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The Bible, Creationism, and Prophecy (part 2)

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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 276 ✭✭Wh1stler


    wolfsbane wrote: »
    ********************************************************************
    1 Timothy 2:12 And I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man, but to be in silence. 13 For Adam was formed first, then Eve. 14 And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived, fell into transgression.

    You must have a great deal of sympathy for the Afghan Taliban then.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,870 ✭✭✭doctoremma


    oldrnwisr wrote: »
    Secondly, the intention of the creationists who first began to study kinds was to create a new picture of evolution, replacing the tree of life with the creationist orchard below.

    EE.tree2_0.jpg

    This approach is equally baseless because the only thing necessary to undermine this idea is to show where any two kinds share a common ancestor, which has been found repeatedly, particularly humans and other apes, feliformes and caniformes and even whales and hippos.

    I came across an article (and references therein), discussing the use of creationist tools to prove evolution: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/wondermonkey/2011/07/faith-versus-science-does-crea.shtml

    Discussion of the first paper in the article:
    Biologist Phil Senter of the Fayette State University in North Carolina, US, has published the second of two papers that uses creation science techniques to examine the fossil record. In the first, published in 2010, he used a technique called classic multidimensional scaling (CMDS) to evaluate the appearance of coelurosaurian dinosaurs over geological time. CMDS is derived from a branch of creation science called baraminology, which classifies organisms according to a creationist framework...Animals fall into types, or baramins, which were created independently, but have diversified since...Dr Senter has no real issue with the methodology – as he points out in the 2010 paper, mathematics has no creed. But he argues that if CMDS shows that dinosaurs do show transitional forms, and are in fact genetically related to each other, then creationists are in a bit of a bind...Dr Senter’s 2010 study did, of course, show that coelurosaurian dinosaurs are related

    And a response from a person involved in developing the exploited tool: http://toddcwood.blogspot.co.uk/2011/07/phil-senter-does-it-again.html
    My long-time readers know that I'm not one to just kneejerk a response, but my first impressions after reading Senter's conclusion is that there's a lot of confusion about what statistical baraminology can and can't do. And that's my fault, so shame on me. I'll be mulling over my response to these confusions in the near future.

    *scraping sound of moving goalposts*


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 25,848 ✭✭✭✭Zombrex


    wolfsbane wrote: »
    The debate can only be settled - or at least ended - when one of these occurs:
    A. Evolution beyond the Family level is demonstrated.

    Demonstrated in what way?

    By definition if we could observe in a lab in one or two generates an evolution beyond "family level" that would in fact disprove Darwinian evolution.

    You reject, I assume, historical evidence for these evolutions (such as genetic markers, fossil record etc?) You want to actually see it in real time?
    wolfsbane wrote: »
    B. Christ returns and brings all mankind to His judgement seat. They'll know there the truth of all He has told us.

    And if this never happens?
    wolfsbane wrote: »
    But in the meantime, indications of the scientific facts can be gained by testing the various suggested mechanisms involved in evolution/creation.

    But you reject this.

    For example, you dismiss all radiometeric dating, based on a few cases where the systems have failed, despite the millions of cases where radiometeric dating has been shown to be accurate through cross verification (ie a number of different methods all giving the same date).

    What is the point of presenting you with scientific evidence if you simply reject or ignore it if it does not fit your religious view point?
    wolfsbane wrote: »
    The nature of the scientific community is a point of disagreement for us. You do not see the pressure ideology has on evolutionists, but you have no bother seeing it among creationists.

    I have no doubt that many many scientists are deeply ideological, as Creationists are.

    The point you miss is that that the scientific method itself weeds this out. This is precisely why Creationists cannot get their ideas into science, because the actual method itself keeps stopping this. So much so that some Creationist groups such as the Discovery Institute have tried to refine science to "overcome" these problems.

    So I in no way think that an individual scientist is any better or more trust worthy than an individual Creationist. Both have to demonstrate their finds to a scientific standard.

    The world is littered with rejected scientific theories, and scientists who have thought they were on to something amazing that turned out to be nothing at all once the theory was examined properly.

    Some of these scientists don't accept that their theories don't pass scientific standards (just like Creationists) and get bitter and continue to work away on them getting more and more angry at the other scientists for not accepting what they say.

    You have never shown you actually understand what it is about the scientific method that produces this. You seem to think it is all down to personal interpretation and trusting the individual scientists. It isn't, though this has been explained before and you have again ignored it.

