You mean you find no similarities with the way Enyart revises his creation theories and the way evolutionists revise theirs? Give me a break and open your eyes. I can make the same claim about the way evolutionists scramble willling to stack theory on top of theory on top of theory just to get their evolutionary model to work. I'm not even going to waste my energies listing them. If you don't know what I'm talking about, then you have the blinders on and are such a hypocrite.Originally posted by ThePhy
I find Mr. Enyart’s relatively recent adoption of Walt’s ideas interesting. It is a tacit admission that some of Enyart’s previous defenses of a young earth were based on bad science. How many more of Enyart’s creationist scientific beliefs are going to give way to new versions as he adopts new ideas that contradict his previous claims?
Walt's debate challenge limited to purely scientific facts and reasoning is out there. Perhaps you should put your actions where your mouth is and start prodding some of these "mainstream geologists" to accept his challenge.Mainstream geologists should either concur with this evidence, or point out that there are significant weaknesses in Walt’s postulated scenario.
Very interesting Phy. Because you're not aware of "any appreciabe recognition of Walt's ideas" you want to subtly put his theories and postulates down as merely religious? If you're so interested in the truth, it would be best first to scientifically consider his theories. Where are the flaws? Why doesn't it fit the evidence? Trying doing this before your obsessive rambling.I am not aware of any appreciable recognition of Walt’s ideas
I hear you, but I don’t see any reasoning against what Brown is saying happened.Oh. Okay. (1) The Mammoths are not in water-laid sediment, they are in wind blown sediment.
The number of mammoth bones in particular at the layer we find mammoth carcasses is out of proportion to other animal's bones when compared to their relative obscurity in other fossil layers.
(2) If a carcass got froze it stayed that way.
These point to a post-flood extinction.
(3) The fact that we can count many tons of mammoth ivory suggests that it was even 100-400 years post flood. Looooong after Dr. Walt Brown's supersonic outer-atmosphere freezing water episode.
You are assuming something that I neither said nor implied. Science itself is a process, not a set of ultimate truths. It is the nature of this process that errors may be recognized and need to be corrected. In contrast, do or do not Christians believe that they are in possession of many absolute inviolate truths?You mean you find no similarities with the way Enyart revises his creation theories and the way evolutionists revise theirs? Give me a break and open your eyes. I can make the same claim about the way evolutionists scramble willling to stack theory on top of theory on top of theory just to get their evolutionary model to work. I'm not even going to waste my energies listing them. If you don't know what I'm talking about, then you have the blinders on and are such a hypocrite.
I will readily admit that evolutionists have made statements that they have had to retract. So have people in most fields of science. But in some branches of science the confidence in the conclusions is now strong enough that it seems a bit silly to preface every statement with “we think…”. For many scientists, the fundamental concepts of evolution are in that category. It has gone through a period of refinement, but the overarching concept of common descent is now felt to be no longer an issue. That does not mean there is not still much to learn about the details of evolution.Like evolutionists have never been gungho about an artifact or postulate only to later find out that they were clearly wrong! Of course, this is after persuasively making the case to his audience that the evidence fits. Hey even though they were wrong, being wrong at times shouldn't necessarily destroy one's credibility. Face it, trying to explain phenomena often involves a lot of guesswork. I think it's safe to say that when it comes to hypotheses, scientists get it wrong most of the time along the path to the truth. It seems that Enyart gives great thought to his theories. At least give him the same grace that you undoubtly give to your evolutionist buddies.
I was not referring to his debate challenge. As I have stated before in this forum, debate is a poor way to determine scientific truth. Science is much better established by clearly submitting ideas to be subjected to intense scrutiny by people qualified to recognize their strengths and weaknesses. The primary step in this process is the submission of new ideas for peer review and publication. How many of Walt’s ideas relative to the Genesis story are you aware of that have undergone that process?Walt's debate challenge limited to purely scientific facts and reasoning is out there. Perhaps you should put your actions where your mouth is and start prodding some of these "mainstream geologists" to accept his challenge.
I should have specified his “religious” ideas. I am sure he has respectable credentials in his engineering field.Very interesting Phy. Because you're not aware of "any appreciabe recognition of Walt's ideas" you want to subtly put his theories and postulates down as merely religious?
