I'm going to ignore the past five pages, because I'm an arrogant git
Show me how the
Omphalos Hypothesis is deceptive without disrespecting a literal interpretation of Genesis 1.
- The intent of this thread is to show that one would have to deny a literal interpretation of Genesis 1 in order to claim Omphalism.
1) The Universe looks 12-13 billion years old.
2) Your interpretation of the Bible implies that the universe is 6100 years old.
3) Therefore, God created/altered the universe to look far older than it is.
NB: the three major events (the Creation, the Fall, and the Flood) cannot be used as a rebuttle (i.e., you can't say "The universe only looks billions of years old because of event
x"). Consider:
The universe just after the Creation is exactly as God intended it to be, so any deception comes straight from God. So perhaps things look older than they are because of the Fall? No.
The universe may very well have changed in some arbitrary way during the Fall, but this change is again a direct act of God: things only went knees up for humanity because God
cursed us. That is, things only changed because God decided to curse us for our oh-so naughty insolence.
So maybe it was the Flood? No.
If it were possible for the Flood to be just a mundane downpoar (albiet on unprecidented scales) without any divine intervention, then this wouldn't account for the apparent antiquity of the Earth: a load of water doesn't cause radiometric dating methods to converge several billion years too far in the past.
So maybe the Flood had divine intervention? Well, that's possible, but it falls foul like the explanations above: any change in the dates would result from God's direct action.
So what I'm trying to say is that any
miraculous explanation for the discrepency between the universe's
apparent age and the universe's
actual age runs straight into the Omphalos 'problem'.
That said, I'd love to hear natural explanations (i.e., ones that don't invoke divinities) for it.
Futhermore, I daresay I've not disrespected the literalist interpretation of Genesis 1 (a bizarre requirement, but whatever).
One final note: AV, I've assumed that a) 'a literal interpretation of Genesis 1' equates to
your interpreation of Genesis 1, and b) your proposed age of the universe hasn't changed since I last saw it (Ussher's 6100 years).
Phew.