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This just gets better and better. Forensic testing? Archaeology? What's that?
Exactly. If the bible wasn't all over the place the whole field of apologetics would be unnecessary. The fact that apologetics exists, and is such a big field, is rather a giveaway that their book has more than a few problems.
*weakly* seriously?
You claimed that archaeology and forensics are science-fiction. I'm honestly having difficulty knowing how to respond to that at all. "Not even wrong" comes to mind.That's about as strong a rebuttle as I've seen in years.
That's not what apologetics is about.
And yet, if someone breaks your knee with a baseball bat, I guarantee you you will drop this ridiculous, asinine pretext in an instant when it comes to prosecuting that person in court. Seriously, this whole argument, that science cannot see into the past... It's completely false. Inference does not suddenly stop working just because the object of inference is in the past.The fields of Science and History are diametrically opposed.
History cannot see into the future, and Science cannot see into the past.
Scientists can predict the outcome of future observations, in the imagination.
But cannot test past events.
Now, given that is likely, the council could have used the silver that Judas threw at them,
and purchased the field in Judas name.
And the point of his death was that he had no one to take his body down from his hanging.
So his body hung there and bloated till it was juicy and splatted on the ground.
If that were true, we'd only have scientists on a jury. Guess what.....we exclude them on purpose.And yet, if someone breaks your knee with a baseball bat, I guarantee you you will drop this ridiculous, asinine pretext in an instant when it comes to prosecuting that person in court. Seriously, this whole argument, that science cannot see into the past... It's completely false. Inference does not suddenly stop working just because the object of inference is in the past.
You claimed that archaeology and forensics are science-fiction. I'm honestly having difficulty knowing how to respond to that at all. "Not even wrong" comes to mind.
Just out of interest, do you have an actual paying job in the real world? If so, I'm curious to know in what field?
The past leaves traces of itself in the present constantly, and once we learn what those traces are, we can follow it back into the past.
double post. (This new forum is seriously annoying.)
Nope. Well we can, but only in our imagination. We can't test past events.
We don't have the ability to know all the original conditions.
Items in the past may be remembered by some, but they cannot be seen, smelled, heard, tasted, or sensed in any way.
It's a straight question. I'm curious to know what role science plays in your daily life.You'd thin' you could come up with something stronger.
When cornered.....think about finding fuel for an ad hominem attack?
Transparency is your middle name, I'll give you that. You are not sneaky.![]()
It's a straight question. I'm curious to know what role science plays in your daily life.
I'm surprised. Sounds like fascinating stuff.My 1st 2 years after college I was in Polymer Development R&D at Amoco Chemicals, part of Standard Oil (now BP.)
Most of our work was on Torlon. A few jobs in OIL and 2 part epoxies, then I settled in adhesive development for a decade
where we created Nip-Weld adhesives. It was already patented before I started working on it, so I missed my chance
to be on the patent. You know how candy bars just have one wrapper now? If you peel open a candy bar wrapper you'll find
it is one flat piece of printed film and they just take the wrapper and fold it around the candy bar and the adhesive sticks to itself. What is unique is that it sticks to the film when wet, but when it dries it only sticks to itself. So the wrapper film can be pre-glued and put on rolls and stored. The film then just pulls off the roll, wrapped around the candy bar, and only sticks to other glue stripes but not to film. We also created the construction process for disposable diapers. Each of layer uses a fine swirl of glue and it all goes together very fast. There are the tab adhesives, binding adhesives, and one formula that goes on like spray glue, but forms the "elastic", but it's actually just another formula of glue. After that I've been in product development for a plastics company that worked on various projects for UPS, Harley Davidson, and Target. Nothing ground breaking there though. The company wasn't going anywhere so I quit a couple weeks ago. Moving on with my career.
I'm surprised. Sounds like fascinating stuff. So... given your petrochem background, if you don't think science can tell us anything about the past, how do you figure geologists work out where the oil deposits are?
I'll be honest, I haven't the foggiest who these Heartland Forensics guys are (looking at their website and Google Streetview, it appears to be one dude running an "organization" out of his home); what they're saying is just wrong. Here's a simple chart outlining the scientific method:Nope. Well we can, but only in our imagination. We can't test past events.
We don't have the ability to know all the original conditions.
I'll be honest, I haven't the foggiest who these Heartland Forensics guys are (looking at their website and Google Streetview, it appears to be one dude running an "organization" out of his home); what they're saying is just wrong. Here's a simple chart outlining the scientific method:
![]()
What, exactly, cannot apply to the past there?
Outlined in green. Sentence #2.
You can easily side step my quotes, but you must never try to face them head on.
We can reconstruct the evolutionary history of fruit flies. We do this by observation. That does not mean we watch different species of fruit flies speciate before our eyes (although it has been found to occur in reasonable spans of time in the lab and the wild), it means we extract and analyze information from extant species — we take invisible genetic properties of the flies’ genomes and turn them into tables of data and strings of publishable code. We observe patterns in their genetics that allow us to determine patterns of historical change. Observation and history are intertwined. To deny the history is to deny the observations.
Paleontology is often labeled a historical science, but it doesn’t have the pejorative sense in which creationists use it, and it is definitely founded in observation. For instance, plesiosaurs: do you think scientists just invented them? No. We found their bones — we observed their remains imbedded in rock — and further, we found evidence of a long history of variation and diversity. The sense in which the study of plesiosaurs is historical is that they’re all extinct, so there are no extant forms to examine, but it is still soundly based on observation. Paleontology may be largely historical, but it is still a legitimate science built on observation, measurement, and even prediction, and it also relies heavily on analysis of extant processes in geology, physics, and biology.
I'm not trying to play this expert court witness as the expert that he is. I present his logic and observations as irrefutable, which so far, they have been.
I can dig into the ground with a spade and see the rich dark loam of this country — the product of ten thousand years of prairie grasses building dense root systems, prairie dogs tunneling through it, the bison wallowing and foraging. This isn’t an illusion, it’s the observable result of millennia of prairie ecosystems thriving here, and it’s the source of the agricultural prosperity of the region. I can sieve through the muck that has accumulated in prairie lakes, and find pollen from the exuberant flora that grew here: clover and grasses, wildflowers and the flowering of the wetlands. I can track back and see the eras when the great eastern deciduous forests marched westward, and when they staggered back. It’s all in the record. It all contributed to what we have now.
[...]
“Were you there?” Yes. Yes, I am here, embedded in this grand stream of history, aware of my place in it, seeing with open eyes the evidence that surrounds me. And I pity those unable to see the grand arena they are a small part of, who want to deny that history is observable.