Just curious, but is there any reason (other than uniformitartianism) to believe that the extrapolations performed in the various dating techniques are necessarily an accurate picture of the past?
As I understand it, all radiometric dating techniques are based on the presupposition that universal constants and natural laws have been exactly the same since the beginning of the universe. This presupposition was expounded on primarily by 19th century geologists as a philosophy within science, called uniformitarianism. Link: Uniformitarianism (science) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It seems to me that this assumption can never be validated and simply must be taken as a given to arrive at final extrapolations of age. I find it very easy to imagine that there have been transients in physical constants and having observed those constants for maybe 200 years at a steady state can't tell us anything about the initial conditions of the universe, nor the age of any particular sample.
Is there any validation of this philosophy?
As I understand it, all radiometric dating techniques are based on the presupposition that universal constants and natural laws have been exactly the same since the beginning of the universe. This presupposition was expounded on primarily by 19th century geologists as a philosophy within science, called uniformitarianism. Link: Uniformitarianism (science) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It seems to me that this assumption can never be validated and simply must be taken as a given to arrive at final extrapolations of age. I find it very easy to imagine that there have been transients in physical constants and having observed those constants for maybe 200 years at a steady state can't tell us anything about the initial conditions of the universe, nor the age of any particular sample.
Is there any validation of this philosophy?