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Evolution
RE: Evolution
I gave you the information you wanted, so any continued pleas to ignorance from you are unwarranted.
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RE: Evolution
(April 29, 2012 at 11:10 am)Cthulhu Dreaming Wrote: I gave you the information you wanted, so any continued pleas to ignorance from you are unwarranted.

What information have you given me (rhetorical question because I read your post)? You would not accept an article from a creationist website yet you expect me to accept a poorly constructed "rebuttal" from an evolution website. I only post information from independent sites and not someone else's argument (that's not evidence) form an extremist website (one who takes a side in this discussion), so I expect the same form any atheists.

Let's examine the actual evidence...

"Radiometric dating is a technique used to date materials such as rocks, usually based on a comparison between the observed abundance of a naturally occurring radioactive isotope and its decay products, using known decay rates." Wikipedia

This method is chosen because the nuclear properties are essentially are unaffected by outside influence (ie temperature, pressure etc). In other words the decay process is not affected by the environment.

But there are preconditions to obtaining accurate measurement...
"The basic equation of radiometric dating requires that neither the parent nuclide nor the daughter product can enter or leave the material after its formation." Wikipedia

In other words we must know the amount of parent/daughter isotopes present at the time of formation of the rock (which is billions of years ago according to them). Of course scientist claim they can rectify possible contamination (gain/loss of parent/daughter isotopes) in several ways.

One way is to check for sign of alterations (metasomatism) which would seemingly render the sample useless. Another way is to take samples from different locations of the same rock body. But it's the same rock, so even if x amount of sample were useless, then how could we even be sure that the "good" samples are any better? If the rock contains different minerals and we assume that they were formed at the same time then we can measure the isochron. In the case of uranium-lead dating we can use a concordia diagram to decrease the problem of nuclide loss. BUT we have to first assume that the rock was in a closed system. Lastly we can use different methods to see if they agree, which would only increase precision not accuracy.

Actually all of these methods could only enhance precision at best, and we must make assumption at every level of the "filtration" process in an attempt to "limit" contamination. Precision would be like going to a gun range and shooting all your shots in the same vicinity but outside the target. Accuracy is when all your shots are hitting the target. We seem to be hitting our shots in the same vicinity, but are we hitting our target? Even if all the dating methods give you precise answers, that does not equate to the true value or age. Especially when you consider that most (if not all) of the parent/daughter isotopes are readily movable by heat and water. Well the earth's core is immensely hot spewing off magma through cracks and about 70% of the earth's surface is water including an underground water table that saturates the rock below it. Oh and not to mention the isotopes are also present in the atmosphere which could easily interact with the rocks or the natural processes (ie floods, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, hurricanes etc) that could easily contaminate rocks over "billions" of years. Well so much for assuming that the rock was in a closed system. Precision is probably the best we could ever do when it comes to the age of the earth (and I have uncertainties about that).
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RE: Evolution
Your shit is smelling up this thread, abishalom. You willfully misread and misrepresent science at every turn, then suggest that science is only belief and that religious doctrine should be given equal space. This shit was old years ago-and I say that in absolute terms. Radiometric dating, potassium argon, rubidium-strontium, uranium-thorium, etc., have demonstrated on many levels the ability to accurately date material. Certainly there are provisos, but you have yet to suggest ANYTHING that controverts them by means of better accuracy or a more testable methodology. In other words, shut the fuck up already, because all you do is trot out apologetic "quandaries," which do not present quandaries to the part of the population that is truly attempting to find answers rather than avoid them.

The accuracy of radiometric dating is often checked by comparing the radiometric date with non-radiometric dates of objects, such as historical accounts, tree rings, ice cores, etc. These results repeatedly demonstrate the validity of radiometric dating. Carbon-14 dating has been extensively tested against known historical items, such as King Tut's wooden coffin, with excellent results. See Lake Suigetsu Algae for another such example. While there are occasional false dates caused by contamination and leaching, overall, radiometric dating has been demonstrated to be very accurate. Critics make much use of these false dates. But just because radiometric dating doesn't work every time, this doesn't mean that it doesn't work. After all, just because Detroit produces a lemon once in awhile, that doesn't mean they can't make cars.

The accuracy of argon radioisotope dating has been verified by testing it against known volcanic eruptions showing that it is accurate.

