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I have showed you this before, but this is for silmarien to see too, because your posts are inaccurate.
http://www.discovery.org/a/3191
So... What's your point?Almost all astronomers agree on the theory of the Big Bang, that the entire Universe is spreading apart, with distant galaxies speeding away from us in all directions. Run the clock backwards to 13.8 billion years ago, and everything in the Cosmos started out as a single point in space. In an instant, everything expanded outward from that location, forming the energy, atoms and eventually the stars and galaxies we see today. But to call this concept merely a theory is to misjudge the overwhelming amount of evidence.
There are separate lines of evidence, each of which independently points towards this as the origin story for our Universe. The first came with the amazing discovery that almost all galaxies are moving away from us.
In 1912, Vesto Slipher calculated the speed and direction of “spiral nebulae” by measuring the change in the wavelengths of light coming from them. He realized that most of them were moving away from us. We now know these objects are galaxies, but a century ago astronomers thought these vast collections of stars might actually be within the Milky Way.
In 1924, Edwin Hubble figured out that these galaxies are actually outside the Milky Way. He observed a special type of variable star that has a direct relationship between its energy output and the time it takes to pulse in brightness. By finding these variable stars in other galaxies, he was able to calculate how far away they were. Hubble discovered that all these galaxies are outside our own Milky Way, millions of light-years away.
So, if these galaxies are far, far away, and moving quickly away from us, this suggests that the entire Universe must have been located in a single point billions of years ago. The second line of evidence came from the abundance of elements we see around us.
In the earliest moments after the Big Bang, there was nothing more than hydrogen compressed into a tiny volume, with crazy high heat and pressure. The entire Universe was acting like the core of a star, fusing hydrogen into helium and other elements.
This is known as Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. As astronomers look out into the Universe and measure the ratios of hydrogen, helium and other trace elements, they exactly match what you would expect to find if the entire Universe was once a really big star.
Line of evidence number 3: cosmic microwave background radiation. In the 1960s, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson were experimenting with a 6-meter radio telescope, and discovered a background radio emission that was coming from every direction in the sky – day or night. From what they could tell, the entire sky measured a few degrees above absolute zero.
WMAP data of the Cosmic Microwave Background. Credit: NASA
Theories predicted that after a Big Bang, there would have been a tremendous release of radiation. And now, billions of years later, this radiation would be moving so fast away from us that the wavelength of this radiation would have been shifted from visible light to the microwave background radiation we see today.
The final line of evidence is the formation of galaxies and the large scale structure of the cosmos. About 10,000 years after the Big Bang, the Universe cooled to the point that the gravitational attraction of matter was the dominant form of energy density in the Universe. This mass was able to collect together into the first stars, galaxies and eventually the large scale structures we see across the Universe today.
These are known as the 4 pillars of the Big Bang Theory. Four independent lines of evidence that build up one of the most influential and well-supported theories in all of cosmology. But there are more lines of evidence. There are fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background radiation, we don’t see any stars older than 13.8 billion years, the discoveries of dark matter and dark energy, along with how the light curves from distant supernovae.
So, even though it’s a theory, we should regard it the same way that we regard gravity, evolution and general relativity. We have a pretty good idea of what’s going on, and we’ve come up with a good way to understand and explain it. As time progresses we’ll come up with more inventive experiments to throw at. We’ll refine our understanding and the theory that goes along with it.
Most importantly, we can have confidence when talking about what we know about the early stages of our magnificent Universe and why we understand it to be true.
Of course it has mass, everything with an actual existence has mass. If general relativity says anything with mass cannot be eternal, how does general relativity account for the current existence of Mass?the burden of proof lies on the skeptic to prove that the universe has no mass, because if it has mass it's not eternal, and is under time, according to general relativity.
the universe has a beginning. There must be something out of time space matter continuum. The time space matter continuum is not eternal.So... What's your point?
