jig wrote:
my main objective up until now has been to point out the many assumptions that are being made by all the current dating methods.
OK, let's look at those from your recent post:
Is not an assumption used in science or in any dating methods. You are confusing it with methodological naturalism, which is not only fully compatible with Christianity, but more so is an originally Christian idea. I have the same problem with ontological naturalism you do, but that doesn't have anything to do with dating methods.
Which is not an assumption of any dating methods, and is not required to do science, and like ontological naturalism, is not relevant to this discussion.
Is the assumption we discussed earlier, that
the physical laws we observe being constant in all places and times we test them are constant in all places and times. While that is an assumption, it is at least the most conservative assumption possible. To understand the data any other way, as you apparently are arguing for, jig, is to assume that that
the physical laws we observe being constant in all places and times we test them are changed in places and times into specific other values jig has chosen, which have never been measured anywhere, at any time. I'll point out that my assumption(blue) is not a huge assumption compared to yours (in brown).
By what exactly do you mean here? That everything is gradual? That's certainly not assumed - the K-T extinction is anything but gradual, as are many other things found by science. You'll have to be more clear about this assumption before it's clear what your objecting to.
Again, you'll have to be more clear. Darwinism is used in a number of different ways by different people. If you mean the idea that some species evolve from other species, I think we agree on that being a fact, so it must not be that.
have not been observed and are not true proven scientific fact - merely philosophical deductions
As many people have pointed out many times, scientific facts are based on evidence, not on whether or not someone observed them happening. So we don't have to throw out all the evidence in the OJ trial, the entire field of forensics, anthropology, and so on. I don't know where creationists got the idea that they are to put more credibility in the Qu'ran than in the physical evidence, but they seem to repeat it over and over even after being corrected. How about we keep track of points, as there are many that could be easily missed.
Jig,
(question 1) do you recognize that scientific evidence, and the determination of a "fact" do not require that a person witness the original occurance being studied?
I made mention of calibration curves and how other dating methods are dependent on others.
The fine tuning of C14 uses other methods, but that is for known reasons and doesn't prevent falsifiability. The other methods are independent. Jig, I notice you did not agree about C14 being used to root "isolated logs".
Question 2. Do you recognize that the description of dendrochronology using the idea of an "isolated log" was not correct, and that continuous sets of tree rings reach back through the entire time measured?
The calibration curves can vary significantly from a straight line, so comparison of uncalibrated radiocarbon dates (e.g., plotting them on a graph or subtracting dates to give elapsed time) is likely to give misleading results.
Jig, all of that from the wiki page is correct and supports the reliability of C14 dating, and it's falsifiability. Please do not play word games. By "significantly", it means "as much as 10 or 15 %", not orders of magnitude. By "misleading results", the wiki page means "off by as much as 10 or 15%", not "by a factor or two or more". Note that a factor of much more than two would be needed to fit the evidence into a literal reading of Genesis.
You may have noticed that the deviation from the line is usually about 10%, in the same direction, and most importantly, is known and corrected for. So if a C14 date is, say 30,000 years (uncalibrated), then the actual date is close to 27,000 (calibrated). That's a far cry from your claim, that that 30,000 date is really 2,000 years - the graph shows that such a claim is clearly untenable.
So basically, you initially claimed that the method were dependant on each other, and adjusted to match each other. When shown that they weren't, you claimed that because C14 is calibrated with a change of around 10% using other methods, all the other methods are determined by each other, and not independant as they actually are. This leads me to
question #3 - Do you recognize that dedrochronology is independent, and that varves are independent, and that speleotherms are independent, and that coral is independent?
If there was no framework then calibration curves would not be needed.
You are calling the use of other methods to fine tune the last few percent of C14 dating a "framework". That is a stretch by itself.
On top of that, what framework, specifically, alters the measurement of varves? What alters the measurement of dendrochronolgy? (Q4)
Matthews, M., Evidence for multiple ring growth per year in Bristlecone Pines, Journal of Creation 20(3):95103, 2006.
Please, a source from a real journal. You know, one that is peer reviewed. Let's list the request for a real source from a peer reviewed journal as
Q5.
This one is seems to be in the form of an appeal to composition, with subtle hints of an appeal to belief.
You were claiming that the idea of an old earth is the result of using a "framework" that is anti-Christian. I was pointing out that the fact that the earth is old was first established by Christian, operating explicitly in a Christian framework.
Q6 - Do you know about the Rev. Adam Segewick?
I thought this was a debate
I thought it was a discussion forum where Christians could talk with other Christians in the spirit of goodwill. I hope nothing I've said in this post sounds mean or rude. I'm sorry that you saw this as an antagonistic debate - let's save that for when we talk with atheists about whether or not Jesus existed, OK?
Papias