    Again what is the point of engaging in these debates if you have no interest in learning what these things are? You seem to have already made up your mind that the scientific method doesn't work, that it is all about trusting scientists and thus the only scientists you trust are the ones that share your religious view point and the other ones have clouded judgement.
    wolfsbane wrote: »
    You further do not accept the Biblical assessment of the deceptive nature of man's heart - how he will resist anything that would give credence to the God of the Bible. Both of these skew your assessment.

    It only skews my assessment if it is actually true Wolfsbane.

    Secondly my assessment isn't relevant. This is the point that you keep spectacularly keep missing. It matters what can be demonstrated, objectively. Again this is why Creationist "science" is rejected, it cannot be demonstrated. You assume it can because you trust the Creationists making all the noise, but I seriously doubt you have actually bothered to see if this is actually true. You simply believe them and reject what we say because you and them hold the same religious view point.

    So again what is the point? If you are simply going to ignore what we say to you why are you even engaging in discussion with us?
    wolfsbane wrote: »
    You evolutionist guys must decide on the value of debating with creationists. Creationists are happy to debate with you - at least for an extended time - because we know God uses His truth to convert sinners.

    If that is so why do you ignore so many of the points presented to you (again radiometeric dating being a good example)?

    How does that help win souls for Jesus? You just come across as someone who does not understand this topic but who holds to their personal religious beliefs despite all evidence to the contrary. Or in other words, a fanatic.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,870 ✭✭✭doctoremma


    Zombrex wrote: »
    You reject, I assume, historical evidence for these evolutions (such as genetic markers, fossil record etc?) You want to actually see it in real time?

    And if this never happens?
    According to creation "science", it should be very easy to observe evolutionary changes on a super-rapid timescale.

    Number of days since the flood: approx 1,642,500.

    Let's start with what might be called a "kind"...
    Number of species in the "beetle" ORDER Coleoptera: 400,000
    New beetle species every 4 days.

    Next taxonomical division down...
    Number of species in the "weevil" FAMILY Circulionidae: 40,000
    New weevil species every 41 days.

    Next taxonomical division down...
    Number of species in the "metallic beetle" GENUS Cicindela: 850 (conservative)
    New metallic beetle species every 1930 days (5 years or so).

    So, if creationism is correct, it should be quite straightforward for me to go and catch a mating pair of beetles and watch them evolve before my very eyes. I'll get back to you next week with an answer. Don't hold your breath though.

    Our inability to observe rapid evolution in a mere matter of days is perfectly in line with Darwinian theory and completely at odds with creationism.

    It strikes me that creationism in terms of "kinds" and other nonsense is between a rock and a hard place. If you subdivide the living world into too many "kinds", you cannot fit them all onto that boat. If you subdivide them into too few "kinds", you cannot account for the diversity we see in terms of "microevolution".

    And to predict an obvious objection: rapid evolution after the flood to create the range of species we see, followed by natural selection to create distinct geographical populations of species is simply not supported by patterns of species radiation.

    PS: any input to refining this argument greatly appreciated!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,055 ✭✭✭Cossax


    doctoremma wrote: »
    According to creation "science", it should be very easy to observe evolutionary changes on a super-rapid timescale.

    Number of days since the flood: approx 1,642,500.

    Let's start with what might be called a "kind"...
    Number of species in the "beetle" ORDER Coleoptera: 400,000
    New beetle species every 4 days.

    Next taxonomical division down...
    Number of species in the "weevil" FAMILY Circulionidae: 40,000
    New weevil species every 41 days.

    Next taxonomical division down...
    Number of species in the "metallic beetle" GENUS Cicindela: 850 (conservative)
    New metallic beetle species every 1930 days (5 years or so).

    So, if creationism is correct, it should be quite straightforward for me to go and catch a mating pair of beetles and watch them evolve before my very eyes. I'll get back to you next week with an answer. Don't hold your breath though.

    Our inability to observe rapid evolution in a mere matter of days is perfectly in line with Darwinian theory and completely at odds with creationism.

    It strikes me that creationism in terms of "kinds" and other nonsense is between a rock and a hard place. If you subdivide the living world into too many "kinds", you cannot fit them all onto that boat. If you subdivide them into too few "kinds", you cannot account for the diversity we see in terms of "microevolution".

    And to predict an obvious objection: rapid evolution after the flood to create the range of species we see, followed by natural selection to create distinct geographical populations of species is simply not supported by patterns of species radiation.

    PS: any input to refining this argument greatly appreciated!

