Why are you so convinced that your personal interpretation of a Young Earth is correct?
I believe in the Consensus of the Fathers, whom among all contended to a Young Earth. I also base my interpretation of Young Earth on my study of the Kolbe Center for the Study of Creation and Answers in Genesis.
Aside from personal preference do you have an objective method of making your interpretation correct?
Method? I will sent you some books, but I am unsure what you mean by "method."
- 'I Have Spoken to You from Heaven: A Catholic Defense of Creation in Six Days' by Hugh Owen & Bp. Korir of Eldoret, Kenya
- 'The Doctrines of Genesis 1-11' by Rev. Fr. Dr. Victor Warkulwiz, M.S.S.
- 'A Catholic Assessment of Evolution Theory' by John M. Wynne
- 'International Catholic Symposium on Creation' by the 2002 Symposium held in Rome (including Bp. Andreas Laun, Fr. Victor Warkulwiz, Fr. Brian Harrison, Fr. Johannes Grun, Dr. Josef Seifert, Dr. Dominique Tassot, Guy Berthault, Dr. Robert Gentry, Dr. Robert Sungenis, Dr. Robert Bennett, Dr. Maciej Giertych, Dr. Robin Bernhoft, Dr. Christian Bizouard, and Dr. Arthur Gohin)
- And lots of things from this list from the Institute for Creation Research: The Young-Earth Creationist Bibliography
How do you feel about Flat Earth believers who also claim that they are supported by a literal reading of the Bible?
They do not have the Consensus of the Fathers, nor any Father that I know of.
You have made an accusation... I'f be very interested if you can support it with any kind of specifics?
Many! Germ Theory of Disease, Ulcers and Bacteria, and especially Continental Drift, which was ridiculed as pseudoscience when Alfred Wegener proposed the theory in 1912, but was later validated in the 1960s, becoming the fundamental concept in geology, and making the act of rejecting it considered pseudoscientific.
The definition of pseudoscience isn't that it is contrary to the mainstream consensus... it's a description of a flawed methodology.
Who's methodology is the
correct methodology? Science is about questioning things, and using new methods to find new things; if a "flawed methodology" works to prove a point, is it pseudoscientific at that point?
Creationism is typically built around axioms that can not be questioned and are frequently not even hypothetically disprovable.
Then why is it considered scientifically disfavorable?
The graphic is absolutely demonstrated by evidence. Geology has a multitude of streams of evidence, and they happen to line up with evidence from physics, astronomy and biology. No scientific theory is ever "proven" in the mathematical context, but in the common use of "beyond reasonable doubt" then evolution and geology are absolutely proven.
Yet, if Creationists use "beyond reasonable doubt," it is considered pseudoscientific, as it would be 'flawed methodology.' As I spoke on in a previous thread, Hubble said (
The Observational Approach to Cosmology) that the apparent alignment of the Cosmic Microwave Background and our ecliptic (aka the precipice of being a 'special' planet or the center of everything in creation) could only be denied because it is 'unwelcome': "
…Such a condition would imply that we occupy a unique position in the universe, analogous, in a sense, to the ancient conception of a central Earth…This hypothesis cannot be disproved, but it is unwelcome and would only be accepted as a last resort in order to save the phenomena. Therefore we disregard this possibility…. the unwelcome position of a favored location must be avoided at all costs…. such a favored position is intolerable…Therefore, in order to restore homogeneity, and to escape the horror of a unique position…must be compensated by spatial curvature. There seems to be no other escape.”