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For Creationists.....

Valkhorn

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The uncertainty principle would have to allow for it. The sun and planets are like corks in very dense water comparatively.

For a moment there I had to check my calendar to make sure it wasn't the year 1610.
 
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Aron-Ra

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The dictionary.com definition for religion is sufficient for me:[/
1. a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, esp. when.....
'esp.'' But not explicitly eh?
Yes, Dictionary.com lists nine definitons for that word. One deals only with resolutions of morality with no reference to any sort of belief structure, and the rest are so vague that Democracy, Capitolism, music appreciation, and model train collecting could all qualify. Only the first definition deals with anything specifically religious, and it excludes several of the religions commonly accepted as such by both participants and observers. Buddhism, for example, is one a few religions which have no creator god, and for whom there is no relevant cause, nature, or purpose to the universe as it relates to their system of belief. All these things are "irrelevent" to Buddhism, and Buddhists will tell you so themselves.

Neither, coincidentally, does evolution have any of that, as I have already explained. So if you still want to assert that evolution is a religion, you're going to have to try again, because your first attempt failed. Now list every religion commonly accepted as such; (neo-pagan, Shinto, Shaman, Druid, Sikh, Asatru, Chinese ancestor worship, Zoroastrianism, Hinduism, Jainism, etc. etc.) and redefine "religion" such that it includes every religion commonly accepted as such, and let's see if you can force biological science into that.
Are you telling me that forensic science is infallible?
Nope. Didn't even hint at it.
If not then I fail to see why it keeps getting mentioned.
Because it does work, and you're trying to make it sound like it can't. Its still demonstrably more reliably accurate than your religious nonsense, despite your shallow insinuation that, if it ain't infallible, then it ain't no good at all.
You posted an evolutionary interpretation of ''evidence''.
No, I told what the only possible indication is, and I challenged you to present any counter interpretation you could for all that I was referring to. Because there are no other option to "interpret". For example, remember that deep time, dating methods, and the geologic column were descovered by Christian scientists, and they identified index fossils indicating several successions of speciations and extinctions. Then of course, taxonomy was developed by another Christian scientist to classify all these things and common group relationships were cited even then, and all this was a century before Darwin was even born. How do you "interpret" that?
I am studying to be a career paleontologist, and I've already taken cellular biology, paleobiology, evolution as 4th level biology, and I've taken physical geology and historical geology, and I've been informed that my own original research in systematics was once cited as a resource in a Master's thesis in biology also.
Good for you but you have neglected to answer the first question How much of what you claimed is based on your own research
I did answer that question. See, the beautiful thing about science education is that they don't want to just believe them. That certainly wouldn't be scientific! Instead they want to demonstrate and prove the point. So my classes have laboratories and direct observations and experiments with the evidence with microscopes and reactive chemicals and such.
there are no sacred truths. All assumptions must be critically examined. Arguments from authority are worthless. Whatever is inconsistent with the facts -- no matter how fond of it we are -- must be discarded or revised. Science is not perfect. It is often misused. It is only a tool, but it is the best tool we have -- self-correcting, ever changing, applicable to everything." And that's my perspective too.
Then I shall ask the question again: How much of what you claimed is based on your own research?
All of it. I've cross referenced and confirmed everything I've ever been taught, and have now dedicated more than a decade of concentrated study into this topic, six years of that before I ever even went back to school.
You say ''perhaps it's not clear enough'' and ''allow me to clarify'' then go on to complicate matters. It was perfectly clear to me with the first entry for faith at dictionary,com
1. confidence or trust in a person or thing: faith in another's ability.
At the online etymology dictionary.com the first entry for faith says:
faith c.1250, "duty of fulfilling one's trust," from O.Fr. feid, from L. fides "trust, belief," from root of fidere "to trust," from PIE base *bhidh-/*bhoidh- (cf. Gk. pistis; see bid)
So faith = trust = faith.
Wrong. faith = stoic trust/confidence/belief ...without evidence, and stoic trust/confidence/belief without evidence = faith.
None of this indicates "trust".
But what I have quoted does and it does, by definition, includes your faith = trust = faith in evo-scientists...
No, because what you quoted you also deliberately snipped to edit out the important part.