    I once read a similar argument about YEC and how the hell they could explain known distances to other galaxies etc. given creation is only 6000 years old. I copied and pasted it but didn't get the book the forum poster was referencing but I assume it was "Telling Lies for God: Reason vs. Creationism" by Plimer.
    Plimer says that the speed of light, according to creationists, was 200 billion times faster than now to allow everything to have happened in 6000 years. That would have made everything somewhat more energetic. "...if Adam lovingly lit a fire for Eve, than the energy released would have been equivalent to a 50-megaton atomic blast. Adam and Eve produced two children and the energy released during each of the two necessary acts of procreation would be equivalent to an explosion of 500 tons of TNT. This is clearly the origin of the expression 'Did the Earth move for you also, darling?', or perhaps it could be interpreted as the creationist big bang theory." pp. 33-34


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 25,848 ✭✭✭✭Zombrex


    doctoremma wrote: »
    According to creation "science", it should be very easy to observe evolutionary changes on a super-rapid timescale.

    Number of days since the flood: approx 1,642,500.

    Let's start with what might be called a "kind"...
    Number of species in the "beetle" ORDER Coleoptera: 400,000
    New beetle species every 4 days.

    Next taxonomical division down...
    Number of species in the "weevil" FAMILY Circulionidae: 40,000
    New weevil species every 41 days.

    Next taxonomical division down...
    Number of species in the "metallic beetle" GENUS Cicindela: 850 (conservative)
    New metallic beetle species every 1930 days (5 years or so).

    So, if creationism is correct, it should be quite straightforward for me to go and catch a mating pair of beetles and watch them evolve before my very eyes. I'll get back to you next week with an answer. Don't hold your breath though.

    Our inability to observe rapid evolution in a mere matter of days is perfectly in line with Darwinian theory and completely at odds with creationism.

    It strikes me that creationism in terms of "kinds" and other nonsense is between a rock and a hard place. If you subdivide the living world into too many "kinds", you cannot fit them all onto that boat. If you subdivide them into too few "kinds", you cannot account for the diversity we see in terms of "microevolution".

    And to predict an obvious objection: rapid evolution after the flood to create the range of species we see, followed by natural selection to create distinct geographical populations of species is simply not supported by patterns of species radiation.

    PS: any input to refining this argument greatly appreciated!

    Apparently all that stopped, just before we started looking, for some unknown reason. Go figure :P


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 145 ✭✭gkell3


    Zombrex wrote: »
    Again what is the point of engaging in these debates if you have no interest in learning what these things are? You seem to have already made up your mind that the scientific method doesn't work, that it is all about trusting scientists and thus the only scientists you trust are the ones that share your religious view point and the other ones have clouded judgement.

    The setup is that minor Christian nuisances have a creationist view of life on the planet and the other nuisances promoting the 'scientific method' have a creationist view of Church history which actually led to the proliferation of the 'scientific method' and the enormous damage it is doing in astronomical and terrestrial sciences where interpretation rather than speculation/prediction is required.

    I am staring at an intellectual apocalypse that nobody feels responsible for,cannot work out themselves even though it undermines matters of faith and the study of natural and celestial phenomena and for all the world it looks like the agency of the devil for no script could have conjured up something as terrible as this as it plays out over centuries.

    The Pope in Galileo's time not only had legitimate objections as to the predictive elements of heliocentric ideology for nothing matches the destructive 'scientific agenda' that arose a century and a half later when they started to model the solar system using a specific process designed around right ascension.The interpretative elements which comprise the bulk of the work of Copernicus could be treated separately without the slightest objection yet a confluence of factors conspired to leave the door open for the current mess where those interpretative approaches were jettisoned by the modeling crowd in the late 17th century.

    I do not expect anyone to actually comprehend the technical details nor is it a support for the Church's position but this creationist form of history where the Church appears desperate to keep the Earth at the center of the Universe,and apparently mainstream Christians accept this history received through empiricist views, doesn't rise above the level of the dumbest keyfigure in the whole affair,in this case Caccini -

    http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/galileo/keyfigures.html

    There is not the slightest hint of responsibility from the contemporary Church that it knows what it is driven by ,not even the barest comprehension what the technical issues which separate the predictive convenience beloved by the 'scientific method' crowd from the interpretative astronomy it has almost destroyed.The empiricists themselves freely acknowledge that they couldn't trace the method by which Newton achieved his results yet I read him like a newspaper and can see clearly what he was up to and at the core of the 'scientific method' was the elevation of Newton's work -

