G
Ghosty
Guest
I’m afraid that young Earth theories fall completely flat when taking all evidence into consideration. There’s a piece of evidence for an old universe that I’ve never heard Young Earthers address, and that is the evidence that the Hubble telescope provides. Due to the nature of the speed of light, which is nearly constant, we can actually gauge distance in “light years”, namely the amount of time it takes light to travel that distance. The side effect of this measurement is that when we see something that is eight light years away, we are actually seeing what it looked like eight years ago. With the Hubble telescope we are able to see much further than we ever could before, and an interesting, if expected, thing has been noticed: the universe looks “younger” the further we look. Again, because of the relatively constant speed of light, we can actually gauge what “time” we are looking at based on how distant the object is. Let’s just say we’ve seen WELL past the accepted time-frame of Young Earth, to the range of about 12 billion years.one bit that hasn’t been brought up by anyone pro or con is that evidence pointing to a young earth (such as human footprints inside of dinosaur prints) is ignored entirely by scientists whose theories are not supported by such evidence.
So while we may ponder whether or not dinosaurs walked with humans, and wonder why their footprints are apparently side by side with ours when they “shouldn’t” be, we can’t argue from that that the universe is “young”. We can literally see back in time, and the universe is billions, perhaps tens of billions, of years old.