"Confident belief in the truth, value, or trustworthiness of a person, idea, or thing, that does not rest on logical proof or material evidence."
--Bartleby.com, Dictionary.com

"complete trust or confidence. 2 strong belief in a religion. 3 a system of religious belief."
--AskOxford

"Belief; the assent of the mind to the truth of what is declared by another, resting solely and implicitly on his authority and veracity; reliance on testimony."
--OneLook

"a firm belief in something for which there is no proof"
--Merriam Webster Online Dictionary.

"Belief in, devotion to, or trust in somebody or something, especially without logical proof,."
--Encarta

"For quite a lot of people, faith or the lack thereof, is an important part of their identities. E.g. a person will identify him or herself as a Muslim or a skeptic. Many religious rationalists, as well as non-religious people, criticise implicit faith as being irrational. In this view, belief should be restricted to what is directly supportable by logic or evidence."
--Wikipedia

Adapt and move on.
When necessary, I will. You, on the other hand, should learn how to admit when you're wrong. But of course if you did that, you couldn't be a creationist anymore.
Then of course, we have the words of the clergy:
Then we have other Christian sources like:

According to all these sources and even the BIble itself, faith is not synonemous with trust. It is a stoic conviction but without evidence.
Absolutely not. You give me your opinion and the opinions of others as if I should be impressed by them somehow... well I'm not.
Well, at least you admit that the Bible is only the opinion of others.

But still, when trying to determine the definition of a word, one would have to turn to definitive sources and cross-reference those as I have done. I doubt very much that you could produce any equal array to counter the real definition as I have revealed it.
You are shameless it would seem. Posting snippets from The Bible that you believe support your argument but when taken in context, (something you accused me of ignoring earlier) OBVIOUSLY do not.
Oh, its obvious, is it? I thought that since I can site Christian hymns and websites as well as theologians past and present as well as a consensus of all dictionaries, and every definitive verse of the Bible itself, that since every source consistently gave the same definition I do, that it obviously was as I showed it to be in context. What snippet do you think you can show to reveal how "obvious" your misunderstanding of that is?
 
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FishFace

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Valkhorn, I don't believe in the historical Luminiferous aether.

I would like to know the precise orbits of the Sun, Mars and Venus and perhaps some stars, too. Then I would like to know how they fit with observation, and how they can predict what will happen tomorrow.

Of course, this all has to be parsimonious as well, since you've not yet provided evidence that doesn't fit good old gravity.
 
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Frumious Bandersnatch

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Frumious Bandersnatch What is the angular momentum of the ether/universe as it rotates around the earth daily? One would think it really enormous. So how is it that the rotation of the universe around the earth is slowing down at the rate one would expect if it were the rotating earth that was being slowed down due to friction loss from tidal coupling in the earth/moon system? [/quote said:
Because this is seemingly supposed to happen in order to allow the laws of gravitation/relativity to be satisfied. You know what I think is really cool? The fact that Malcolm Bowden, a geocentrist, wrote about the earth moon system and it was hosted on the True.Origin archive.

http://www.trueorigin.org/moonmb.asp
I have read and reviewed Bowden's bogus page on the earth moon system before and have read some of the orginal papers he fails to mention. IIRC he doesn't even talk about the most recent work quoted in Tim Thompson's page which is supposedly rebutting. However, that is off topic here and you have not answered the question and Bowden certainly does not address the recession of the moon or the concommitant slowing of the earth's rotation from a geocentric perspective. Apparently he knows that geocentrism is too goofy even for most of the readers of TrueOrigins.

You also failed to address this question

How is that there are small seasonal variations in the rate of the rate that the universe rotates around the earth? It is true that the cause variations in the length of day is not well understood but is is probably because of variations in atmospheric angular momentum. They would seem to be to be totally impossible in a geocentric universe again due to the vast angular momentum of a unverse that is zipping around the earth each day.

And you still have not told why this magic ether with its enormous Plank Density is totally undectable by any experiment carried out to date.
 
