T+
Before I get into the specific things you wrote, I need to remind you of what I have been posting in this thread (and what I haven't).
1. I have only been discussing how radioactive isotopes behave *after* a rock froms, whether that formation be natural or creation.
2. I have not made claims about whether there is or is not a supernatural. It is not relevant to the decay of isotopes that already exist.
3. I have not claimed there was no creation, I only offer ways to understand how things change *AFTER* it occurred (if it did).
4. I have not claimed there are no gods. The existence of gods is not relevant to the subject I have been discussing. It work either way.
Do I have opinions on those topics (2-4)? Of course I do, but the science of radioactive decay I discuss are not dependent on those opinion either way.
The radioactive decays and how the results are interpreted are very much at the core of the "embedded age" claims. Now let us proceed.
Decay that happened to a created rock.
As stated above, whatever isotopes were in a rock when it formed, whether created or naturally formed, then decay and can indicate the time since the rock was formed/created.
If you believe there was no supernatural in where we came from, you do so with no evidence. In fact, despite the overwhelming evidence for the supernatural
(This is not germaine to the discussion, but, no I don't believe in the supernatural precisely because there is no evidence for it.)
It is irrelevant. Why? Because it had nothing to do with the creation, but is just some process that happens in this already existing universe. You want to credit it with much more than that.
It is relevant because the radioactive decay of the already existing rock (created or otherwise) indicates the time that has passed since it was formed. That is all this is, the physics of radioactive decay.
Totally made up. The amount of decay in 6000 years is negligible. And you can't say what the ratios were after creation.
It is not "totally made up". Radioactive decays happen. When the isotopes in a crystal in a rock are measured, we could take two very opposite views based on the known decay of isotopes. The measured isotopes and isotopic ratios can be used to infer:
1. The ratios when the crystal was created at the assumed age of 6000 can be inferred by "reversing" the impact of the decay using the given expressions; or
2. The age of the crystal can be deduced assuming that the chemistry of formation of the crystals has not changed.
As for 6000 years yielding negligible decay that just isn't true. There is a huge range in radioactive half-lives. Some isotopes would barely decay in 10 billion years and others would be completely decayed away in less time that it takes for you eye to blink.
Your whole trip is to deny creation and ignore it and replace it with natural only explanations. So you do not like to use the word creation. Everything in your mind apparently is just natural and naturally caused.
Nope. My whole "trip" is getting the nuclear physics right and insisting that you do as well.
You should admit that if there was a creation, that the natural processes after the fact cannot tell us about it. All that natural processes can tell us is how it works now. To ignore any and everything else sidelines you from any creation debate. Why? Because all you can do is offer the natural as the reason for all things existing.
I'm not interested in describing the mechanism of any putative creation. I leave that the "creation scientists". It does not interest me in the slightest.
Is that your equation you refer to? If so, it has no relation to creation.
I didn't claim it was related to creation. It describes a general form for radioactive decay, not creation.
My equation is math. If 2 + 2 is math so is my equation.
You would be best sticking to describing your ideas in sentences. Your attempt to do so in equation form was not successful. The reason we use equations in physics is that it is more efficient when communicating with each other.
If you are talking about your radioactive decay of course it is measured.
That is exactly what I am talking about as was clear from my prior statement.
It is not measured before anything existed though! And the OP shows that if your method was used on a 1 day old newly created rock, your results would be trillions of times off!
No one claims that we could measure things before they existed. As for a newly created rock, it would show the isotopic ratios of the original creation with one day of decay. If the chemistry of the rock indicated that the product of decay wouldn't naturally form inside the rock, then using that assumption would give an age that is much larger than one day. This is at the heart of the issues pointed out with "embedded age". (New rocks continue to form as I have spent part of the day watching new rocks form.)
What is meaningless and untestable is your statement of faith that there is no God or supernatural. (using ONLY the natural is precisely that) That is just your opinion! It is useless. It is not subject to testing!
I made no such claim
All natural only science can test are things that exist now and that are natural. All claims that these processes are responsible for the world and man are 100% faith and not testable!
wow
You apparently do know what science can and can not test. As a scientist, I do not apply science outside its normal realm, but I have no qualms about applying scientific analysis to any object I can observe.