    "Newton singlehandedly contributed more to the development of science than any other individual in history. He surpassed all the gains brought about by the great scientific minds of antiquity, producing a scheme of the universe which was more consistent, elegant, and intuitive than any proposed before. Newton stated explicit principles of scientific methods which applied universally to all branches of science."

    http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Newton.html

    Considering the unrelenting assault on the faith of individuals by the followers of a toxic strain of Royal Society empiricism,Christians have a good reason to revisit the Galileo affair and the issues surrounding it because it was here so much damage was done by all parties involved.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,870 ✭✭✭doctoremma


    gkell3 wrote: »
    the proliferation of the 'scientific method' and the enormous damage it is doing in astronomical and terrestrial sciences where interpretation rather than speculation/prediction is required.
    You appear to have some kind of axe to grind with modern astronomy. Or ancient astronomy. Or the Christian church. Or maybe you love Chrsitianity. I can't tell, your posts are rather verbose. However, it's clear (I think) that you claim the scientific method is somehow doing enormous damage to our study in terrestrial and extra-terrestrial sciences. Do you have an alternative approach? How have YOU approached your studies?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 145 ✭✭gkell3


    doctoremma wrote: »
    You appear to have some kind of axe to grind with modern astronomy. Or ancient astronomy. Or the Christian church. Or maybe you love Chrsitianity. I can't tell, your posts are rather verbose. However, it's clear (I think) that you claim the scientific method is somehow doing enormous damage to our study in terrestrial and extra-terrestrial sciences. Do you have an alternative approach? How have YOU approached your studies?

    I am not running a popularity contest, judging anyone specifically nor give a damn about being judged myself as this is dealing with the wreckage of Western astronomy and the dilution of historical and technical perspectives to a level not seen before on this planet.

    There is no such thing as modern astronomy unless you call it a dumping ground for theorists 'astronomy' and it doesn't bother anyone in the slightest that the same theorists couldn't tell you why a 24 hour day keeps on step with one rotation of the Earth and if people can't recognize that as severe damage then I do not know what would.

    The standard of discussion is meant to be raised for Christians who truly wish to discover what the actual objections were to planetary dynamics and why these objections were well founded and not that shallow creationist view of history imposed on the issue of planetary dynamics by the 'scientific method' crowd who never get beyond the idea that the Church opposed anything that disturbs the Earth as the center of the Universe.They have been given a free run by the Church itself who has shown no inclination whatsoever to deal honestly with the topics.

    If the issue was dealt with properly none of this would have happened,that it did still requires an in-depth treatment which returns not only a stable narrative to astronomy but returns the astronomical discipline as a vibrant facet within Christianity.You have these browbeaten Christians playing victim to empiricism,and they are not creationists who are free to believe what they want,but Christians who are trying to sound like they actually understand the junk expounded by empiricism under the name of astronomy.The fact is that even empiricists themselves once fought to clean up their own act but failed as the attraction of easy answers ,shortcuts and the unrestricted choices they give themselves turn science into a comedy that it is.

    "This empiricism, the melancholy heritage transmitted to us from
    former times, invariably contends for the truth of its axioms with the
    arrogance of a narrowminded spirit. Physical philosophy, on the other
    hand, when based upon science, doubts because it seeks to investigate,
    distinguishes between that which is certain and that which is merely
    probable, and strives incessantly to perfect theory by extending the
    circle of observation.
    "This assemblage of imperfect dogmas bequeathed by one age to another—
    this physical philosophy, which is composed of popular prejudices,—is
    not only injurious because it perpetuates error with the obstinacy
    engendered by the evidence of ill observed facts, but also because it
    hinders the mind from attaining to higher views of nature. Instead of
    seeking to discover the mean or medium point, around which oscillate,
    in apparent independence of forces, all the phenomena of the external
    world, this system delights in multiplying exceptions to the law, and
    seeks, amid phenomena and in organic forms, for something beyond the
    marvel of a regular succession, and an internal and progressive
    development. Ever inclined to believe that the order of nature is
    disturbed, it refuses to recognise in the present any analogy with the
    past, and guided by its own varying hypotheses, seeks at hazard,
    either in the interior of the globe or in the regions of space, for
    the cause of these pretended perturbations. It is the special object
    of the present work to combat those errors which derive their source
    from a vicious empiricism and from imperfect inductions."
    Homboldt ,Cosmos


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,870 ✭✭✭doctoremma


    gkell1/2/3, please, for the love of anything scientific and succinct, quit with the stream-of-consciousness offload. You dn't publish papers with that language, desist here.

