I'll just post this one more time so it doesn't get missed:
wiccan_child said:
Is there any evidence that the Universe was created by a divine entity? is there any evidence that this is the same Divinity as a particular terrestrial monotheism, namely Christianity?
What would count as evidence for a devine entinty? If the general concensus is that science cannot prove or disprove God, what can be given?
wiccan_child said:
As a side not, I read in another thread that 'The BigBang and Evolution hypotheses fail terribly" in terms of evidence. Where do either fail? We have doppler shift, background microwave radiation, the fossil record, paeleogeographical and geological dating evidences, etc etc.
I don't know about "fail terribly".....but the Big Bang doesn't give any evidence for evolution of a universe. They can give evidence of age like dopler shift, but not evidence that it set evolution in motion.
Biological evolution fails in three ways: it's lack of transitionals, and the fact the most "transitionals" found don't show a pattern from a simple to complex being. At best, there is only a "smaller" to a "bigger" creature.
Third, "transitionals" are extremely unuseful in showing that an entire population had evolved. We know that organisms, especially humans, can be born with deformities, or simply an unusual build for it's type of population that it a one time occurance and doesn't get passed on.
"Transitionals" found are usually just individual fossils, and often, not always, are not accompanied by more discoveries of fossils like it.
While any one of these may be able to be explained away, the combination of these things together make evolution hard to believe.
As far as dating, we know thatwith carbon dating, it can only date back in thousands of years, not millions. Even in this case, there are still assumptions that must be made, like the atmosphere was always the same, which isn't a logical assumption if one believes the earth evolved over time into what it is today.
Radio-metric dating relies on a ratio of an element to the ratio of what it decays to. This is unreliable, because we have to make assumptions, like the "parent" element which decays was pure. We also have to assume that things like water didn't wash similar elements into or out of the rocks. This factor would greatly mess up the "correct" age.
There's also the factor that some rocks may naturally contain either the initial element, or the element that it decays into. This would also make radio-metric dating unreliable.