You are correct, some YEC appear to ignore the evidence. However, that is not to say all do. There are some very honest and brilliant minds within the YEC camp, just as there is with the OEC camp.
I would say even the honest ones are using their brilliance to find reasons to dismiss the evidence. The honest ones, are those that state forthrightly, as you have been doing, that the reason they dismiss the evidence is their theological orientation. It is not a matter of disagreeing with scientists' conclusions about the scientific meaning of the evidence.
I'll have to disagree with you when you say that it is my philosophical foundation that pressures me to ignore the evidence. I personal try my best to give proper consideration to all pieces of evidence that falls my way.
Again, we all examine and study the same body of physical evidence.
I am sure you do, but more of that below.
True, but naturalistic philosophy also allows for the idea that there is no God. This cannot be said of my philosophical position.
One has to look at the context and history of word usage. In the early 19th century the term "biologist" had not been invented yet and scientists we would now refer to as "biologists" were called "naturalists". This did not imply that they held a God-denying philosophy. (Similarly, what we would now call a Department or Faculty of Science at a university was then referred to as a Department or Faculty of Natural Philosophy, with no suggestion that this was anti-theist.) However, because we have now invented different terms ("science", "biologist") the use of "natural philosophy", "naturalism", "naturalistic" have acquired an association with the philosophical position that "Nature is all there is" or as Carl Sagan put it: "The cosmos is all there is or has been or ever will be."
My point is that a scientific or natural explanation of anything in nature does not imply adoption of this philosophy of naturalism. Every Christian is aware of natural explanations of things like rainbows for example and their acceptance of this naturalistic explanation does not mean they are kowtowing to philosophical naturalism.
The same holds true for believers who accept natural explanations of geological formations.
True, my point here was to show that we come to different conclusions of this "amount" of time based on our philosophical bias. I may see certain geological formations being formed rather quickly through a series of catastrophes, where you may see the very same geological formation and interpret it's "maturity - or wear" in another fashion, such as through some long uniform process. Or we may hold that a mixture of both occured but vary on how much of each.
And if we are geologists, we put our hypotheses to the test to see which best accords with our observations. We study various processes to see which produce similar observations.
This is what I mean by us having the same physical evidence but come to wide ranges of conclusions all based on our philosophical assumptions. The physical evidence we have is is not objective, it is subjective.
Here is a clear-cut example of why I say that fundamentally, YE creationism undermines the first principle of Christian belief: namely that God created. A physical world which God created is necessarily objective. It is external to any one person or group of people. And it will appear to any one person or group of people the same way in the same circumstances. If one really believes in creation, one must affirm the objective reality of physical evidence.
The only meaning the physical evidence has is the meaning we apply to it.
Here I agree. Interpretation of physical evidence is not necessarily objective. This is why interpretations need to be evaluated. Science is the best tool we know of by which to evaluate interpretations of physical evidence.
It's all based on biblical hermeneutics.
The decision to give priority to literal interpretation has no exclusive claim to be called "biblical" hermeneutics. That is a poisoning the well argument since it implies that a different hermeneutical approach is by definition not "biblical".
The creation story exhibits a literary style that demands a literal interpretation.
That is a matter of opinion. I have seen very good arguments to the contrary.
In fact, it is the most natural reading of the text.
Natural to whom? I cannot recall any time in my life, even as a child, when I thought of the creation stories as literal rather than literary. And what about the first audience which was much more familiar with stories than with modern prosaic reportage. The "natural reading" of a text is strongly influenced by cultural notions of what is "natural".
In this case, as with all biblical texts, the appropriate "natural reading" is the one that accords with the cultural context of the time and place it was written. That is very often not equivalent to a 21st century North American "natural reading".
You'd have to provide a logical reason to interpret the text outside its natural and plain reading. And you can't say that science or the evidence requires it, because those conclusions are assumptions based on a fragile philosophical system. You must provide something objective.
