarily limited because of the tight focus on the Word and His Incarnation.
I see nothing scientific about any of this as it regards Genesis. All I see are people posting endlessly about what science “we must” believe. And so it will continue here. The goal? Full compliance regarding a subject science cannot study, namely, God and what God can do. But that will continue to be ignored as well.Wow. I don’t even know where to begin with the mistakes and spurious assumptions this paper, but I’ll try:
Code:First, the assumption that a single result from a single measurement overturns all others. If I measure a given volume of water five different ways, and get measurements of 1.0l, .99l, 1.02l, .89l, and 40ml, the author's assumption would have me throw out the measurements that agree - those near 1l - and treat only the 40ml measurement as accurate. To me, this shows a reversal of normal investigative and experimental procedure: The author is looking for a date of less than ~65Myr for the samples in question, so he discards all measurements that don't agree with his preconception. A proper scientist would look at the measurements and discard the outlier as an error, just like in my water measurements above. Second, the idea that C14 dating can even return valid results in samples older than 50Kyr. His "rebuttal" makes the assumption that the returned date is valid, but the entire point is that if one does get a result from a sample older than 50Kyr, that result cannot be trusted. Again, if multiple other methods give results that agree within their margins of error, then the outlier must be discarded as an error. If 10 people describe the perpetrator of a crime as a white male over 6 feet tall and one other person says it was a black female dwarf under 4 feet tall, the outlying "measurement" must - assuming everyone is telling the truth to the best of their ability - be discarded. Third, the fact that, except in exceptionally rare cases, dinosaur "bones" are not actual bone at all. When a fossil forms (and this is part of the reason why they are so rare), the organic material is slowly replaced by minerals, and it is these minerals which are the fossils. The bones themselves have (again, in the vast majority of cases) long since gone to dust or dissolved. God gave us a universe filled with wonder and the intellect to understand some portion of how He created and sustains it. God says, "Fiat lux", and we observe the echoes of the Big Bang. God says, "Let Us make man in Our image", and we see the progression of life on earth from single-cell algae to humankind across the span of billions of years. science and Scripture are not enemies, and they do not contradict each other - viewing each through the lens of the other gives us (in my humble opinion) an even more complete picture of God's Glory and Might. For the ancient Greeks, lightning was simply the arrows of Zeus. Today, we know that it is the result of billions of subatomic particles simply seeking their base energy state. As Catholics, we can see God's divine power in the ordering of His creation through the fact that we can understand what the lightning is, and marvel at how His power can be shown so spectacularly by the action of some of the smallest particles in existence. We cannot read Genesis in a vacuum. Look at the first chapter of St. John's Gospel - it's another creation account. If we were to read it in the way that several people insist we must read Genesis, then absolutely nothing happens between the creation of man and the emergence of St. John the Baptist as a Prophet. Knowing what happens in between these events doesn't make it false, it simply completes the picture presented by that chapter - a picture necessarily limited because of the tight focus on the Word and His Incarnation.
I f a person weighs 50 lbs and the scale capacity is 200lbs then the 50 lb reading would be accurate within the scale. Now if your base assumption is that very same person has to weigh 500lbs then you cannot believe the scale and you would call it ridiculous.Wow. I don’t even know where to begin with the mistakes and spurious assumptions this paper, but I’ll try:
Code:First, the assumption that a single result from a single measurement overturns all others. If I measure a given volume of water five different ways, and get measurements of 1.0l, .99l, 1.02l, .89l, and 40ml, the author's assumption would have me throw out the measurements that agree - those near 1l - and treat only the 40ml measurement as accurate. To me, this shows a reversal of normal investigative and experimental procedure: The author is looking for a date of less than ~65Myr for the samples in question, so he discards all measurements that don't agree with his preconception. A proper scientist would look at the measurements and discard the outlier as an error, just like in my water measurements above. Second, the idea that C14 dating can even return valid results in samples older than 50Kyr. His "rebuttal" makes the assumption that the returned date is valid, but the entire point is that if one does get a result from a sample older than 50Kyr, that result cannot be trusted. Again, if multiple other methods give results that agree within their margins of error, then the outlier must be discarded as an error. If 10 people describe the perpetrator of a crime as a white male over 6 feet tall and one other person says it was a black female dwarf under 4 feet tall, the outlying "measurement" must - assuming everyone is telling the truth to the best of their ability - be discarded. Third, the fact that, except in exceptionally rare cases, dinosaur "bones" are not actual bone at all. When a fossil forms (and this is part of the reason why they are so rare), the organic material is slowly replaced by minerals, and it is these minerals which are the fossils. The bones themselves have (again, in the vast majority of cases) long since gone to dust or dissolved. God gave us a universe filled with wonder and the intellect to understand some portion of how He created and sustains it. God says, "Fiat lux", and we observe the echoes of the Big Bang. God says, "Let Us make man in Our image", and we see the progression of life on earth from single-cell algae to humankind across the span of billions of years. science and Scripture are not enemies, and they do not contradict each other - viewing each through the lens of the other gives us (in my humble opinion) an even more complete picture of God's Glory and Might. For the ancient Greeks, lightning was simply the arrows of Zeus. Today, we know that it is the result of billions of subatomic particles simply seeking their base energy state. As Catholics, we can see God's divine power in the ordering of His creation through the fact that we can understand what the lightning is, and marvel at how His power can be shown so spectacularly by the action of some of the smallest particles in existence. We cannot read Genesis in a vacuum. Look at the first chapter of St. John's Gospel - it's another creation account. If we were to read it in the way that several people insist we must read Genesis, then absolutely nothing happens between the creation of man and the emergence of St. John the Baptist as a Prophet. Knowing what happens in between these events doesn't make it false, it simply completes the picture presented by that chapter - a picture necessarily limited because of the tight focus on the Word and His Incarnation.