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Frumious Bandersnatch

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Earthquakes can be allowed for in a biblical Geocentric perspective.
I didn't ask if earthquakes were allowed. I asked this question
How is it that massive earthquakes can cause slight but measureable variations in the rate the entire universe rotates around the earth. This would also seem to me to be impossible in a geocentric universe.

How is it that the farthest star "knows" that there was an earthquake and instantly changes its rate of rotation around the earth? How can angular momentum possibly be conserved in this situation? How can an earthquake on our little planet instantly alter the rotation rate and thus the angular momentum of the entire universe, which must as I said be of enormous magnitude if the entire universe really is zipping around the earth each day?
 
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RichardT

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I didn't ask if earthquakes were allowed. I asked this question
How is it that massive earthquakes can cause slight but measureable variations in the rate the entire universe rotates around the earth. This would also seem to me to be impossible in a geocentric universe.

How is it that the farthest star "knows" that there was an earthquake and instantly changes its rate of rotation around the earth? How can angular momentum possibly be conserved in this situation? How can an earthquake on our little planet instantly alter the rotation rate and thus the angular momentum of the entire universe, which must as I said be of enormous magnitude if the entire universe really is zipping around the earth each day?

No, you're not reading me correctly, I said that the earthquakes would actually move the earth and that this could actually be allowed from a biblical Geocentric PoV.
 
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lemmings

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No, you're not reading me correctly, I said that the earthquakes would actually move the earth and that this could actually be allowed from a biblical Geocentric PoV.
So the Earth does move? When our day slows down due to tidal forces, it isn’t really slowing down but rather speeding up in the same direction that the ether spins.
 
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RichardT

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I guess I'll copy paste (again) what Dr. Bouw sees as common misconceptions of Geocentricity.

By Gerardus D. Bouw (Ph.D. in astronomy from Case Western Reserve University)

Publisher:

The Biblical Astronomer
4527 Wetzel Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio 44109
U.S.A.
http://www.geocentricity.com

Common Misconceptions

It is generally believed, without evidence, that in the geocentric
model the sun, moon, planets, and distant stars all orbit the earth
once per day. There is no orbiting involved. What is happening is
that the firmament is rotating. Now the nature of the firmament is
such that it defines all the physics of the universe, both the local and
the universal, protophysics (Chapter 11, page 116). This means
that all the “laws” of physics are part and parcel of the firmament
and that the firmament acts like a medium for the laws of science.
So it is that in a geocentric model the sun, moon, and stars do not
gravitationally orbit the earth daily any more than that a molecule in
a top gravitationally orbits the center of the top. In the case of the
spinning top it is the fibers and material of the top which carry the
molecules around the axis of the top. By the same token, in the
geocentric model it is the fabric of the firmament which carries the
universe about it.
A second common misconception is related to the first and that
is that the geocentric universe requires that the sun orbit the earth
once per year. Again, this is not the case. In a geocentric universe
Newton’s (or Einstein’s) laws must be fulfilled just as in a heliocentric
universe. Newton’s law of gravity states that from the sun’s
perspective, the earth must be seen to revolve about it once per year. It matters not to the sun whether the earth actually does so or
appears to do so; remember that we are talking about relative motion,
not absolute. If the firmament were to possess a wobble
(about which we will say later) which carries the sun, planets, and
stars about the earth once a year in such a way that the earth seems
to describe an orbit around the sun, then the sun and the universe
are content that the law of gravity is being satisfied. Remember,
the physics of the universe which specify the law of gravity is fastened
to the firmament, not the earth or sun.
A third misconception is that the speed of light cannot be exceeded.
This argument means that if the stars and planets are further
away than Saturn, they would be moving faster than the speed
of light in their daily motion about the earth. There are two problems
with this statement. First, the daily motion is one of rotation,
and relativity (which dictates that the speed of light is a speed limit)
is said not to apply to rotation. This is claimed because relativity
cannot account for the Sagnac effect, an effect which violates relativity’s
postulate that the speed of light cannot be exceeded. More
practically, though, relativists maintain that in a spinning universe
the gravitational field increases as one goes further and further from
the axis of rotation. Relativity allows that it is the gravitational
field which dictates the speed of light in any part of the universe.
Thus the further one goes from earth, the faster the speed of light in
a rotating universe. But the true resolution is this: the laws of physics,
including any laws about a speed limit, are defined relative to
the firmament.
It is not the case that the universe is rotating once per day inside
the firmament. On the contrary, the firmament does the rotating
and the bodies of the universe seldom go much faster relative to
the firmament than a few hundreds to a few thousands of miles per
second, far, far below the speed of light. Hence, if the speed of
light (3x1010 cm/sec or 186,272 miles per second) is a speed limit in
the universe, it is so only relative to the firmament. Because of its
tremendous mass and density compared to the material universe, it
is a small thing for the firmament to rotate once a day. For rotation,
there is no problem with violating the speed of light, even at
the most remote edge of the universe.