The Big Bang theory begins with the existence of the singularity that expanded to become what is known as the Universe. Prior to the expansion of the singularity; nobody knows.the universe has a beginning. There must be something out of time space matter continuum. The time space matter continuum is not eternal.
But you didn't reply to the fact that plants cannot live without light for vast ages of time, and you didn't reply to the fact that the number two definition of yom, as per your source was a 24 hour period. The third and fourth were less likely and included vast periods of time.Ok to make it clearer I should of written : The ancient Israelites with their culture and language, wrote the old testament.
I agree it was inspired by God.
In their language yom is many types of period of time. Not just a day. Logic does demand that we don't interpret the Genesis one piece of prose as a literal piece of writing. But I've done this to death. lol
this is just playing with words and time wasting for me now.
So God bless
Maybe between species but not between genera and phyla.Ed1wolf said: ↑
No, the problem is not that there are randomly assorted gaps which is what would be expected if there was just a lack of fossils, it is that they are systematically at the places where the biggest morphological changes would be taking place, such as genera and phyla.
efm: There are many transitional forms in the fossil record. Anyone who knows how to use a search engine, or go to a library or a museum, can figure that out pretty easily.
Not really, in 2005 evolutionary biologists A. Rokas, D. Kruger, and S.B. Carroll analyzed 50 genes from 17 animal groups and concluded that different phylogenetic analyses can reach contradicting inferences with seemingly absolute support.efm: And again, if there were no fossils at all, the evidence from genetics alone would be more than enough.
But you didn't reply to the fact that plants cannot live without light for vast ages of time, and you didn't reply to the fact that the number two definition of yom, as per your source was a 24 hour period. The third and fourth were less likely and included vast periods of time.
Its not eternal right ? It had a beginning right ?The Big Bang theory begins with the existence of the singularity that expanded to become what is known as the Universe. Prior to the expansion of the singularity; nobody knows.
There is no scientific theory that claims the singularity that lead to the Big Bang actually had a beginning. IOW nobody knows. Science only reports on what they know, so they cannot claim the Singularity was eternally existing, and they cannot claim it had a beginning because they do not know.Its not eternal right ? It had a beginning right ?
Its not eternal right ? It had a beginning right ?
In in a lecture on the no-boundary proposal, Hawking wrote: "Events before the Big Bang are simply not defined, because there's no way one could measure what happened at them. Since events before the Big Bang have no observational consequences, one may as well cut them out of the theory, and say that time began at the Big Bang."
I did read this you posted to someone else. Very dissatisfied with what Hawkins said.
basically Stephen Hawkins is saying We don't know so we will not deal with it.
I'll go into it with more ken-1122. I can't reply today. No "time".
They came up with it though because the fossil record did not reflect gradualistic predictions. And the mechanisms are inadequate for both.Ed1wolf said: ↑
That is how they explain it, but nevertheless it confirms that those systematic gaps exist and they are attempting to hold to the paradigm by coming up with basically an ad hoc explanation.
efm: Evolution is still a fact, so their is nothing to 'ad hoc' here. Punctuated equilibrium, assuming one holds to it as the prevailing model, has exactly the same mechanisms as gradualism, and they're not mutually exclusive.
Who said anything about laughing at anyone? The Epicycle theory was a serious theory held by almost all scientists at the time. And Copernicus was not laughed either, they just thought his theory was all wrong because he had little to no evidence. Then Galileo came along and provided the strong evidence.Ed1wolf said: ↑
That was true with the epicycle theory too, until Galileo confirmed the fringe dissenter Copernicus.
efm: The 'they laughed at X' argument is not an argument. They also laughed at Bozo the Clown, and we laugh at Ken Ham, Kent Hovind, Ray Comfort etc., for the same reasons. The lone difference being, Bozo knew he was a clown.
