OK...
> He also made the abstract concept of measurement during this 6 day
> period( assume,assume).
Don't think that works. Abstract concepts are not made, nor are they
physical properties of things. That is pretty much independent from
the religious or scientific beliefs - Theologians typically argue
that even God can't change the laws of logic, simply because they are
not "laws" in that sense. as soon as you have anything, you can mesure
it, "being measurable" is not an additional quality it can acquire
later. So your sentence is meaningless i the true sense of the word,
>Assume only humans can measure things.
Fine, though I don't see how it helps you (and what about angels, and
God, and any of the other non human but intelligent agents in the
bible/)
> Thus any measurement of anything was only possible when God told Adam
> to label the animals.
As I said, that idea is not even intelligible. The animals were
measurable, e.g. had one specific number, as soon as they were reated,
and independent fro the question if someone is around who could
actually count them.
> D>uring the creation event the very concept of
> measuring anything,including the speed of light did not exist.
Well, if you think of the creation moment as singularity, a bit like
the big bang, that had no extension in time, that would work. But that
of course contradicts the biblical idea tha the creation took 6 days -
which is of course an explicit statement of a time measurement.
> Problem with this argument for one is that it is utterly
> unfalsifiable. This would be a problem if God himself didn't state: He
> calleth those things that be not as though they were. Thus from the
> premise of unfalsifiability follow the conclusion of unfalsifiable
> faith .
I think you misunderstand why unfalsifibale proposition, especially
"strong unfalsifiable propositions" (that is, not jut unfalsifiable
with present measurement equipment, but in principle unfalsifiable)
are a problem.
First, while your position can't be refuted, you also lose the ability
to use to to refute anyone else's position. Sure, we can assume for
the moment that the world is 6000 years old, and then adjust lots of
stuff to make this fit with all possible observations. But why 6000?
Why not 6 days? Or 7000 years? Or 60000, 600000, 6bn, 60bn, 600bn? We
can use the same approach of "assuming" the starting point, and then
to rearrange everything around it as you have done above, and by
definition, there is no way to distinguish between the legitimacy of
one assumption over the other. Let's assume Discordia created the
world 6 days ago. Or lets assume that Brahma started dreaming the
present universe about 4,320,000,000 years ago. Now IF you treat these
as statements about material reality, and IF at the same time you take
them as unfalsifiable assumptions justified by faith, they (and any
other number) is just as good as yours.
Now, some religions may be willing to bite that bullet - all those
religions that reject proselyting e.g will have fewer problems. But
most think it is possible to convince other people of their belief,
something you lose in principle through your approach. That is where
Ray Martinez started criticising you last time round - your
"assumption" approach makes religious choice with necessity arbitrary,
fully subjective and in a way very postmodern.
It also raises the issue why you post on a NG like this one - on your
own terms, there is nothing that you can possibly learn here that can
change your mind, and there is also nothing you can say that can
legitimately change the mind of others. All discussion becomes futile,
and "agreeing to disagree" the only and immediate choice.
There is another set of difficulties for you though. You are always
able to prevent your assumptions from being falsified by data, but
some of the adjustments can be a problem for the internal consistency
of your own approach. As I said elsewhere, our knowledge, in
particular our scientific knowledge, forms a net where all parts "fit"
and support each other.
Changing parts of it very often has unforeseen ripple effects at other
parts.Changing the speed of light in the past for instance will mean
to make lots and lots of adjustments in all other sorts of physical
theories. I'm not a physicist, and have no idea how much you can
"contain" changes like this, but I guess is that you'd have to make
massive adjustments and introduce more and more assumptions in fields
of our knowledge that seem to be far removed and look unrelated to
the age of the earth.
again, this might be bullet you are willing to bite, but your troubles
don't stop with physics. Essentially, your line of argument leads to
radical scepticism towards our knowledge of the past - any inference
of observations now can't be any longer extrapolated to the past. And
that makes all reports from the past also unintelligible for the
present. _all_ reports, including the Bible. In your cosmology,
certain things we experience as constant now speed of light e.g.)
would have changed with rapid speed, others that we experience now as
changing may have been constant then (as above, you will have to
introduce many more assumptions to make your model consistent). and
that means that people in the past would have experienced, and
described, a very different world.
There is no guarantee any longer, in your approach, that when the
bible talks of 6 days of creation, 40 years in the desert, 3 days on
the cross etc that these words mean anything like what they mean for
today's readers. All measurements might have been radically out of
line with what we experience and measure today, 4 years then may have
been 4000 or 0.4 years "in today's measurements" etc.
And this only uses those changes to standard model of the universe
that you make explicitly. Your _type_ of argument goes potentially
much further. How do we know that in biblical times, people did not
have green scales on their bodies and fangs? Well, because we
extrapolate backwards from what we observe today, but according to
your approach, this is illegitimate (it says noewehre in the bible
that people did NOT have green scales and fangs..)
So in your approach, both with the restricted assumptions you make
explicitly, and even more so when one is using the type of argument
you do, the Bible just like any other old human record becomes
meaningless for us, unreliable and devoid of _any_ intelligible
factual content. We have no idea any more if the words used there
comport anything like their modern meaning to us.
>
> The same type of faith I use to speak this language the Lord Jesus
> gave me at age 12:
http://www.esnips.com/displayimage.php?album=4868690&pid=34103247#top...
Sorry can't quite see what that is supposed to be evidence of.