    If it helps, you can use bullet points.

    Now, what were you saying?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 145 ✭✭gkell3


    doctoremma wrote: »
    gkell1/2/3, please, for the love of anything scientific and succinct, quit with the stream-of-consciousness offload. You dn't publish papers with that language, desist here.

    If it helps, you can use bullet points.

    Now, what were you saying?

    Never getting the point is an empirical defense, a form of protective stupidity of a mind snapped shut to anything other than what it chooses to let in.The creationist view of history by empiricists parallels the creationist dummies in their approach to terrestrial sciences yet the creationist could probably manage to reach a level where they could say that one 24 hour day keeps in step with one rotation of the Earth,something empiricists simply cannot do.Who has objected to the 'scientific method' ?,I see no other Christians with a sense that there is more than one way to approach creation just as there is to Christianity itself.

    What I see here in this forum says more about the standard of Christianity and how Christians approach their history and their heritage than it does about the truly dismal 'scientific method' bunch who seeking the 'mind of God' end up getting the dreary 'mind of the devil' instead.This intellectual apocalypse is not just failing to see God in creation but also failing to see the devil in man.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,254 ✭✭✭tommy2bad


    gkell3 can you give us an explanation of what this 24 hour day thing means in a simple way we can understand, better yet a link to something explaining the dilemma you see?
    Myself I haven't the foggiest what your on about!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 145 ✭✭gkell3


    tommy2bad wrote: »
    gkell3 can you give us an explanation of what this 24 hour day thing means in a simple way we can understand, better yet a link to something explaining the dilemma you see?
    Myself I haven't the foggiest what your on about!

    Sorry son,I have already done that multiple times without the slightest sign that Christians or non Christians have a problem with a 1465 rotation/1461 day imbalance which is central to Newton's agenda and the 'scientific method'.

    I could probably tell you that all the things you experienced within the 24 hours of today is due to a rotating Earth but I doubt very much you would get the point why it remains that way day after day and no divergence occurs never mind getting into the ins and outs of Church history surrounding planetary dynamics and the Galileo affair.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,254 ✭✭✭tommy2bad


    gkell3 wrote: »
    Sorry son,I have already done that multiple times without the slightest sign that Christians or non Christians have a problem with a 1465 rotation/1461 day imbalance which is central to Newton's agenda and the 'scientific method'.

    I could probably tell you that all the things you experienced within the 24 hours of today is due to a rotating Earth but I doubt very much you would get the point why it remains that way day after day and no divergence occurs never mind getting into the ins and outs of Church history surrounding planetary dynamics and the Galileo affair.

    OK I've googled 1465rotation 1461 imbalance and all results are about education reform, Christians and calendar reform. Strange thing is all the posters on this subject use the same strange phrasing and odd intonation as you. Ether you all come from the same school of nonsense or... your the only one and you get around.
    Sample post from here; http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/Archive/Uk/uk.religion.christian/2010-10/msg00192.html
    Here is how it actually works and it is there for people to enjoy,it
    is more involved however the more detailed account can be dealt with
    separately keeping in mind that this is not just a Christian heritage
    but something exquisite we inherit from antiquity.
    Sound familiar?

    All get good sound explanations that they keep ignoring and repeating the same accusation without an explanation, all keep saying that it so obvious their disappointed no one else sees the contradiction.
    :confused:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,870 ✭✭✭doctoremma


    gkell3 wrote: »
    Never getting the point is an empirical defense, a form of protective stupidity of a mind snapped shut to anything other than what it chooses to be.
    Do you ever think, just for one second of one minute, that the reason the people trying to listen to you don't understand what you're saying is because you're not explaining yourself adequately? Perhaps it's more likely than the premise that the entire scientific community is somehow thicker than you?

    Just a thought. Public engagement and all that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,080 ✭✭✭lmaopml


    Morbert wrote: »
    You're clearly ignorant of these salient words:

    "Doubtful it stood;
    As two spent swimmers, that do cling together
    And choke their art. The merciless Macdonwald--
    Worthy to be a rebel, for to that
    The multiplying villanies of nature
    Do swarm upon him--from the western isles
    Of kerns and gallowglasses is supplied;
    And fortune, on his damned quarrel smiling,
    Show'd like a rebel's whore: but all's too weak:
    For brave Macbeth--well he deserves that name--
    Disdaining fortune, with his brandish'd steel,
    Which smoked with bloody execution,
    Like valour's minion carved out his passage
    Till he faced the slave;
    Which ne'er shook hands, nor bade farewell to him,
    Till he unseam'd him from the nave to the chaps,
    And fix'd his head upon our battlements." -- Sergeant

    pml, that's an odd poetic outburst Morbert. Love it!