Ed1wolf said: ↑
No, it is based on knowledge not ignorance
efm: You don't know, and have no possible means of knowing, what lifeforms could have evolved under conditions you are not even capable of imagining, let alone gleaning. All you have is an extremely narrow understanding of what constitutes 'life' - carbon based, water subsistent, etc. - based on your infinitesimally limited experience. Which you've arbitrarily selected out of trillions of features within the universe, because it happens to be important to your religious views. It is absolutely based on ignorance. And arbitrariness. And a complete lack of imagination.
Professionals in astronomy and astrophysics roll their eyes at the line of reasoning you are using, when they're not tearing their hair out in frustration at hearing the same crappy arguments over and over again. I'm married to one, so I know.
Goodness me. Congratulations, gradyll, that almost sounds like you're starting to grasp the truth. But to make sure, I'd like to ask you to clarify your meaning: are you willing to concede that the 2005 trial found that:yes sir, that was a long time ago. Sorry for the pun, but ID has "evolved" and separated from creationism, so that is no longer the case. Back when Behe was testifying, they were very similar.
Why on earth are you showing us this? It dates from 2004, and was published in a newspaper, not a scientific journal. It is, however, valuable evidence that the ID side were lying; here, you can see Meyer claiming that ID is not creationism, a few months before the court finds indisputable evidence that it is.I have showed you this before, but this is for silmarien to see too, because your posts are inaccurate.
http://www.discovery.org/a/3191
They tried that line in court. It didn't work there either.For example you will see various citations of ID within christianity and creationism to support their creationism, but ID does not cite anything other than science and logic to support their views.
I agree, it does sound ridiculous, but it was Michael Behe who said it. Not that he wanted to, but he was forced to admit it under cross-examination.See evolutionists can't refute the principles of ID but they can make them sound ridiculous when use ad hominem attack to make them similar to astrology for example.
Messaging people who have been found guilty of lying in court in order to ask them if they're telling the truth sounds like a serious waste of time. I certainly shan't be doing that, and I'm surprised that you did.To settle this I can give you emails of people who work for discovery institute and you can email them and ask them, that is how I found out. But you will have to message me for that information.
No, there is more to it than that, according to Dr. Goldsmith, the scientific consensus is that the BB is the ORIGIN of the universe, as well as time.Ed1wolf said: ↑
Well you need to tell Dr. Goldsmith, because that is what he wrote.
efm: Nope. You are putting the point forward, so you defend it. You are playing bait-and-switch, whether you realize it or not.
Once again, the Big Bang describes the earliest known conditions, expansion, and early evolution of the universe. That is the only consensus, and that is all scientists mean when they speak of a 'beginning' to the universe.
I didnt say there was a consensus that there was an actual ex nihilo creation event, only that it appears that way. And if you run the BB backwards you come to a point with no dimensions which implies nothingness. Which is exactly what the bible teaches.efm: What it does not mean is that the universe constitutes the totality of existence, and that it began with an ex nihilo creation event. That is what you are tasked with demonstrating. And I don't care how many scientists you can find being uncareful with their words in popular publications, you will never find a 'consensus' on that, because it doesn't exist. No one knows either of those things, because there is as yet nothing to know about them, and there is no such thing as a consensus or non-existent information.
I shouldn't have to explain this to someone who claims to be a professional scientist, but here we are.
The reason why more accept the BB is because most of it can be empirically observed in real time due to the ability to see into the deep past because of the speed of light. With evolution such a thing is not possible. Macroevolution has never been empirically observed. Also, the BB is based on well known relatively simple laws of physics, there are no laws of evolution.I could be wrong, but I feel like not long ago at all, most creationists denied both biology and astronomy. That was the 'old guard' - Duane Gish, Kent Hovind, and other assorted blithering morons. I have a hard time wrapping my head around this class of creationists who accept the Big Bang, but still deny evolution.
I blame William Lane Craig. By resurrecting Kalam, he showed that you can misconstrue Big Bang cosmology to apologetic ends.
What does it feel like to have to pick and choose which cornerstone scientific theories you're going to accept? I'm glad I don't know.
- ID was a form of creationism
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ID was emphatically not science
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