Magnetic Poles
New Member
Or the universe IS actually billions of years old.Not_hard_to_find said:Nope -- you've jumped to an erroneous conclusion based on imperfect assumptions.
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Or the universe IS actually billions of years old.Not_hard_to_find said:Nope -- you've jumped to an erroneous conclusion based on imperfect assumptions.
Magnetic Poles said:Or the universe IS actually billions of years old.
NEWS FLASH!!!Not_hard_to_find said:Ah, an a-theist!
Magnetic Poles said:NEWS FLASH!!!
Not all Christians are "Young Earthers". Because one accepts the age of the universe doesn't make one an atheist. Major logical miscue here.
It seems some of you are totally unaware that there one can be a Christian and not:
1. Believe in a 6000 year old earth
2. Believe biological evolution is untrue
3. Be a right-wing political extremist
4. Think that homosexuality is a sin above all sins
5. Believe in the death penalty
6. Be a fundamentalist
and on and on and on
You're running beyond what I said. I understand the temptation to do so; this topic cannot be discussed in a controlled manner, which was the point of my OP.Magnetic Poles said:So, if God purposely creates a universe with observeable age, including rocks, distant galaxies millions of light years away, etc.; yet it is NOT that old, then God is lying.
Not really, no - can you explain it?UnchartedSpirit said:Remember those two old theories on how the Pyramids were built? Then, once the two were combined to form a agreeable model?
UnchartedSpirit said:It now doesn't matter anymore how long God took to do these things, it's miraculous enough that he made somethin out of nothing---he even made time and force out of nothing, and he had all the 'time' to plan and make it, since he works outside its dimension anyway.
Religion" is no problem to anyone until it makes claims to be objectively true. Everyone agrees that we ought to be nice. Sometimes I even try to be nice myself.
Presuppositions, basic beliefs, ultimately dictate the interpretation of scientific data;
the data doesn't interpret itself.
Pipedude said:In my experience, the Calvinist-Arminian debate is a walk in the park compared to the war that atheist scientism wages against biblical theism. Each side fails to hear the other, neither can accurately present the other's beliefs, neither side adheres to strict honesty, each demonizes the other, each is polluted with ignorant peacocks who master a few arguments and pretend to have annihilated the other's position.
There's probably more chance for peace in the Middle East than in this debate. "Radicalized scientist"--heh heh, about as common as leaves on the ground in November.
Last Thursdayism
Last Thursdayism (sometimes Last Tuesdayism or Last Wednesdayism) is a joke version of omphalism. It is the idea that the world was created last Thursday, but with the appearance of age: people's memories, history books, fossils, light already on the way from distant stars, and so forth. As such it resembles the Occasionalism of Malebranche.
A recent manifestation of Last Thursdayism appeared on the USENET group talk.origins in 1991, as a hyperbolic response to omphalism. It gradually gained popularity, and in 1997 it was expanded into a grand theology, similar to Unicornism or Pastafarianism, which claimed that the universe was created Last Thursday by "Queen Maeve the Housecat", who would destroy the world Next Thursday, saving those who were nice to cats and damning evildoers to the never-cleaned Eternal Litterbox. Since then the website for Last Thursdayism has become defunct.
It should be noted that in some circles, especially talk.origins, Last Tuesdayism is taken as a schism of Last Thursdayism and is founded on the belief that the world was created last Tuesday but that unlike last Thursdayism, this happens every Tuesday.
Pipedude said:If (notice that I always have said "if") God creates something, that thing will, of necessity, look older than it is, even if it only looks one second older than it is. This is a philosophical fact because everything that is "here" looks like it got "here" by natural processes, which require time to occur..
You are incorrect. No one has yet proposed omphalism. Its problems are obvious and it contradicts the scriptural view of God and things. I have stated a fact: if God creates something, it will look like it was here before. You cannot deny it, for it is self-evident.Gold Dragon said:Last Thursdayism is mocking version of omphalism which is what is being proposed here.
I'm glad you recognize this.Pipedude said:You are incorrect. No one has yet proposed omphalism. Its problems are obvious and it contradicts the scriptural view of God and things.
I definitely agree that science cannot answer the question of whether God spoke to initiate the cascade of events or "Big Bang" the universe into existence and continued to speak things into existence after that initiation event. I believe that what we observe through science about origins attempts to imperfectly analyze the processes that God created.Pipedude said:Now, since it is undeniable, it carries with it certain implications. One of them is this: if God spoke the world into existence, science cannot analyze that fact. Science is powerless to analyze that fact. An analysis of starlight cannot confirm or disprove that God spoke the starlight into existence, although the "hypothesis" entails certain evidential problems. All theories of origins have unanswered problems.
I definitely agree by faith that God spoke us into existence and that is not a ridiculous statement.Pipedude said:All tht can be done is to ridicule the protasis "if God spoke the world into existence." I, with you, would ridicule "last Thursdayism." But I do not consider the biblical statement "the worlds were framed by the word of God" to be ridiculous, and I hope you don't, either.
Am I understanding you correctly that while you believe omphalos theology is incorrect, you are saying that if it was correct, it is beyond the scope of science to determine this? I would agree with that.Pipedude said:The scientific method assumes that no "god" has meddled with the data. If Adam looks thirty years old, then he absolutely is thirty years old. There is no allowing for the possibility that God created Adam last week.
But if God did create Adam last week, then science is helpless to demonstrate it.
If you acknowledge that most scientists aren't atheists, why do you frame Creationism vs. Evolution in terms of fundamentalists vs. fundamentalists? Isn't it more accurately characterized as fundamentalists vs. scientists?Pipedude said:I have stated a fact: if God creates something, it will look like it was here before. You cannot deny it, for it is self-evident.
Y'know, npc, I'd like to address that very question. Problem is, I don't understand it at all.npc said:If you acknowledge that most scientists aren't atheists, why do you frame Creationism vs. Evolution in terms of fundamentalists vs. fundamentalists? Isn't it more accurately characterized as fundamentalists vs. scientists?
On my way out the door for work this morning, I wrote too hastily concerning omphalism. Some of it inheres in the fact that I'm defending. I do believe that God created the universe as a functioning whole, even as he created man thus. But what little I know of omphalism as a distinct set of ideas, or its original form as first propounded, seems to include indefensible ideas and, as others have alleged, God creating false evidence.Gold Dragon said:Am I understanding you correctly that while you believe omphalos theology is incorrect, you are saying that if it was correct, it is beyond the scope of science to determine this?
It was a sincere question; if I've mischaracterized something perhaps you will explain what? I'll point I've never called anyone's words "pedestrian".Pipedude said:Y'know, npc, I'd like to address that very question. Problem is, I don't understand it at all.
Remember, I'm a fundamentalist. Type more slowly and use easier words.
And explain a little more.