KerrMetric
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- Oct 2, 2005
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A minor quibble here - we aren't really discussing origins, that is a red herring primarily put about by religious conservatives trying to rally their flock.Again you come back to your essential argument which is that science is the appropriate tool to consider our origins and only its high priesthood are qualified to interpret its results.
If ya don't read/write Chinese then you can't be an expert in Chinese literature. Similarly its tough to talk about the depths of astrophysics without being a physicist. As I said before, you can't dumb some things down to allow everyone to truly follow the arguments or understand their ramifications. Society is full of areas where a true understanding is really only amenable to a few experts - that does not invalidate them. You don't expect neurosurgery to be performed by a car mechanic do you?
You are performing the standard trick here of trying to paint certain science legitimate by use of the word practical and other areas of the same field as somehow illegitimate. Sorry - it doesn't work that way. Physics is physics. The condensed matter theorist uses the same methodology and fundamentals as I do. Apart from the late term specialisations we underwent the same training in most respects and do our jobs using the same tools and skill sets. Note - these are not the same tools and skills employed by plumbers, burger flippers and insurance agents who seem to be the typical professions of those whining against astrophysics on these boards.I can marvel with the rest of the world at the Apollo missions, at the worlds satellite network, at X Ray machines in hospitals and at the Voyager missions without sharing in this speculative madness about the origins of the universe. Practical science yields practical respect without having to understand all the nitty gritty details of how you did it. But when you talk about the origins of the universe you are speculating.
You are missing the point that you have no expertise to base that decision on. And if you took the time to forget the dogma of this debate - we are not really talking about origins. the Big Bang is not really an origins theory - but of course the pastors and associated nitwits want to portray it as such so they can rally the flock, honesty be damned.Again the intellectual arrogance accompanied ironically with another misreading of what I actually wrote! I am not even attempting to argue a scientific case here and you keep missing that point. I am saying that science exceeds its remit when it speculates about the unique event of creation.
And this sentence of yours tells me clearly that you don't understand what you are talking about here.That the method of observing current trends and facts and then by a process of mathematical deduction speculating about dates and processes that go back billions of years makes the mistaken assumption that meaningful results can be obtained by such a process of observation and deduction.
I could simply argue that you need to show how such inference or deduction is invalid but even forgetting that - this is NOT the primary methodology employed in astronomy or astrophysics.
Can you think of the primary method I am talking about? Surprise me and describe it!
You have, for the umpteenth time, no credibility to question this. Where is the dividing line? What criteria do you apply to determine this? The SAME methods are employed in what you deem acceptable and what you deem unacceptable. So how can you claim they are different and the results of one good and the other "murky"?If you stuck to Nuclear power stations and trips around the solar system you guys would probably be my heroes but instead you have to go off into the impossibly murky question of our origins. The scientific method has achieved great things but I am describing a limit to it here. You are not the appropriate tool to consider our origins as your methods cannot resolve those questions.
NOT SO. Do you not see the fundamental error you are making here? I hinted at this earlier - you are forgetting a fundamental aspect of astronomical observations that invalidate your complaint.the surveying of what. When you speculate about the origins of the whole universe you do so from a very small data sample, you make the assumption that what you observe here will work elsewhere also and over time
That is because there is. It's not my fault this does not compute to the uneducated.You make the assumption that there is enough observable evidence in the universe to make considered mathematical deductions about origins.
But your assumption is based on nothing more than wishful thinking. It's not backed up either by physical theory or mathematical logic. It's personal appeal and nothing more. We back our claims up, we check concordancy, we predict new results/observations.I make the assumption that since "CUrsed is the ground...." and "creation is in bondage to decay" what you observe is not a reliabel basis to make these deductions. It is our assumptions that divide us not our skills. Even the best mathematician comes to a false result if he makes the wrong assumptions.
Again - totally unfounded nonsense based upon a fundamental misconception. You really ought to read up more before spouting absolutes in an area you are fumbling about in.Its not about having 20 decimal places or 1 its about the assumption that what you might be able to demonstrate in our solar system will also apply elsewhere when we have no experience of elsewhere. Also when our knowledge of the present dynamic equilibrium of forces in even our own solar system remains limited.
Absolutely NOT true.This has worked fine in the context of our own solar system but remains untested outside it.
Again - you are so ignorant of the science of astrophysics you make statements that are pure hogwash. Heck, this was hogwash 170 years ago. And if you are smart you'll figure out why I say specifically 170 years (or thereabouts).
Totally not true. Absolute bunkum.Regarding the age of the universe being 13.7Bn years old:
1) Your evidence is limited to that collected in the environs of one star amongst billions in a single galaxy.
No - it is your characterisation that is false and thus invalidates your statement.So your evidence is limited.
Entropy and information are not the same thing. And please lets not go off on how Creationists are incompetent with thermodynamics. I'll spill a drink on my keyboard laughing at the errors.2) Another way to talk about creations bondage to decay is entropy. If there is decay and the corresponding loss of information then that entails that your evidence is corrupted and is corrupting over time.
Yawn, a new age mystical argument that is arguing against something no one claims. This also comes back to the fact most people haven't a clue about numbers, inference, statistics and approximation.3) A mind that is not large enough to conceive a universe such as the one in which we live can hardly map its laws in their entirety or write its history.
But since we aren't doing that your point is not germane. Secondly, we aren't really talking about creation in astrophysics. Remember - you have been the victim of some dogmatic nonsense put out by Creationist groups in all likelihood. The Big Bang Theory is NOT a Origins Theory.4) The event of creation is a unique one. So to try to understand it by analogy to observations and deductions made from a presently rather small data set is naive.
But when many different people do the calculations the odds it is truly in error become less and less. And when you add in the cross checks and concordancies of other experiments and observations the evidence becomes compelling.5) All human beings make mistakes and it is human scientists who are conducting the investigations of our origins. Therefore we cannot trust the results of things which we cannot experientially test and confirm.
If you do not accept this then you might as well reject all of science and human perception and become a solipsist.
But its not your place to set the dividing line - especially when you cannot define how you do this and you cannot do the science. All you have is personal appeal from incredulity here. Not expertise and not divine fiat but just a spidey-sense tingling from religious dogma.There are many positive achievements to modern physics. But that does not mean you can go beyond your remit and apply the same successful methods to the question of origins.
Depends on what you mean by Origins. If you mean Big Bang theory or observations of the universe then theologians are as much use as harlots or cobblers. Maybe less use actually.The first question to ask is whether this is the right man for the job and that includes the question of whether the acquired skill set matches the task in hand. I think a theologian is better equipped to answer questions of origins than is a scientist for the reasons discussed above.
Physicists have achieved great things and can talk with authority on a great many things which most people recognise and will attribute directly to their efforts. However they step beyond their remit when they consider the question of origins with anything but the greatest humility. I trust a competent eyewitness to the events of creation over a Old Universe theoretician and speculative scientist.
Again - you have nothing to set the limits we can operate except personal wish. It's obviously not physics expertise.
How ironic - you think non-physicists should set limits on how and where physics applies. My irony meter blew up at this thought.
By the way - there were no eyewitnesses and what is more - eyewitness testimony is considered one of the weaker forms of evidence.
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