Eireann
New member
Oui! Les drglwnbawd sont la espece les plus interessant dans le monde! Je les etudiais pendant beaucoup ans!Originally posted by Zakath
Oui? Tu comprends actuelment les drglwnbawd? :think:
Oui! Les drglwnbawd sont la espece les plus interessant dans le monde! Je les etudiais pendant beaucoup ans!Originally posted by Zakath
Oui? Tu comprends actuelment les drglwnbawd? :think:
I don't argue with the absolute form of concrete constructions. I just argue with the leap in logic that abstract absolutes must follow if one concedes the existence of concrete absolutes.Originally posted by Freak
Eireann--
Can the letter 'C' be anything but 'C'?????
It has value as a absolute real form. Are you telling me you do not acknowledge the absolute form of constructions of words/letters/numbers?
Can "computer" be "land?" Of course not. The very word "computer" (again I'm not referring to the meaning of the word) is "computer."--just as 23 is 23. When I write 23 on a paper it is 23--it is absolute.
The sequence demands such.
show me the study that can account for apparently (not actually) younger rocks consistently on top of apparently (not actually) older rocks. What you are suggesting is that rocks with differing parent material had sorted itself out according to parent-daughter isotopes and not age OR there was a time after the earth was formed and land created that radioactivity was >>>> faster to acounter for the same ratios.Well, if you have a rock with as much lead-208 as uranium-238, you're going to get a date of 4.5 billion years. That doesn't mean the rock is that old, but that's the date you're going to get.
NO! How much effect do to tides have on deep sea or this would also mix up fossils (and dismiss claims of sorting according to escape ability) it would also destroy delicate fossils - I have a pair of Carboniferous amphibian tracks that were 70 feet under other sediments. Tides affect near shore but there wasn't even a shore during the flood.What do you mean? The tides are going to mix this stuff up to a certain degree.
you are entitled to your opinion but most people would suggest that estimates are evidence if they are reliable. These estimates of coalescence, in humans, are based on known mutation rates in mitochondria.Estimates aren't evidence.
I didn't think hundred of acres of mud hundreds of feet thick could form into rock so quickly. And it must have at rates that were amazing - maybe a year or two since a river cutting through mud, would just collapse on itself.Why not? Mt. Saint Helens laid down hundreds of feet of sediment in a few days back in 1980. We know that didn't take millions of years to form.
Tides when you need them tides when you don't. So were tides mixing things up or not? Are most population centers near the ocean? Why wouldn't all those dead babies, women, and men, cats, rats, dinosaurs, hats, all wash out to the nearby ocean?Why would you expect to find humans with clams and jellyfish? That doesn't make any sense.
why would I expect whales, seals, pelicans, gulls, etc with clams and jellyfish? I could have sworn all these things lived in the ocean.Again -- why would you expect to find these with clams and jellyfish?
I would expect that there would be a center of specis richness where most organisms that can't get around well near a hypothetical landing site for the Ark. Away from that site I would expect to find fewer and fewer organisms that can't get around well.I'm afraid you're going to have to be a bit more clear on what you're wanting here.
so the Galapagos tortoises moved from Ararat to the Galapagos and then speciated into the various species in 6000 years? Is there any evidence of this amazing hypothesis?Why not? As animals adapt to their habitat, they become more specialized. Micro-evolution. Few of these animals are so unique that there's nothing like them anywhere else in the world.
You didn't answer my question. How is the evolutionist different from the creationist?
Oh really? I haven't seen the theory of evolution change in it's basic assumptions,
sounds like a great thread for Origins... be my guest.and I've seen evolutionists dismiss a lot of the evidence.
Not so... just a few waysI don't think so. Evolution isn't testable or verifiable. Not without a time machine.
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theories,
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So do we.
No you don't because you must be able to accept falsification to actually test a hypothesis and you must entertain the possibility of alternative hypotheses. Creationist, by defination, do not allow alternatives and they cannot allow falsification.quote:
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hypothesis, predictions, tests
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So do we.
