RE: The Statler Waldorf Balcony
October 15, 2010 at 8:41 pm
(This post was last modified: October 17, 2010 at 1:41 pm by TheDarkestOfAngels.)
(October 15, 2010 at 4:14 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: :-) So tell us if you didn't observe the growth of the trees you cut open, how would you know that the ones you cut open with less rings were younger and the ones with more rings were older? Kind of putting the cart before the horse there.
By being able to observe numberous trees in various stages of growth simultaneously.
And, of course, when you cut them open, you can see the tree rings.
(October 15, 2010 at 4:14 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: As to your old trees. Certain genuses of trees can grow up to 5 rings per year. These rings are indistinguishable from true annual rings. Pre-ice age climates also could have caused trees to grow far more than even five rings a year. So counting annual rings (dendrochronology) is not nearly as accurate as you make it out to be.
Oh wow. Scientists must never take things like that into account. Puh-leese.
(October 15, 2010 at 4:14 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: Ugh, you just don't get the light thing, so I will leave it alone.
If that's the excuse you have to use to justify the fact that you have absolutely no scientific grounds for you or your "astrophysicist's" theories, then go for it.
(October 15, 2010 at 4:14 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: Wow, I had no idea that Colorado State was a Christian School! You learn something everyday. So can you tell us all what other "Christian" schools give out doctorates in Astrophysics? I am sure you are fully aware that in order for a school to give a graduate degree, that program must first be approved by all the other Universities in that State right? So even the graduate degrees that are given out at Christian Universities have been given the green light by secular schools.
I'll say that I'm forced to take both your and your "astrophysicist's" claims to prominance in any thing even remotely related to science with a grain of salt, at least in the fields in which creationism is opposed, which is virtually all of them.
(October 15, 2010 at 4:14 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: Wow you dodged a lot there. You never answered, what happens when two things are supposedly the same age, but when you date the organic matter with radio-carbon dating it comes out to a vastly different age than the non-organic matter that is dated with radio-metric dating? We see this a lot with fossils that still have some organic matter left. Which date do you accept then?
How did I know they were the same age if the test churned out two different ages for the same material?
This looks like a fallacy by Rhetorical Question or someone goofed by testing carbon-14 with a different radiogenic test than the one designed to date carbon 14 or they picked a contaminated sample or any number of issues that could be solved by smarter or more sensible testing.
Scientists do things like test more than one sample before calling it a day to avoid situations where they might get a bad sample and they usually make sure they're testing the right material. That's just common sense.
(October 15, 2010 at 4:14 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: It would not have to change the rates off the Earth for radiometric decay, only on the Earth. Go back and see the work by Dr. Newton. Using calcuated time definition the matter from off the Earth would date to be old. I know you don't get the whole time defintion thing, but give a look.
What work? You've neither shown nor have you linked me to anything this ... "genius" of a scientist who is apparently so sciency that he can out-science all of the previous centuries of observation and study.
I'm not even the one who is technially with the burden of proof as all of the evidence provided here and in reality all point away from your crackpot ideas that you're trying to evidence for creationism, despite the mountains of evidence to the contrary.
If this above response is all you have to everything everyone has said about radiometric dating thus far on this and other threads, then you really have nothing to disprove radiometric dating. Any of it outside of proven hoaxes. Your light theory violates some of the most well-established scientific principles in modern physics, and all of your other ideas are just as well thought out and NONE of them have been backed up by anything you have provided here.
You're constantly complaining about us using youtube or wikipedia and when one one of us does link something you accept, you've only moved the goalposts further because apparently, according to your reasoning, your theories are valid scientifically despite absolutely no public, peer reviewed papers of your own. You haven't even provided any links or evidence of any kind - not even bad evidence.
Either put up or accept that you're wrong.
(October 15, 2010 at 4:14 pm)Statler Waldorf Wrote: You never gave us the specific passage that supposedly says the Earth is flat, so I guess I will just assume it does not exist.
You do that. After all, I'm sure a creationist at some point is going to argue that spheres have corners and ends.
If today you can take a thing like evolution and make it a crime to teach in the public schools, tomorrow you can make it a crime to teach it in the private schools and next year you can make it a crime to teach it to the hustings or in the church. At the next session you may ban books and the newspapers...
Ignorance and fanaticism are ever busy and need feeding. Always feeding and gloating for more. Today it is the public school teachers; tomorrow the private. The next day the preachers and the lecturers, the magazines, the books, the newspapers. After a while, Your Honor, it is the setting of man against man and creed against creed until with flying banners and beating drums we are marching backward to the glorious ages of the sixteenth centry when bigots lighted fagots to burn the men who dared to bring any intelligence and enlightenment and culture to the human mind. ~Clarence Darrow, at the Scopes Monkey Trial, 1925
Politics is supposed to be the second-oldest profession. I have come to realize that it bears a very close resemblance to the first. ~Ronald Reagan