Ask Jeffery for the citation.
Those links don't prove a thing, my argument is correct.
This is what I look like when reading a post by reaper in the Ye Religion Thread.This is what I look like when I respond to reaper's post.
They're not guesstimations in the sense that would allow for the kind of variation you're talking about.There are several independent techniques for estimating the age of the earth, as well as multiple techniques for estimating elapsed time since the Big Bang. We literally set our clocks by some of these techniques.If we were wrong about the rate of decay of radioactive isotopes, atomic clocks (and GPS navigation) wouldn't work, for instance.Regards,
I watched the Tyson - Big Bang Video (painful)
My question is - how were humans created. I can assume that people will say that human life started as a single molecule and grew from that over time.
Fader mentioned DNA comparisions between humans and monkeys, are there similiar results from monkeys to other creatures Is there a scientific path back to where humans began
We set our clocks by the speed at which the earth rotates. One rotation around the sun is one year.
None of that necessarily accounts for periods of time in which poisonous gases or oxygen deprived gases spewing from the core of the earth might have choked all living organisms forcing living things back to square one (or at least the land dwelling variety). Seems like a hasty move to assume that our technology and knowledge is advanced enough to claim that gaps in traditionally recognized time periods of the earth are an impossibility. Perhaps these types of catastrophic events weren't even worldwide which may have something to do with commonality between fossils and currently existing organisms.
It wouldn't be the first time that groups of humans were presented with evidence that pointed to one conclusion only to later discover that the conclusion wasn't 100% correct. [...]We know jack shit about anything.
Same goes for calculating the age of our solar system. Is it likely we'll discover increasingly accurate ways to determine its age in the future? Sure. Should we expect the current calculations to be off by billions of years? Probably not.
Quote from: astral on August 30, 2011, 01:22:45 PMwho says the universe ever had to expand, maybe it has been and always will be this size for this particular universe, fact is no one has a real clue about the origins or life of the cosmosMy point about relativity and expansion, was that who says the fundamentals of the "observable" universe are bound to humans ideals and beliefs. Fact is that what we see might be a reflection of the "reality" we humans create continually while being alive, nothing more and nothing less. We might be "fooling" ourselves into thinking this is what the universe is(!), while in reality the universe isn't that way at all.I recognize the mindset. Tubby veered in a similar direction months ago when engaged about his misapprehensions concerning the gene-centric mechanisms of inheritance.In any case: It hardly matters whether the 'true' nature of the universe is different than the one we can observe. (For instance, we could all be running as a simulation on some alien mainframe.)In practical terms, we appear to all be participating in the shared experience of living in a universe governed by consistent laws.As Dr. Krauss observed in the link posted earlier (about time 12:00) - "If we could just convince a lot of people of just that simple thing: that the universe is the way it is, whether we like it or not -- I think we'd overcome a lot of problems in this country; and I have to waste far too much time on that..."In short: Don't be a Tubby.
who says the universe ever had to expand, maybe it has been and always will be this size for this particular universe, fact is no one has a real clue about the origins or life of the cosmosMy point about relativity and expansion, was that who says the fundamentals of the "observable" universe are bound to humans ideals and beliefs. Fact is that what we see might be a reflection of the "reality" we humans create continually while being alive, nothing more and nothing less. We might be "fooling" ourselves into thinking this is what the universe is(!), while in reality the universe isn't that way at all.
rocks
Now where I was going with my discussion:The wave particle duality of matter, in essence, matter is aware of being observed. Thereby changing characteristics accordingly.Back in the 1800's Thomas Young discovered the dual wave-particle nature of light. I was suggesting that the observable universe might have such abilities as well.