You mean creationist continuously think of the best ways to falsify a 6000 year old Earth?So do we.
neither are methods but patterns we see in the fossil records and they are not mutually exclusive and there is evidence of both.By the way, which method of evolution are you partial too? Gradualism or punctuated equilibrium?
The land of improved accuracy and precision; and creationism?Where is it going?
Interesting you should mention hats. I've always thought they were the surest evidence of evolution. The resemblance between a tam and a beret is just too uncanny for them not to have a common ancestry.Originally posted by Stratnerd
Tides when you need them tides when you don't. So were tides mixing things up or not? Are most population centers near the ocean? Why wouldn't all those dead babies, women, and men, cats, rats, dinosaurs, hats, all wash out to the nearby ocean?
ROTFL... thats great stuff!Originally posted by ilyatur
Our Fun Day Together At Battle Talk:
"Look, bumpkin, I worked at a zoo, and no way they had enough people to shovel all the poop on the Ark."
"A chair is a chair."
"That's a non-sequitur, zoo-boy. The Bible says nothing about shovels on the Ark."
"Letter c, letter h, letter a, letter i, letter r. Why are you so OBTUSE?"
"Are you saying they left it on there?!?"
"Or CHAIR. Cushions are not case-sensitive."
"Yes, they needed it to plant a garden. All the topsoil was washed away."
"A chair by any other name would smell like naugahyde. But it wouldn't be 'chair'".
Originally posted by shima
Novice
>>
IF there are only three solutions to the origin of energy and matter
A. All the energy and matter that exists has existed forever
B. All the energy and matter that exists created itself from nothing
C. A Supernatural creator created all the energy and matter that exists
(you do agree there is no 4th option right?)
Science has proven that A is wrong. Science has in no way proven that B is wrong.
Just because something is real doesn't make it absolute. You seem to be implying that if we can't effect something's existence, it must be an absolute. But in fact all forms of existence pass away. Energy constantly changes and takes on new forms. Your chair, or whatever we decide to call it, exists in whatever form it exists in for a finite time, therefor, it's "reality" is RELATIVE to time and space and circumstance. In fact, every form or structure that we are able to perceive is relative to time, space, and circumstances as far as we know. No thing in the universe is absolute except perhaps the energy that temporarily takes on all these forms and becomes our universe. But we don't know where that comes from so we don't know what will happen to it. We can't say if it will pass away or not.Originally posted by Soulman Me “deciding” that a chair is not REALLY a chair has zero affect on the physical reality that the chair IS. I cannot “deny” the chair out of existence. I can “ignore” the chair, or call the chair a foot-stool, but I cannot deny the physical reality of the chair’s existence. My “definition” or “perception” of the chair doesn’t alter the fact that the chair IS. If a chair is inadvertently used as a foot-stool, the physical reality of what we “call” a chair remains the same. The “chair” doesn’t CHANGE into a “foot-stool.” So, whatever we want to "call" this physical object, the object really and absolutely IS.
Sure, but it's reality is still relative to time, space, and circumstances, and so is not absolute.Originally posted by Soulman Well, if we can’t agree on what a physical “object” is, we’re in big trouble. I would agree that “physical reality” is not limited by or dependent upon our “perception” of physical reality, because, as you said, all “objects” are not perceived the same way. But whose relative “visual” perception of an object would you defer to? A man with 20/20 vision, or a blind man? Both perceptions are equally (relatively) “true,” but just because the blind man doesn’t “see” the object, it doesn’t mean it isn't REAL.
But we don't have that "fixed yardstick", and all we are doing is guessing. We humans live in a world of probabilities, not a world of certainty. That's just the way it is. Welcome to the human condition: the condition of being perpetually uncertain. Our only yardstick becomes ourselves and each other. This is so frightening for so many of us that we simply MAKE UP that yardstick, so that we can pretend that we are not lost in perpetual uncertainty. This is what religion is all about. This is what "believers" do. Religions give us the imaginary yardsticks so we can be relieved of the fear of our own ignorance.Originally posted by Soulman Again, if there’s no absolute standard of reality, knowing anything is impossible. Relativizing reality doesn’t “solve” anything. We need a fixed yardstick against which to compare everything else, otherwise all we have is mindless babble. On some basic level everyone understands this. Without an “absolute” yardstick establishing the STANDARD of reality, all we can do is “guess.”
