- Jan 17, 2005
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You are too small to test an unknown past.The point of having something that can falsify a hypothesis is to test that hypothesis.
The flood is not a theory. The flood was an event that was recorded.So it should involve something whose certainty has not yet been established. Saying that X would be falsified if the the sky were green is not a valid test if we have already determined that the sky is blue. In that case, looking for a green sky would, indeed, be inventing silly questions.
Ideally, the falsification test is one that has been assumed by the old theory, to have one answer, and the new hypothesis presents a totally different answer.
Even better if that answer can be demonstrated in different ways by different tests. General Relativity posited that gravity can affect light waves, in contradiction to Newtonian physics that said it can't. The tests included searching for (and finding) gravity lenses --a strong gravity source, a large planet or a sun, can bend light, and thus act much like an optic lens -- and predicting and explaining some odd conditions in Mercury's orbit around the sun.
So far so good.
On earth...yes.Those explanations led to another aspect of the GR hypothesis, and a new prediction (Energy equals mass times the speed of light squared). So the building and firing of the A-Bomb, and the building and testing of the H-Bomb are "proofs" of GR.
That sentence seems to do mental gymnastics. Try clarity.So what differences do any of the accepted scientific theories that Creationists conflate into the term "Evolution" present from the predictions of the so-called "literalist" or "Biblical" account, that can be tested for and that have not yet been tested and answered in favor of the scientific theories?
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