Event Biblical events have been accurately dated using Carbon-14. A tunnel believed to be built by King Hezekiah and described in the Bible (Kings II 20:20; Chronicles II 32:3, 4), was dated using carbon-14 and uranium-thorium dating to show that it was built near the time of the Judean king (700 B.C.).


http://www.epicidiot.com/evo_cre/radiome...m#accuracy

When you lay aside the christian bullshit, which contaminates things far worse than any errors in radiometrics, we can begin to talk about your "misgivings."
Trying to update my sig ...
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RE: Evolution
(April 29, 2012 at 12:54 pm)Abishalom Wrote: What information have you given me (rhetorical question because I read your post)? You would not accept an article from a creationist website yet you expect me to accept a poorly constructed "rebuttal" from an evolution website.

Who the FUCK are you to tell me what I would and would not accept?

Here's a free fucking clue for you: If a source has adequate citations which are peer reviewed, I don't give a flying fuck what the source is.

The first page I quoted was a summary of some of the evidence (with citations). The second was an article (with citations). Poorly researched, my ass.

Quote:I only post information from independent sites and not someone else's argument (that's not evidence) form an extremist website (one who takes a side in this discussion), so I expect the same form any atheists.

Are you even aware of the man-years of research that went into the talk.origins FAQ?

Quote:Let's examine the actual evidence...



Yes, lets. While you're at it, you might investigate isochron dating (which does not depend on known parent/daughter isotopes). You might also provide some insight on means by which solid rocks can be contaminated in such a way that is a) not known and accounted for by science, and b) applicable to the dating method being used. The second article I linked has adequate citations to investigate your assertions. Can you find a problem with the particular evidence that the conclusion came from, or are you just going to throw around generalized assertions?



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RE: Evolution
(April 29, 2012 at 5:34 pm)Cthulhu Dreaming Wrote: Can you find a problem with the particular evidence that the conclusion came from, or are you just going to throw around generalized assertions?

Ladies and gentlemen, place your bets now!
At the age of five, Skagra decided emphatically that God did not exist.  This revelation tends to make most people in the universe who have it react in one of two ways - with relief or with despair.  Only Skagra responded to it by thinking, 'Wait a second.  That means there's a situation vacant.'
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RE: Evolution
(April 29, 2012 at 5:45 pm)Stimbo Wrote:
(April 29, 2012 at 5:34 pm)Cthulhu Dreaming Wrote: Can you find a problem with the particular evidence that the conclusion came from, or are you just going to throw around generalized assertions?

Ladies and gentlemen, place your bets now!

500 on generalized assertions, Stim.

Reply
RE: Evolution
(April 29, 2012 at 4:40 pm)Epimethean Wrote: Your shit is smelling up this thread, abishalom. You willfully misread and misrepresent science at every turn, then suggest that science is only belief and that religious doctrine should be given equal space. This shit was old years ago-and I say that in absolute terms. Radiometric dating, potassium argon, rubidium-strontium, uranium-thorium, etc., have demonstrated on many levels the ability to accurately date material. Certainly there are provisos, but you have yet to suggest ANYTHING that controverts them by means of better accuracy or a more testable methodology. In other words, shut the fuck up already, because all you do is trot out apologetic "quandaries," which do not present quandaries to the part of the population that is truly attempting to find answers rather than avoid them.

The accuracy of radiometric dating is often checked by comparing the radiometric date with non-radiometric dates of objects, such as historical accounts, tree rings, ice cores, etc. These results repeatedly demonstrate the validity of radiometric dating. Carbon-14 dating has been extensively tested against known historical items, such as King Tut's wooden coffin, with excellent results. See Lake Suigetsu Algae for another such example. While there are occasional false dates caused by contamination and leaching, overall, radiometric dating has been demonstrated to be very accurate. Critics make much use of these false dates. But just because radiometric dating doesn't work every time, this doesn't mean that it doesn't work. After all, just because Detroit produces a lemon once in awhile, that doesn't mean they can't make cars.

The accuracy of argon radioisotope dating has been verified by testing it against known volcanic eruptions showing that it is accurate.

