1 + 1 = 2.Show me the math.
1 + 1 = 2.Show me the math.
Would appear to be about the level of your math capability but does not answer the question I posed of what Dr. Brown does with 1500 trillion megatons worth of energy along the 46000 mile mid ocean ridge.1 + 1 = 2.
Gee, something that dramatic and we'd still be feeling the aftershocks today! :think:Would appear to be about the level of your math capability but does not answer the question I posed of what Dr. Brown does with 1500 trillion megatons worth of energy along the 46000 mile mid ocean ridge.
Gee, something that dramatic and we'd still be feeling the aftershocks today! :think:
I mean, golly, that sort of energy could cause the planet to roll on its axis! We might today be still able to see a wobble.Your lack of math insight is noted.
We'd have radioactivity coming out our ears, lots of things would have died horrible deaths, the weather would have gotten all messed up, the contents of the atmosphere vastly altered, huge deposits of salt and carbonates would have precipitated out, ice ages, volcanoes, tsunamis, earthquakes like you wouldn't imagine, lava flows the size of continents...Stripe: the math please.
Stripe: the math please
What? What maths?
Oh, that! You're still looking for that? Try here.Show the math for Dr. Brown to deal with the energy from 1500 trillion megaton bombs along the 46000 mile mid ocean ridge.
Oh, that! You're still looking for that? Try here.
I'm certain I've posted this before at least a few times. :noid:
Or it might punch an energy wave straight through the Earth. The interior of the Earth would see huge amounts of friction and melting. We would have a liquid core after something that massive!
:think: Is it your position that the core wasn't molten prior to the flood?
Yep.
Mr. Brown Rabbit lives in a forest. His DNA is just fine, doing what it was “designed” to do to keep Mr. Rabbit alive.Meanwhile, atheists are still yet to answer the fundamental question. Can data from DNA be analysed using information theory? If not, why is it that DNA data is immune to such analysis?
Does this kid have less information in his DNA than Daddy Brown Rabbit did?
I am not conversant with the exact definitions and rules applicable to information theory, so for now I occasionally ask a specific question (like about rabbits) that can probably be considered as an applied case of information theory.Yes.
Do you have a response to the question? Can data from DNA be analysed using information theory? If not, why is it that DNA data is immune to such analysis?