I like reality. Sometimes it sucks, but most of the time it's great, and I have lived many years of my life escaping from realy, so I do have a comparison. *smile* But reality is not an absolute; at least not for us. We humans are living in a relative and finite dimension.Originally posted by Soulman My position would be that we HAVE an absolute standard of reality. Can I “prove” it? Fortunately, I don’t have to. I banged my head three times this morning on the same pipe in my basement. THAT is reality! “Reality” is what we find when we get there. Reality does not require substantiation. Subjective encounters or descriptions or perceptions or levels of understanding changes nothing. Reality IS, although I agree our “perceptions” may, for physical reasons or philosophical reasons, vary. What I call a chair, someone else may call a foot-stool. But banging your head on galvanized pipe hurts, even if you call it a “pillow.”
Originally posted by Stratnerd
show me the study that can account for apparently (not actually) younger rocks consistently on top of apparently (not actually) older rocks.
What you are suggesting is that rocks with differing parent material had sorted itself out according to parent-daughter isotopes and not age OR there was a time after the earth was formed and land created that radioactivity was >>>> faster to acounter for the same ratios.
How much effect do to tides have on deep sea
or this would also mix up fossils (and dismiss claims of sorting according to escape ability)
it would also destroy delicate fossils - I have a pair of Carboniferous amphibian tracks that were 70 feet under other sediments.
Tides affect near shore but there wasn't even a shore during the flood.
you are entitled to your opinion but most people would suggest that estimates are evidence if they are reliable.
These estimates of coalescence, in humans, are based on known mutation rates in mitochondria.
I didn't think hundred of acres of mud hundreds of feet thick could form into rock so quickly.
And it must have at rates that were amazing - maybe a year or two since a river cutting through mud, would just collapse on itself.
Tides when you need them tides when you don't. So were tides mixing things up or not?
Are most population centers near the ocean?
Why wouldn't all those dead babies, women, and men, cats, rats, dinosaurs, hats, all wash out to the nearby ocean?
why would I expect whales, seals, pelicans, gulls, etc with clams and jellyfish? I could have sworn all these things lived in the ocean.
I would expect that there would be a center of specis richness where most organisms that can't get around well near a hypothetical landing site for the Ark. Away from that site I would expect to find fewer and fewer organisms that can't get around well.
so the Galapagos tortoises moved from Ararat to the Galapagos and then speciated into the various species in 6000 years?
Is there any evidence of this amazing hypothesis?
huh see the quote just below...
may I suggest then, that you don't know the history of evolution well.
sounds like a great thread for Origins... be my guest.
Not so... just a few ways
1. A more reliable estimator of absolute age constrains the Earth to be much younger
2. Some law is discovered that precludes the changes in phenotype and genotype that we've seen over time
3. The presence of modern form in all ages get discovered
theories in the sense of the scientist is a generalization that accounts for evidence (e.g., natural selection).
to the creationist, a theory is a generalization of ad hocs and handwaving (e.g., hydroplate theory, vapor canopy theory) necessary to keep a literal interpretation of Genesis tenable.
No you don't because you must be able to accept falsification to actually test a hypothesis and you must entertain the possibility of alternative hypotheses.
Creationist, by defination, do not allow alternatives and they cannot allow falsification.
For example,
Hypothesis1: There was a single global flood just 6000 years ago
Hypothesis2 (the alternative) there was no flood
Prediction: Population genetics should point to a severe population bottleneck 6000 years ago
the test....
Now what? Do creationist admit that H2 is possible? and that H1 has been falsified?
You mean creationist continuously think of the best ways to falsify a 6000 year old Earth?
neither are methods but patterns we see in the fossil records and they are not mutually exclusive and there is evidence of both.
The land of improved accuracy and precision; and creationism?
Originally posted by Hank
How has science proven that A is wrong?
Originally posted by quip
Do you realize that all those "most likelys" reduce your "logic" to simple extrapolation using what science/philosophy has already demonstrated?
