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No more than they know otherwise. They should stick to what they know.I know it, and you know it, but do they know it?
That is fine. Even if there were more rings than years to the flood, all that may mean, is that more rings came in a year than at present. Not that the microscope is wrong.
Well, you know me, bro --- I'm biased toward a literal interpretation of Genesis 1 --- and I think everyone who goes up against a Creationist should know a literal interpretation of this chapter beforehand, as it actually does get harder from there. You can't explain how Jesus walked on water* to anyone who doesn't believe "In the beginning, God..." I've spent an inordinately-long period of time in my two and a half years here explaining Genesis 1 to these guys. They disdain the "God did it" explanation of anything, and that makes our work even harder, and posts and threads inordinately long.No more than they know otherwise. They should stick to what they know.![]()
That's standard dendrochronology, Gary ---dad said:That is fine. Even if there were more rings than years to the flood, all that may mean, is that more rings came in a year than at present. Not that the microscope is wrong.Seeing you appear to be making this stuff up as you go along, how exactly could this happen?
Wikipedia said:Alternating poor and favorable conditions, such as mid summer droughts, can result in several rings forming in a given year.
Who cares? How could it not happen? Who says life processes worked the same? Who says plants grew at the same rate, and way? Who says the present laws applied? No one. You made that up as so called science went along.Seeing you appear to be making this stuff up as you go along, how exactly could this happen?
And, if they neither know the bible, or care less, they better at least be able to impose the laws that we have now, on the garden of Eden, and pre history times. Other than just by dreaming.Well, you know me, bro --- I'm biased toward a literal interpretation of Genesis 1 --- and I think everyone who goes up against a Creationist should know a literal interpretation of this chapter beforehand, as it actually does get harder from there. You can't explain how Jesus walked on water* to anyone who doesn't believe "In the beginning, God..." I've spent an inordinately-long period of time in my two and a half years here explaining Genesis 1 to these guys. They disdain the "God did it" explanation of anything, and that makes our work even harder, and posts and threads inordinately long.
* Actually, you wouldn't have to.
Correct ---And, if they neither know the bible, or care less, they better at least be able to impose the laws that we have now, on the garden of Eden, and pre history times. Other than just by dreaming.
Who cares? How could it not happen? Who says life processes worked the same? Who says plants grew at the same rate, and way? Who says the present laws applied? No one. You made that up as so called science went along.
To be fair, we only disdain people touting "God did it" as a scientific explanation. It's obvious that God could indeed have done it, there's just no evidence that he did. That's why, to us, it seems like a completely arbitrary and unsupported hypothesis: possible, but no more likely than the existence of magic pixies. And I guess it's annoying when some Creationists call us the delusional, unsubstantiated ones.Well, you know me, bro --- I'm biased toward a literal interpretation of Genesis 1 --- and I think everyone who goes up against a Creationist should know a literal interpretation of this chapter beforehand, as it actually does get harder from there. You can't explain how Jesus walked on water* to anyone who doesn't believe "In the beginning, God..." I've spent an inordinately-long period of time in my two and a half years here explaining Genesis 1 to these guys. They disdain the "God did it" explanation of anything, and that makes our work even harder, and posts and threads inordinately long.
* Actually, you wouldn't have to.
How would "God did it" be a scientific explanation?To be fair, we only disdain people touting "God did it" as a scientific explanation.
Would it really matter? Dispensation Theology says "no" --- and an atheist says in his heart that there is no God --- note: not in his mind, but in his heart --- thus no amount of evidence is going to convince him, even if God died on a cross and came back.It's obvious that God could indeed have done it, there's just no evidence that he did.
What you call "completely arbitrary and unsupported hypothesis", the Bible calls "many infallible truths."That's why, to us, it seems like a completely arbitrary and unsupported hypothesis: possible, but no more likely than the existence of magic pixies.
We could call you what the Bible calls you, but that would bother you too. Do you want us to lie?And I guess it's annoying when some Creationists call us the delusional, unsubstantiated ones.
Wiccan, now can I play my trump card?inb4 your apple challenge.
Hmmm if you accept yec then isn't the scientific way to go about it trying to analyze how Goddidit? Not just saying it is soo and then leaving it at that. Surely there must be some godly-method or something that we, with what rationality we have can deduce? It's not as if we are without something to work on. It'll be like researchers in bigbang theory trying to reconstruct how things came to be, only now it's only 6000-ish years ago and not a whopping 14billions or whatever.
To be fair, we only disdain people touting "God did it" as a scientific explanation.
To the OP: cool find! But I would've thought the oldest temple would be in Africa... but maybe it's been destroyed since then?
Wiccan, now can I play my trump card?
If it were derived from the available evidence. It's not, so it's not scientific.How would "God did it" be a scientific explanation?
If you want to call it a scientific hypothesis, yes. If you acknowledge that it's a religious, personal belief, then no.Would it really matter?
If memory serves, you have a different definition of 'atheist' than the rest of us. So I won't argue this point.Dispensation Theology says "no" --- and an atheist says in his heart that there is no God --- note: not in his mind, but in his heart --- thus no amount of evidence is going to convince him, even if God died on a cross and came back.
I don't doubt that they may be true (I'm curious how truth can be anything but infallible), I'm just saying that their affirmation is indeed arbitrary and unsupported. Something can be both arbitrary and unsupported, yet still turn out to be true.What you call "completely arbitrary and unsupported hypothesis", the Bible calls "many infallible truths."
Not at all. It's not the mud-slinging that's annoying, but rather the hypocrisy of the whole thing.We could call you what the Bible calls you, but that would bother you too. Do you want us to lie?
And God said, let there be apples.Wiccan, now can I play my trump card?
OOPS --- my bad --- I should have said, "many infallible proofs" ---... (I'm curious how truth can be anything but infallible) ...
--- but your point still applies.Acts 1:3 said:To whom also he shewed himself alive after his passion by many infallible proofs, being seen of them forty days, and speaking of the things pertaining to the kingdom of God:
It was supported back then, but the support, and the supporters, are now gone, thus faith takes over. Did you see the point I made in another thread that science today can't prove the Spanish Armada was defeated in 1588, let along prove the armada itself ever existed?... I'm just saying that their affirmation is indeed arbitrary and unsupported. Something can be both arbitrary and unsupported, yet still turn out to be true.
Your humor aside --- I would conjecture that an attempt to do a search of a person who just materialized an apple into the palm of your hand ex nihilo would not be the wisest of choices.If you poofed an apple into existence, I'd probe you *everywhere* to find out how you did it