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You are correct. A majority of scientists agree and I'm highly convinced it's because they have not heavily considered the alternatives or they are not allow to publish their findings if it challenges the status quo. Think about all of the assumptions built into trying to date the earth based upon rock layers and fossils. How many times have you been presented with the evidence by young earth geologists in class?
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If you were to ask all of these scientists the following questions, how do you think they would answer?
1. How many times in school were you presented with evidence from a geologist that rock layers is not a way to determine the age of the earth and that hydrologic sorting is a better explanation of rock layers?
2. How many times in school have you been presented with all of the assumptions built into the dating methods?
3. How many young earth geologists can you name? What papers of theirs have you read?
4. How many other young earth pieces of scientific evidence have you been presented with throughout your education?
Schools also don't teach that the possibility that the Earth is flat. . . . . should they?
The fact that a young Earth is not taught in schools is not automatically indication that there is a conspiracy against young Earth theories. Consider the possibility that young Earth models are excluded on the basis that they are simply not considered to be 'good' science by the overwhelmingly vast number of the world's geologists. If schools were required to teach the controversy on every scientific question for which 0.1% of the world's scientists disagreed, children in school would learn literally nothing.
To answer your questions:
1. I don't know. But, I'm pretty sure that the geology information I learned in K-12 could fit on a single piece of paper. Kids aren't given in depth geology lessons - its not a priority. I have a 9th grader and a 6th grader. Both of them complain to me that they've been taught the water cycle every single year since 1st grade. . . . because our school science curriculum is mostly a joke.
Also, on what grounds do you say hydrological sorting is a better way of determining age? Is this based on your multiple PhDs in geology and 30 years experience? Or is it based on the 0.1% of geologists who believe this and whom you are drawn toward believing because they confirm your bias? Now, you can rightly point out that I also have zero PhDs in geology nor do I have professional experience. And I have bias. But, I'm not the one making claims about what dating methods are better than others.
2. I don't think I understood anything about scientific assumptions until much later in life than grade school. Passing the geology chapter in public schools amounts to being able to look at a picture of mountain and identify it as such. Its not in depth.
3. Zero. I also can't name a single 'old Earth' geologist.
4. I did go to a Catholic School through middle school. I was aware of the idea. But again, my experience with myself and with my kids is that geology taught in K-12 amounts to about a week here and there in different grades.
I think a relevant question here is: What is the threshold at which competing scientific theories should be taught in K-12?
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He gave us enough specific information about the creation and within creation to conclude that He did it. The stars, sun, and moon having specific purposes is our reality to determine seasons, days, and years. Think about that for a moment from a purely atheistic perspective. Why is their such a thing as a season, day, or year at all if's it's unguided and undesigned? In addition, to believe that non-life could develop into life and then develop an organized thought or purpose or give objects meaning makes no sense.
I believe that the idea that the sun and moon and stars exist for our use is unjustifiably human-centric. The sun does not exist for you. The moon does not exist to tell you when it is day or night. The stars do not exist to tell you what season it is. The purpose of their existence has nothing to do with how we use them.
I have a coffee mug in my office that I use as a paper weight sometimes. By your logic, the coffee mug was made for the purpose of being a paper weight, right? That humans utilize the stars and moon for a purpose does not mean that the stars and moon exist for that purpose.
We have good theories on why we have seasons and days and years. Every physics based computer model of solar formation model predicts objects with orbits and rotations and tilts.
This reminds me of when BIll O Reilly made statements about the tides. He said: 'Tide goes in, tide goes out. Never a miscommunication. You can't explain that. You can't explain why the tide goes in." Except of course, we can explain it. We know exactly why the tides behave the way they do. Scientific models predict precisely how they behave. And they also offer good explain for how stars form, how planets and objects form, how moons get captured, why many planets rotate, why many have tilts and seasons, and why the stars appear different to us at different times of the year.
Yes, the idea of non-life turning into life and evolving into conscious beings is absolutely wild. So is the idea of a super being that exists outside of time and space and reality. You have taken perhaps the most profound and extraordinary question humans can consider (origin of life) and answered it with a solution that involves something infinitely more profound and extraordinary as though that creates understanding.
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The only way to have a definition of supernatural or miracle is to know and understand the natural. The creation account is one of the biggest miracles in Scripture. It's a description of God supernaturally creating and designing the universe with a massive amount of complexity and intent. He created mankind in with a massive amount of complexity and intent. This event was also a singularity.
I do not know how God took the dust of the earth and breathed life into it. I do not expect to find a scientific article explaining how He did that or how He created cows and grass and pollen and bees and spiders.
If there were a scientific article explaining how God created the universe, then that act would no longer be a miracle. . . . it would be science. You've made a fantastic argument for why supernaturalism, miracles, and religious base theories have no place in a science class.