    Ah Macbeth, galliant, but driven mad to the bone by his arrogance, kingship and paranoia - the human condition, that Shakespeare expresses so perfectly. Humans huh? aren't we all...:D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 276 ✭✭Wh1stler


    doctoremma wrote: »
    Do you ever think, just for one second of one minute, that the reason the people trying to listen to you don't understand what you're saying is because you're not explaining yourself adequately? Perhaps it's more likely than the premise that the entire scientific community is somehow thicker than you?

    Just a thought. Public engagement and all that.

    I think that gkell considers the orbital path of the earth as being a 'straight' line from the perspective of the earth as it is in free-fall toward the sun and I have some sympathy with this view.

    The curved path of the earth around the sun gives rise to the fact that earth must experience at least one stellar day per year unless it has retrograde rotation where one rotation per year would mean zero stellar days per year.

    And that's the confusion; how can the earth turn and make the stars appear fixed due to there being no circumploar motion?

    Whereas, if one considers the sun to always be on the 'left-hand side' of the earth then one rotation of the earth does indeed occur once a day.

    Then the extra stellar day can be considered an artifact caused entirely by the motion of a non-rotating earth in orbit aroun the sun.

    This seems reasonable to me but we are still left with 1465 stellar days per 1461 solar days; or 1461 rotations of the earth plus four orbits of the sun per four years.

    Consider this; a photon travels through space in the viscinity of a black-hole causing the path of the photon to be 'bent'. A photon travelling along a curved path will experience 'circumpolar' motion; can we say that the photon has acquired 'spin'? Couldn't a photon possibly be 'tidally locked' to a black hole?

    It's the same force being applied to the earth therefore doesn't it stand to reason that the same effect would be produced?

    Perhaps Morbet would like to shed some non-spinning photons on this.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 145 ✭✭gkell3


    doctoremma wrote: »
    Do you ever think, just for one second of one minute, that the reason the people trying to listen to you don't understand what you're saying is because you're not explaining yourself adequately? Perhaps it's more likely than the premise that the entire scientific community is somehow thicker than you?

    Just a thought. Public engagement and all that.

    Today is Saturday,it is both one 24 hour day and one rotation of the Earth which will be followed by Sunday which is another 24 hour day and another rotation of the Earth and on it goes.It is as natural as breathing to a reasonable person as they have no reason to believe that all the experiences they have today such as daylight turns to darkness is due to anything other than one rotation of our planet.

    When the 'scientific method' crowd comes along and determine that there are 1465 rotations in 1461 days,it is supposed to register as something really wrong,the rotations of the Earth we give names such as Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and so on no longer mesh with days of the week and if that sounds absurd then it is,but that is what empiricism insists.

    At least the Pharisees could interpret the concept of weather between one day and the next day hence the questioning of Jesus in Matthew 16 whereas in this dismal era not even that relationship between daily temperature rises and falls and rotation survives as a fact for how can it with the refusal to accept that there are 1461 rotations in 1461 days.

    Christians indeed !.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 145 ✭✭gkell3


    lmaopml wrote: »
    Humans huh? aren't we all...:D

    You have to be human to understand this -

    "The Pharisees and Sadducees came and, to test him, asked him to show them a sign from heaven.
    He said to them in reply, "(In the evening you say, 'Tomorrow will be fair, for the sky is red';and, in the morning, 'Today will be stormy, for the sky is red and threatening.' You know how to judge the appearance of the sky, but you cannot judge the signs of the times.)" Matthew 16

    At least the Pharisees could interpret the sky yet couldn't interpret God in creation and in the words of Jesus,in this dismaying era with its mindless speculations,you don't even rise to the level of the Pharisees -

    "The Earth spins on its axis about 366 and 1/4 times each year, but there are only 365 and 1/4 days per year."

    http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/ask_astro/answers/970714.html

    The Earth turns once in a day and a thousand times in a thousand days so when humanity turns away from this primary experience of God's creation for no other reason than it chooses to,it defies the gift of intelligence we are all blessed with.Let you join the empiricist in their intellectual apocalypse because that is what it is.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,870 ✭✭✭doctoremma


    gkell3 wrote: »
    Today is Saturday,it is both one 24 hour day and one rotation of the Earth which will be followed by Sunday which is another 24 hour day and another rotation of the Earth and on it goes.
    This subject is entirely novel to me so the following could be complete rubbish...