How is this, not itself, "elastic"?
And that is a "natural" occurrence?
Please explain your answer "D" is practical terms.
For instance....
If "time" were created how long did it take?
And where did this event take place if NOTHING existed yet?
What are these "different dimensions" you speak of?
And what type of "quantum events" lead up to this event?
index fossils were once used to give relative dates. Radiometric dating has allowed absolute dating (you or anyone for that matter has yet to show why these dates are unreliable). Once fossils are associated with certain dates via radiometric dating then they can be used as indexes of absolute dates.Stratnerd, I've already told you how the strata are dated by the index fossils they contain. Working from those assumptions, there is no way I can show you what you're asking for.
BINGO!!! Either radiometric dates are working or you have something really weird going on like igneous rocks sorting themselves out according to apparent (not actual) ages - that's the only way you had a point when you mentioned the parent:daughter problem. Also, some of these techniques use materials whose parent material is a gas and doesn't start the clock until the rock cools.What? How are igneous rocks going to sort themselves out? I'mnot sure what you're getting at here.
It has some effect. I remember seeing a time-lapse video of the sea floor one time, and there was all kinds of stuff going on down there.
and
They are mixed up to some degree.
What method was used to date these tracksquote] NO DATING THIS ISN"T ABOUT DATES. I found amphibian tracks 70 feet under other layers - no dates just an observation. If tides were stirring up sediments to the points where layers of sand (to form sandstone) are landing up on top of layers of silt (and often alternate - like they do at this site) then it should destroy footprints on something as delicate as silt - what is it doing at the bottom of the great flood anyway (we'll ignore that).
every conclusion you could ever come up with is based on assumptions. could you demonstrate why those used for radiometric decay are in error?Estimates are based on assumptions.
the assumption is that there are differences in reproductive rates among females - sounds reasonable to me and that mutations in mitochondria are relatively constant but the method is used to estimate a time to which a population can be traced back to a group of related female descendents.Coalescence means coming together to form a whole. What does this have to do with the mutation rates of mitochondria? I'm sure you've got a point here somewhere, but I don't see it.
sediment in water formed rock in a few years - could you provide me with a reference?Well it did -- go to Mt. Saint Helens and take a look. It's as rocky as you could possibly want it to be now.
uh... where could they have been if not near rivers or coast? and the amazing thing is we don't ever find those remains on land either...so what's the deal?We have no idea where most of the population centers were before the flood, what with them all being destroyed.
BINGO!!! So where are the human remains mixed in with other terrestrial critters like dinos?During the flood, wasn't the ocean pretty much everywhere?
whatever you want... none of it works... OK then why aren't dinos and humans found together? ThEN you can answer why jellyfish, whales, and trilobites, braciopods aren't found together.Nice dodge, but you were talking about mostly land animals.
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Nuh uh. If this event occured a mere 6,000 years ago, then its path should be clearly imprinted on each cat genome, right?
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What do you mean? I can't think of a single scientist that will dispute the fact that all cats share a common ancestor. Can you?
3. The cat as a model for the evolution of genome organization:
Our studies have revealed a high degree of linkage conservation between the cat and human genomes (3 to 4 times more conserved than mouse vs. human), permitting a reconstruction of primitive mammalian genome organization. Increased understanding of genomic organization of the cat will contribute to our understanding of mammalian genome evolution and whether there is adaptive rationale to genomic organization as has been observed in the MHC, HOX and globin complexes. Additionally, the high degree of conserved synteny between human and cat leads to powerful comparative inference in gene mapping exercises
I guess I’m not sure how the word “absolute” is being used. It seems like every time I’ve use it, you’ve objected. For the sake of discussion, absolute and “real” are synonymous. I’ll treat them as non-equivalents if it creates less confusion. Atheists are relativists, and relativists hate absolutes.Just because something is real doesn't make it absolute.