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This is the root of the problem. When one eliminates the supernatural as a possibility they are not playing with all of the possible information, especially if the supernatural is possible or a reality.
Who says I've eliminated the supernatural as possibility? All I've said is that science lacks the tools to explore the supernatural. This is the realm of philosophy and theology. If I'm open to supernatural explanations, I don't think I'll find them by studying rocks.
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1. We have supernatural evidence detailed in the biblical text.
2. We have supernatural evidence of prophesies and fulfilled prophesies with some of the fulfillments coming outside of the biblical account and recorded in history.
3. An atheistic origin story of Big Bang - chaos > non-life to life, zero intelligence to rational thought, has infinitely more supernatural hurdles than the creation story of Genesis. The ability to do scientific experimentation or having rational thought being a product of randomness would be a miracle as well. How could one trust their own thoughts?
1. No you don't. The Bible is no more 'evidence' of supernaturalism than Harry Potter is that Hogwarts exists. Something is not true because its written in a book. Nor is something true because other parts of the book can be shown to be true or historically consistent.
2. No, you don't. I had this debate with a coworker 15+ years ago. At his request, I read through a book detailing every prophesy. I then spent a couple weeks writing a response to every single prophesy pointing out why it is not proof of divine revelation or supernaturalism. In this case, I have studied this argument and I don't buy any bit of it.
3. The first two sentences are simply assertions that you cannot remotely begin to prove. But, you are correct that a purely materialistic explanation for the universe and life is missing a million pieces to the puzzle. The difference here is that I'm not claiming to know the answer. This world is full of people who all KNOW the deepest mysteries of existence. How lucky you all are to have access and to know your Truth is THE Truth.
Your solution to question #3 is to invent a being who is, by definition, incomprehensible, and then pass this solution off as though it is a comprehensible solution. None of us have the slightest understanding what being outside of time and space means. None us has the slightest understanding of what being all powerful means. None of us have the slightest idea what it means to create existence or create natural laws or create matter and energy. Any explanation you give for explaining the meaning of an infinite term will inevitably be infinitely inadequate.
I don't use the term magic to be derogatory, but this is what we are talking about. Your solution is 'magic'. No explanation for the magic. No origin for the magic. No causation for the magic. And because this magic has no cause, we invent terms like 'timeless' or 'outside of time'. And 'timeless' has the properties of solving for the causation problem. Which is incredibly circular. But that doesn't matter. And this magic is everywhere and nowhere and exists beyond space. . . . which is a theological theoretical term which has no tie to anything remotely concrete, observable, or empirical. The phase 'outside of space' exists to solve for the problem of where magic exists by offering a phase with zero actual value. And this magic is all-powerful. But we don't know what that means. And it should be obvious to everyone why speculating on the value of these infinity's is pointless.
And this magic created existence because it wants you and I to love It. And it will torture me if I don't love it. . . . cuz I guess that is how love works. But, the vast majority of people to live or who live now don't believe this magic even exists. This magic stays hidden and is only obvious to those who already believe its obvious . . . because of course there is no rational reason for believing this magic is obvious. And this magic cannot be questioned or challenged. We are not permitted to disagree with this magic. We were all created against our will by this magic, inherently wicked, and ordered to follow exactly as this magic commands without any recourse for disagreement or dissent. And this is called free will. And this is called 'good'. Because this magic is good and can only do good. And I can become good to by abdicating everything about me that is unique apart from this magic because everything this magic made me with which is unique from itself is evil.
Compare the FINITE radical complexity and improbability of us existing here today through pure naturalism with the INFINITE possibility of God. If we want to discuss what is a reasonable or rational worldview and we are going to introduce infinite Gods. . . . human reason and rationality are out the window. If God is infinite, there is exactly zero justification for the suggestion that we have the rational faculty to understand any tiny bit of God enough to understand His intents. Because every tiny bit of God is also infinite. And the idea that we have been given enough information to understand what we need to understand of an infinite being strikes me as absolute folly. You cannot break infinite into finite bite size comprehensible pieces.
Look Dirt. . . . . I recognize that the idea of a universe from natural origins and life from chaos and intelligence from non intelligence is freaking bonkers. . . . . If there is a theory out there that offers an explanation that is less bonkers, I'm listening. . . . . but, I'm really not seeing it in religion. Maybe my position is more bonkers, I don't know. . . .
I don't have the answers. And when I think about the most deep existential questions humans can come up with, I don't understand how anyone can honestly think they do. And this is why I lean so hard into the 'I don't knows'.
How can I trust my own thoughts. . . Maybe I can't. But, why should I trust anyone who claims to know the truth about an infinite super-being?
phew. . . . enough for tonight.
Sorry for the rant. I worry that the above comes off as dick-ish. I don't mean for it to be, and rewriting it feels hard.