    A solar day averages out to 24 hours. Is anyone arguing is? Given that the definition of hour was defined by the solar day, it would be 24 hours per solar day, regardless of an absolute value.

    From some quick reading of the most basic of resources, the solar day is longer than the day as measured by stars much further away, because the earth doesn't move very much relative to them (while it clearly moves relative to the sun). Because of the earth's rotation and shifting position around the sun, it takes a slightly shorter time for the distant stars to get back to the same place in the sky?

    So the earth's 'absolute' rotation time is 23:56 but because we are moving around a closer star by which we set our clocks, we have a slightly longer 'apparent rotation' in terms of time, which corresponds to a slightly longer than a 360 degree rotation?

    When you count the number of perceived rotations that a star close to a polar star makes in each solar year, how many is it?
    gkell3 wrote: »
    When the 'scientific method' crowd comes along and determine that there are 1465 rotations in 1461 days
    But the '1465 rotations' part is in reference to a different object to the reference point used to determine the '1461 days'. Aren't you conflating two separate measurements?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 145 ✭✭gkell3


    doctoremma wrote: »
    But the '1465 rotations' part is in reference to a different object to the reference point used to determine the '1461 days'. Aren't you conflating two separate measurements?

    I am not the first to spot this intellectual apocalypse but I am the first to tackle it head on through the technical details.The poets had an instinctive repulsion for the clockwork solar system and the minds that bred it -

    "I turn my eyes to the Schools & Universities of Europe
    And there behold the Loom of Locke whose Woof rages dire
    Washd by the Water-wheels of Newton. black the cloth
    In heavy wreathes folds over every Nation; cruel Works
    Of many Wheels I view, wheel without wheel, with cogs tyrannic
    Moving by compulsion each other: not as those in Eden: which
    Wheel within Wheel in freedom revolve in harmony & peace."
    Jerusalem ,William Blake

    The Christian is supposed to remain steadfast at the point that one 24 hour day keeps in step with one rotation of the planet and all the great gifts of God they experience within that day whether it is a Monday or a Wednesday,each day and each rotation following each other with the Earth turning once a day and ten thousand times in ten thousand days.It is nothing short of betrayal should they follow what is effectively a late 17th century parasitic Ra/Dec conception attached to the main Lat/Long system and the AM/PM cycles that keep the 24 hour days fixed to the 1461 daily rotations enclosed in 4 years/4 orbital circuits of the Earth.

    Christians who entertain the empiricist community and its 1465 rotation/1461 day imbalance which is as unsightly as it is unacceptable are complicit in this intellectual holocaust for it is not possible to even begin to enjoy creation and the work of the great astronomers without that fundamental point of departure.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,686 ✭✭✭✭PDN


    I must say that the Creationism thread is like the Godfather movies - number 2 is turning out to be much more entertaining than the original.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,870 ✭✭✭doctoremma


    gkell3 wrote: »
    I am not the first to spot this intellectual apocalypse but I am the first to tackle it head on through the technical details.
    You aren't tackling anything. Your posts are devoid of scientific content and full of quotes from poets. I am clearly not going to learn anything from you - I can't even discern if you have anything to teach.

    I asked a specific question which you didn't answer but which might help me. When you track the movement of a circumpolar star, how many rotations do you see in one whole solar year? I don't know that answer, I don't know if it's relevant, but I'm guessing it consists of a single number, not a Shakespearean sonnet. What is that number?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 276 ✭✭Wh1stler


    PDN wrote: »
    I must say that the Creationism thread is like the Godfather movies - number 2 is turning out to be much more entertaining than the original.

    :eek: Sacrilige!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 276 ✭✭Wh1stler


    doctoremma wrote: »
    When you count the number of perceived rotations that a star close to a polar star makes in each solar year, how many is it?


    366.25 (ish)

    doctoremma wrote: »
    But the '1465 rotations' part is in reference to a different object to the reference point used to determine the '1461 days'. Aren't you conflating two separate measurements?


    Yes. There is an extra stellar day every year (4 x 366.25 = 1465) due to the earth's rotation.


    If the earth was tidally locked to the sun then the same side of the earth would constantly face the sun in the same way as one side of the moon always faces the earth. In such a situation the earth would experience one stellar day but zero solar days per year.


    gkell and I contend that a tidally locked object has zero rotation and only appears to rotate because it travels along a curved path.