Regardless of space, time, and circumstance, which are relevant, I think the point is that whatever form the chair takes, the form is REAL. Energy to raw material to chair to raw material and back to energy again are all SOMEthing, all states of being, so if you’re saying that nothing is “absolute” because nothing exists in an infinite form, then of course you’d be right, as far as it goes. IF that’s what you mean by “absolute,” and IF nothing exists in an infinite form. I can’t speak for all theists. I can’t even speak for other Christians. (The word “Christianity” has become too broad. I shudder every time I hear the words, “Christians believe…”) The God of the Bible as understood is, as an infinite form, “absolute,” even, I think, by your definition. The absolute, infinite God of the Bible is the fixed, unchanging standard by which the “stuff” of reality is conceived, and perceived. If reality was a movie, God would be the screen on which the movie was projected. Take away the screen -- in this case the absolute standard and “background” of reality -- all you’ll be doing is shining a flashlight in a vacuum. There is nothing to “perceive” in this vacuum, until the stuff of reality is “held up to” and “perceived” against the “screen” or background of the infinite form. Without some concept of an overriding infinite form (theistic or non-theistic), I don’t see how the differentiation and order of the universe could be explained, or even possible.Energy constantly changes and takes on new forms. Your chair, or whatever we decide to call it, exists in whatever form it exists in for a finite time, therefore, it's "reality" is RELATIVE to time and space and circumstance.
It’s a good line, but a lousy argument. Atheists don’t have a fixed yardstick, so all they CAN do is guess. Nothing too deep, or new, about that. Perpetual uncertainty is all atheism has to offer. But, at least they deliver! You say theists invented God out of fear of their own ignorance, but it could just as easily be asserted that atheists deny absolutes because they fear God.But we don't have that "fixed yardstick", and all we are doing is guessing… This is so frightening for so many of us that we simply MAKE UP that yardstick, so that we can pretend that we are not lost in perpetual uncertainty. This is what religion is all about. This is what "believers" do. Religions give us the imaginary yardsticks so we can be relieved of the fear of our own ignorance.
Sure beats the alternative!I like reality.
Originally posted by Stratnerd
index fossils were once used to give relative dates. Radiometric dating has allowed absolute dating (you or anyone for that matter has yet to show why these dates are unreliable). Once fossils are associated with certain dates via radiometric dating then they can be used as indexes of absolute dates.
But fossils has nothing to do with this. Radiometric dating shows younger rocks over older rocks... how does such a thing happen? See below...
BINGO!!! Either radiometric dates are working or you have something really weird going on like igneous rocks sorting themselves out according to apparent (not actual) ages - that's the only way you had a point when you mentioned the parent:daughter problem.
Also, some of these techniques use materials whose parent material is a gas and doesn't start the clock until the rock cools.
So tidal mixing can get gravel on top of sand on top of silt but still not get mammalian, dinosaurian, avian fossils to mix... that's an interesting universe you live in. You can't have it both ways.
every conclusion you could ever come up with is based on assumptions. could you demonstrate why those used for radiometric decay are in error?
the assumption is that there are differences in reproductive rates among females - sounds reasonable to me and that mutations in mitochondria are relatively constant but the method is used to estimate a time to which a population can be traced back to a group of related female descendents.
sediment in water formed rock in a few years - could you provide me with a reference?
uh... where could they have been if not near rivers or coast? and the amazing thing is we don't ever find those remains on land either...so what's the deal?
BINGO!!! So where are the human remains mixed in with other terrestrial critters like dinos?
whatever you want... none of it works... OK then why aren't dinos and humans found together?
ThEN you can answer why jellyfish, whales, and trilobites, braciopods aren't found together.
Originally posted by Charismata
"A chair is a chair" yes...that qualifies as a tautology last I checked.
They lived together in the Triassic? Now you have me confused. I thought you were one of those arguing for a 6000-year-old earth? If the earth is 6000 years old, there wouldn't have been a Triassic. It is placed approximately 250 million years ago. Humans didn't appear until the Quaternary Period (the Tertiary, Jurassic and Cretaceous Periods all fall between the Quaternary and Triassic periods).Originally posted by One Eyed Jack
Dude, you apparently don't know what you're talking about. Dinosaurs, birds, and mammals all existed together in the Triassic. We do find their fossils together.