BrotherSteve said:
The methods are not validated.
Wrong, as previously demonstrated.
Because evolutionist use similar arguments. The age of the earth is a key part of evolution--and a key part of your argument. Throw our this one thing and you have nothing to stand on.
Wrong. The age of the earth is determined
independently of evolution. "Evolutionists" only use the same arguments because they are arguing about the age of the earth, not evolution, and they happen to be people who also accept the theory of evolution. These are independent concepts.
Not at all. What I am saying is one cannot say that dating techniques are accurate based on small time-scales.
Only if you define "small time-scales" as periods of millions of years.
There is NO evidence to substantiate how accurate any dating method is over the course of a million years.
Obviously you didn't read the thread I pointed to about the Hawaiian Island Chain, which demonstrated how K-Ar dates were consistent with plate tectonic determinations of their ages over periods of millions of years.
To say that dating methods are accurate for dating anything as millions of years is an ASSUMPTION.
No, it's a substantiated conclusion.
Again, these can only be concluded from evidence on small time scales. There is no evidence to show they are accurate on large time scales.
You are arbitrarily throwing out evidence you don't like. And your objection is invalid because you implicitly define "small times scales" as several million years.
Using dating methods to validate other dating methods is a weak argument.
No, it's not. We're talking about different dating methods involving (1) different types of nuclear decay, (2) different parent-daughter combinations, (3) different decay constants, and (4) different percentages of the parent decaying to a particular daughter used in the measurement (e.g., only ~10% of K-40 decays to Ar-40).
They are very different dating methods and they all agree on the same date. This is
an extremely strong argument that you are dismissing for no reason.
This means that it's either an amazingly incredible coincidence or a vast conspiracy among scientists. And that's ridiculous.
Only using methods that have never been shown to work for billions of years.
Wrong, as previously demonstrated.
Science does not work "via falsification".
Yes it does. You are only demonstrating that you don't know how science works when you say things like this.
Science works to eliminate (falsify) alternate explanations to reach the most logical explanation that incorporates all of the data.
Example: God made a really large animal that walked on the earth during the flood (leaving really big foot prints that look like craters) so that scientist would think it was meteorites.
That statement, while logically doesn't make sense--cannot be falsified. Just about every statement you make about meteorites I can make about this giant animal, and there would be no way for you to falsify my statements.
My point exactly. Your explanation is not a scientific one because it is not falsifiable. Of course the fact that we find zero fossils of such creatures decimates the credibility of that claim. And my claims about meteorites actually have evidence backing them up, and yours does not.
I wasn't trying to give a valid objection--just trying to point out that people are wrong. We all make mistakes sometimes. Geologist could be wrong about the age of the earth, etc. Scientist have been wrong before.
This is a given, but you were using it as an argument against the conclusions of modern science as if it's in any way meaningful. It's true about any conclusion in science.
Yeah it is. You are either unaware of why scientists make the conclusions they do or are in denial.
Show me how you have proven that your dating techniques are valid for billions of years. Don't just say they are--show me some validated results.
I already did that. You have no valid objection to why radiometric dating doesn't work except saying that it doesn't.
You can't, and neither can anyone else. It IS a theory...
The pinnacle of investigation in science is a theory.
But again, you are using the 'maybe you're wrong' style of argumentation once again. Simply saying something like 'maybe you're wrong' is not a valid objection. That's what your argument continually reduces to: 'you might be wrong about a conclusion I don't like because scientists are fallible, so I'm just going to ignore the evidence.'
How can you accept evidence found that contracicts YEC while you don't accpet evidence that supports YEC? That is not scientific.
There is no evidence that supports YEC.
YEC was disproved almost two centuries ago,
by creationists trying to demonstrate that the earth was young and shaped by a global flood.
You are the one who arbitrarily ignores evidence that contradicts YEC, and that is not scientific.
YECists also start with a theory, which they think is the logical conclusion. Then they find evidence to support their theory--just like any scientist would.
That's why YEC, as it exists today, is not science.
Science doesn't work by starting with a fixed conclusion, assumed to be right no matter what, and then finding support. Did you even read my reply?
I seriously doubt this is true based on your previous comments about YECists.
Then you are wrong.
However, YECists probably won't concede either.
And that's the problem with YECists: they ignore contrary evidence without any valid justification.
The estimated age of the earth is still just an estimate based on a theory which cannot be shown to be true.
Nothing in science can be shown to be true, as in proved.
The notion of an "old" age of the earth is evidenced beyond any reasonable doubt, however. That is clear.
The evidence has been presented. The burden is on you to disprove it (science works by falsification). You have provided no valid objection to this evidence.
Your only objection has been a 'maybe they're wrong' style of argumentation, then ignoring the evidence.
And again, it is not a valid argument to say 'it's something that cannot be shown to be true, therefore it's false so I'm going to ignore it.'