I am not a geologist (nor is Walt). I am sure he has spent enough time refining his ideas that he knows many things about geology that I do not. But how many professional geologists concur with the ideas that he proposes? Have the professionals in the field of geology been so incompetent that a non-geologist has picked up on a number of significant clues they missed?If you're so interested in the truth, it would be best first to scientifically consider his theories. Where are the flaws? Why doesn't it fit the evidence? Trying doing this before your obsessive rambling.
You are referring to objectivity in the face of not have all the data on a subject. Creationism verses evolution has a great deal of facts and data to consider, but it is nothing like the empirical science of studying marine biology or agriculture today. Because we do not have the immediacy, the vary nature of the studies of the cause of the universe is prone to speculation.I have no problem giving Enyart “the same grace that undoubtedly give to [my] evolutionist buddies”, if he is willing to reject religious “truths” with the same willingness that science employs when found to be wrong in its ideas.
Me too because this raises another problem which is what caused the average lifespan of predeluvian man to be hundreds of years. I've always heard the theory of the water over the earth creating a kind of high pressure hyperbaric oxygen chamber for the entire earth. Plus the water canopy would theoretically block out harmful ultraviolet rays. Those 2 things combined were supposed to be able to produce long lifespans.Originally posted by elected4ever
I was intrigued by the idea that firmament meant land and not atmosphere. I never heard that before. I had always though that water covered the earth like a giant umbrella. Before I accept the view of the firmament as land i need to hear some other creditable witnesses on the subject.
As to your question, perhaps it was just yet another natural aspect of God's good design, similarly with the flood having a tremendously natural trigger, the same sort of thing could hold true for the lifespan changes with man. The fact may simply be that the genetic mutations necessary to sufficiently erode the genetic code wasn't cumulative enough until after that many years. Secondly, like I said, it seems likely to me that our atmosphere and ozone protection may have been drastically altered after the flood explosion, thus speeding up the genetic mutation rate. Maybe the air had just as much oxygen as it does today, or nearly so, but man had a superior oxygen absorption/utilization system. Perhaps the same with nutrients as well. When you consider that you and I are built from one extremely tiny instruction set, exposing mutations therein is certainly not a life giving thing to do.I suppose that it is still possible that the pre-flood earth had a far better atmosphere and perhaps far better ozone protection from harmful UV rays. If what Walt Brown says is true, then loosing so much of the earth’s mass, even at 1/100th of one percent, all the meteors, and comets, and asteroids, came from Earth is a tremendous statement, the flood must have been just unimaginably violent, sending parts of the earth into outer space! Surely such a thing could have put a real “dent” in our atmosphere and ozone protection.
Yes, "speeding up" is exactly what happened. The lifespans of people born after the flood did not immediately drop down to a maximum of 120 years. It did so gradually. Why? Why? Why? :think:Originally posted by 1Way
Secondly, like I said, it seems likely to me that our atmosphere and ozone protection may have been drastically altered after the flood explosion, thus speeding up the genetic mutation rate.
Originally posted by Jefferson
Me too because this raises another problem which is what caused the average lifespan of predeluvian man to be hundreds of years. I've always heard the theory of the water over the earth creating a kind of high pressure hyperbaric oxygen chamber for the entire earth. Plus the water canopy would theoretically block out harmful ultraviolet rays. Those 2 things combined were supposed to be able to produce long lifespans.
But if there was no water canopy, what now is the explanation for those long lifespans?
Since you are concerned with finding scientific reasons to explain unusual longevity, can you first establish scientifically that in fact humans lived to the ages claimed in the Bible?perhaps the genetics + food + environment would account for longevity
Originally posted by Stratnerd
This has nothing to due with mutation so even if there was some barrier in space it wouldn't affect aging rates.
No. Nor can I disprove hundreds of other exceptional claims arising from not only Christianity, but numerous other religions. I do wonder if the eras in which these long-lived Old Testament peoples lived is concurrent with historical records from other parts of the world – records giving no hint of the exceptional life spans in those areas of the world. Was longevity granted only to Biblical peoples, or simply not worth mentioning in cultures such as the Far East?No, can you prove the converse?