    To say the the moon rotates is to say that photons in the viscinity of a strong gravitational field acquire spin.


    As far as I know, physics objects to this, asserting, as it does, that photons always travel in a straight line. I am happy with this but they can't change the rules just because it is a planet or moon that is travelling in a straight line through curved space.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,870 ✭✭✭doctoremma


    Wh1stler wrote: »
    366.25 (ish). There is an extra stellar day every year (4 x 366.25 = 1465) due to the earth's rotation.
    So the apparent mismatch of numbers is perfectly valid - the number of rotations can be different depending on your reference point (and how you are moving compared to it)? That seems intuitive to me.
    Wh1stler wrote: »
    If the earth was tidally locked to the sun then the same side of the earth would constantly face the sun in the same way as one side of the moon always faces the earth.
    Ok, following this...
    Wh1stler wrote: »
    In such a situation the earth would experience one stellar day but zero solar days per year.
    Yep, still with you...
    Wh1stler wrote: »
    gkell and I contend that a tidally locked object has zero rotation and only appears to rotate because it travels along a curved path.
    So this is where it starts to sound wrong to me (which, of course, has no bearing on whether it actually IS wrong!). To us on earth, the moon doesn't appear to rotate. To an observer outside the earth-moon system, the moon rotates in absolute space, no? If the moon didn't rotate in absolute space, it would move around the earth in only a translational fashion and therefore, we would see different surfaces of the moon?
    Wh1stler wrote: »
    To say the the moon rotates is to say that photons in the viscinity of a strong gravitational field acquire spin. As far as I know, physics objects to this, asserting, as it does, that photons always travel in a straight line. I am happy with this but they can't change the rules just because it is a planet or moon that is travelling in a straight line through curved space.
    Well, I'm completely unable to address this as I don't know a huge amount about light/photons/spins/etc, except to say that don't lots of things start to get weird when you deal with light and quantum particles as compared to bodies with large mass?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 145 ✭✭gkell3


    doctoremma wrote: »
    You aren't tackling anything. Your posts are devoid of scientific content and full of quotes from poets. I am clearly not going to learn anything from you - I can't even discern if you have anything to teach.

    I asked a specific question which you didn't answer but which might help me. When you track the movement of a circumpolar star, how many rotations do you see in one whole solar year? I don't know that answer, I don't know if it's relevant, but I'm guessing it consists of a single number, not a Shakespearean sonnet. What is that number?

    For whatever reason it is not sinking in and in common sense language you are missing the mark and not getting the point,the older Christian idea of what 'sin' is.

    Many Christians share with you the inability to comprehend that today Saturday 14th of April is both a 24 hour day and a rotation of our planet and that correspondence between one day and one rotation never,ever diverges as one 24 hour day as one rotation progresses to the next

    The struggle is not science vs Christianity or reason vs faith,it is a struggle against irrelevance that is the central issue.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,254 ✭✭✭tommy2bad


    Wh1stler wrote: »
    366.25 (ish)





    Yes. There is an extra stellar day every year (4 x 366.25 = 1465) due to the earth's rotation.

    OK,
    If the earth was tidally locked to the sun then the same side of the earth would constantly face the sun in the same way as one side of the moon always faces the earth. In such a situation the earth would experience one stellar day but zero solar days per year.
    OK

    gkell and I contend that a tidally locked object has zero rotation and only appears to rotate because it travels along a curved path.

    To say the the moon rotates is to say that photons in the viscinity of a strong gravitational field acquire spin.
    But it dose rotate, one lunar day is 27.3 days, equivalent to our month approx? It's rotation is held in check by gravitational friction in sync with the earth.

    As far as I know, physics objects to this, asserting, as it does, that photons always travel in a straight line. I am happy with this but they can't change the rules just because it is a planet or moon that is travelling in a straight line through curved space.
    I still don't get what apocalypse ye are on about.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 145 ✭✭gkell3


    Wh1stler wrote: »


    gkell and I contend that a tidally locked object has zero rotation and only appears to rotate because it travels along a curved path.

    Let the moderator deal with that nonsense otherwise there is no point to a forum.



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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,686 ✭✭✭✭PDN


    tommy2bad wrote: »
    I still don't get what apocalypse ye are on about.

    I think it's the one where Christians get on with their lives and concentrate on stuff like loving one another and living out their faith rather than getting worked up about how many times the earth spins in a year.


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