Event Biblical events have been accurately dated using Carbon-14. A tunnel believed to be built by King Hezekiah and described in the Bible (Kings II 20:20; Chronicles II 32:3, 4), was dated using carbon-14 and uranium-thorium dating to show that it was built near the time of the Judean king (700 B.C.).


http://www.epicidiot.com/evo_cre/radiome...m#accuracy

When you lay aside the christian bullshit, which contaminates things far worse than any errors in radiometrics, we can begin to talk about your "misgivings."
You cannot be serious. Naturalism is not science it's a worldview just like Christianity is a worldview (that did more for science than naturalism did). All I did was discuss actual facts. You can take it however you want to.

As for "apologetic quandaries", all I did was point out the assumptions that are made in radiometric dating. Apparently you do not believe scientists make these assumptions, but I got all that information from Wikipedia.

Oh and of all those methods you mentioned essentially all of those isotopes are readily moved by either water or heat (some both), meaning that they can enter/exit surrounding rock through say a flood or even by saturation from the underground water table or a magma flow beneath the earth. These processes can easily affect the results.

As for their "accuracy" being verified, you are mistaking precision with accuracy (see by gun range example from post). Like I said getting the same results every time (if that's really what happens) does not equate to getting the right results no matter how many methods you invent.

BTW Please give me links to where a "mainstream" scientist (since those are the ones atheist seem to be infatuated with) actually dated a recent volcano with K-Ar dating method. You probably won't find one, because their too busy crying "you can't date it because it has excess argon from the lava" (yet we should trust them on the dating of unknown aged rocks). They do the same thing when lightening strikes a tree and causes rapid petrification.

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RE: Evolution
Keep clinging, keep clinging. You have nothing. Read the entire link I sent you if you want to discuss reality.
Trying to update my sig ...
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RE: Evolution
(April 29, 2012 at 5:34 pm)Cthulhu Dreaming Wrote:
(April 29, 2012 at 12:54 pm)Abishalom Wrote: What information have you given me (rhetorical question because I read your post)? You would not accept an article from a creationist website yet you expect me to accept a poorly constructed "rebuttal" from an evolution website.

Who the FUCK are you to tell me what I would and would not accept?

Here's a free fucking clue for you: If a source has adequate citations which are peer reviewed, I don't give a flying fuck what the source is.

The first page I quoted was a summary of some of the evidence (with citations). The second was an article (with citations). Poorly researched, my ass.
I'm sure they spend plenty of their life dedicated to undermining creationist claim, but I actually never questioned how much research they did. I said it was poorly constructed (ie full of circular reasoning and selective information). Obviously Talks Origin has a purpose (to "refute" every claim a creationist makes) regardless if there arguments are sound or not.

Quote:
Quote:I only post information from independent sites and not someone else's argument (that's not evidence) form an extremist website (one who takes a side in this discussion), so I expect the same form any atheists.

Are you even aware of the man-years of research that went into the talk.origins FAQ?
What does man hours have to do with a poorly constructed argument?

Quote:
Quote:Let's examine the actual evidence...



Yes, lets. While you're at it, you might investigate isochron dating (which does not depend on known parent/daughter isotopes). You might also provide some insight on means by which solid rocks can be contaminated in such a way that is a) not known and accounted for by science, and b) applicable to the dating method being used. The second article I linked has adequate citations to investigate your assertions. Can you find a problem with the particular evidence that the conclusion came from, or are you just going to throw around generalized assertions?
Well for one thing I never said isochron dating relied on knowing the parent/daughter isotopes. I said that you have to assume that since a rock had different minerals these minerals were all formed from the same event (pretty lofty assumption).

To your contamination remark...a) scientist know but either overlook it or ignore it (you decide) b) we're talking about the age of the earth so it's applicable to all methods used for this process.

I have no problem with actual evidence, but evidence are they using to "refute" said claims. Here's an example of a "rebuttal" from talks origin...

"2. Claims that the assumptions of a method may be violated
Certain requirements are involved with all radiometric dating methods. These generally include constancy of decay rate and lack of contamination (gain or loss of parent or daughter isotope). Creationists often attack these requirements as "unjustified assumptions," though they are really neither "unjustified" nor "assumptions" in most cases."

If that's their idea of a rebuttal, then that's laughable at best. ROFLOL






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RE: Evolution
Abishalom, what do you think of the age of the light we see from stars?
"It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it" ~ Aristotle
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