First one needs to establish the real natural and plain reading of the text. Next one needs to account for any accommodation made in inspired scripture to the knowledge base and culture in which the scripture was written. It is noteworthy for example that no scripture speaks of scientific information discovered after the time it was written. Not once, for example, does scripture speak of disease being caused by bacteria or viruses, presumably because no one to whom it was originally addressed knew such things existed. Rather, as was customary at the time, diseases are attributed to demons and healing to the casting out of demons.
Physical evidence is objective since it is provided by the creator. Scientific conclusions about physical evidence do not depend on philosophical systems. That is why science can be so trans-cultural with scientists of all sorts of different philosophical persuasions working together, replicating each others observations, and agreeing on conclusions.
Science is still an interpretation of the evidence, not the evidence itself; scientific conclusions are probable, not definite. But the onus is on the dissenter to show how the evidence supports a different conclusion.
This happens regularly in science as we see in the relatively recent adoption of plate tectonics to explain many geological features. It took nearly 40 years of research to convince the scientific community that this was a better explanation.
I think you've misunderstood what it means when YECs say they interpret the Bible literally. When Jesus calls Herod a fox, do YEC literally think Herod was a fox? No, we notice this is a literary device that has a literal interpretation. That literal interpretation is Herod was clever.
Jig, I have been through this conversation more times than I can count. You are fiddling with the definition of "literal" in order to call an interpretation "literal" when it is not. The use of a literary device means that the expression is NOT to be interpreted literally. The literal meaning of "fox" is the animal of that name. The literal meaning of "Herod is a fox" is that Herod is the name of an animal of that species. But we correctly understand that this is not Jesus' meaning. He is using a literary device known as a metaphor, and the METAPHORICAL (not literal) meaning is Herod is clever (or more likely "sly".)
By referring to the metaphorical meaning as a literal meaning, you are taking the position of another creationist I had this conversation with when she concluded of a passage we were discussing "Well, it's literally figurative." What an oxymoron.
No, I don't misunderstand the YEC meaning of "literal". I know that a basically literal approach to scripture does not rule out the existence of literary devices. But I do find, again and again, that YECs don't understand the actual meaning of "literal". They extend the meaning in multiple directions to cover both literal and figurative meanings. They also use it to mean "plain" as if metaphors and other literary devices are not plain and easily understood. Some use it to mean "prose" as if prose never contains literary devices and poetry never contains anything but literary devices. And some even equate it with "true". None of these are legitimate meanings of "literal" as applied to a text.
To be honest, I don't see a problem with a universe being of immense age. I just don't believe in it.
The point is not whether it is problematical to hold the universe is old. The point is why is authority granted to a hermeneutical principle (which is, by definition, of human origin) to disallow consideration of physical evidence (which is, by definition, of divine origin)? Doesn't humility in the face of what God has presented to us in creation suggest we should order our hermeneutics appropriately to recognize this data?
This conclusion is based on a faulty understanding of literal interpretation.
Says the one who has just demonstrated his own misunderstanding of the meaning of "literal interpretation". Btw, I realize this is not a personal failing of yours. It is endemic to the whole YEC perspective. But the outcome is that "literal" has no longer any bounded meaning within YE interpretations. The only significant meaning it now has is "whatever YEC teachers say it means".
Wait one second. You are phrasing your comment in a way that assumes my interpretation is false. This is unfair. Truth may very well be within my position.
No, the phrasing does not contain that assumption unless you put it there. Truth may be within your position. It is still the case that it is truth one should be defending, nothing else.
But when you use a hermeneutical principle of interpreting scripture to decide that some physical evidence is to be given no weight, you are no longer defending truth, either scriptural or scientific. You are only defending the hermeneutical principle itself. If the principle of interpretation you are applying to scripture is itself valid, it ought not to have problems with any physical evidence.
I consider it weak because the text does not require a non-literal interpretation nor is it necessary. It is only applied because of ideas within naturalism and conclusions about our universe and planet that can not be known for sure.
By "naturalism" do you mean "a philosophy of naturalism that denies the reality of anything supernatural"? If that is the case, you are basically saying that science is inherently atheistic. And that is plainly false, given that so many Christians are involved in science with no impairment or compromise to their faith.
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