The last misconception we shall look at now is the one which
claims that the laws of physics should be different in a geocentric
universe than in a heliocentric universe. Time and time again this
has been shown to be false. What this misconception claims is that
phenomena such as the Foucault pendulum, the stationary satellite,
the flight of ballistic missiles, indeed, the very equations on which
the space program is based must be different in a geocentric universe.
This is the very misconception which Ernst Mach tried to
counter in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
To understand this, think of it this way. Imagine a nonrotating
coordinate system fastened to the center of a spinning
globe in the middle of a room. Imagine that somewhere in the
room there is a basketball player standing, dribbling a ball. Initially,
even though the globe is spinning, the coordinate system is not
spinning and we describe the motion of the ball mathematically in
terms of the coordinate system attached to the globe. Now imagine
that the coordinate system starts spinning with the globe. It should
be intuitively obvious that the behavior of the basketball and player
is not affected by whether or not the coordinate system is spinning.
In other words, just because some imaginary coordinate system is
spinning, one cannot claim that the ball should bounce back up,
away from the player’s hand. This is the case claimed by Mach and
the geocentrists. Geometry is an imaginary concept and cannot be
allowed to dictate the physics as a function of the coordinate system.
Yet there are those who insist that a geocentric universe must
give a different physics. Unwittingly they argue that the behavior of
the basketball is different in a spinning coordinate system than in a
non-spinning one. Those subject to this misconception have assumed
that the coordinate system, the geometry, is the ultimate reality
instead of a language used to describe reality. This is the ultimate
reality of Plato, but is wrong and borders on idolatry.
 
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Frumious Bandersnatch

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I guess I'll copy paste (again) what Dr. Bouw sees as common misconceptions of Geocentricity.

By Gerardus D. Bouw (Ph.D. in astronomy from Case Western Reserve University)

Publisher:

The Biblical Astronomer
4527 Wetzel Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio 44109
U.S.A.
http://www.geocentricity.com

Ad hoc nonsense about the rotating firmament snipped.
quote]

The whole idea of the entire universe out to the farthest star billions of light years away whizzing around the earth once each day whether in a rotating "firmament" or not is so incredibly silly that I am astonished that anyone takes it the least bit seriously in this day and age and Bouw's ad hoc invocation of a rotating firmament does not answer the questions I have asked.

Why does the rotation rate of the "firmament" around the earth vary slightly with the season?

Does this "ether" now called a firmament with its enormous "plank density" have angular momentum? Certainly the bodies going around the earth with the firmament must have angular momentum wrt the earth that is almost incalculable. How can angular momentum be conserved if the rate of the rotation of the firmament varies with time?

How is it that the rotation rate of the firmament around the earth can be changed by an earthquake?

Why is the firmament's rotation rate slowing down in at a rate that just happens to be consistent with tidal drag in the earth moon system reducing the rotation rate of a rotation earth?

Why has no experiment ever detected this "ether"?
 
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lemmings

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Hey, it just occurred to me! Could the firmamant with its huge "Planck density" be "Dark Matter"? We should contact some astrophysicists immediately so we can reinstate geocentrism.
Doubt it, we are only missing something like 90% of our Universe’s mass. A cubic centimeter of material with plank density would contain more mass than thousands of Universes.
 
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