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So you’ve gone from data to valid data. I guess I’ll just have to keep going. How do you determine what data isn’t valid?In scientific research, excluding data is a big no-no.
Once an equipment piece is calibrated and the control tests have been done and are within acceptance range, all produced data is considered valid. And excluding valid data is a big no-no. Scientific research is meant to discover new things, to expand our understanding of physical world. So outliers, unexpected results and anomalies are not be swept under the carpet. They are to be investigated. Because they might point to something to be explored and yet to understand. So what data to use: the data that the observation, measurement or experiment provides.
Do you remember this post of mine:
in which I gave some examples of stuff we see with an age that lies way out of the range of 6.000 to 10.000 years. You just dismissed it as wrong (Another thing I don't understand about the creationist position...).Another thing I don't understand about the creationist position...
They really don’t need dating. The rocks don't need dating? Why not? How else shall we known the geological history of a place? (In this case eastern Washington and Oregon.)www.christianforums.com
Again, dismissing valid data denotes an anti-scientific attitude. These measurements don’t go away because creationists don’t like them, or because they show creationists wrong. They are valid. They tell us something about the world, about the physical reality.
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