Posted on 03/09/2006 11:30:41 PM PST by Tim Long
Got an answer?
Or just smartass remarks?
Is it worse to toss out 150 years of "science" or 5000 years of religion? Modern science though nothing of tossing the previous several hundred years of science out on its ear when it came time to reject God and his Providential Governance of the world.
As to my lumping disciplines under evolutionism, that is what Lyellism in geology does, for example. Unprovable uniformitarianism of rates (no one was there to observe if the rates were the same even 20,000 years ago, let alone 20,000,000 or 2,000,000,000) and a sophistic rejection of catastrophism are part and parcel of the evolutionary theory. Evolutionism is not confined to Darwin and Co. in the Biology Dept. The other atheistic sciences are just as firmly committed to seeing that no evidence ever surfaces to question this neo-Orthodoxy of a religion.
You missed by this much, but you are getting closer to the truth.
It was, "a miraculous feat of shipbuilding.
I have no idea what history books you read but there is no question that the use of metals is what gave the name to eras. Daniel had nothing to do with it since his model is even more vague that that you object to.
A little snippy?
It never ceases to amaze me how angry unbelievers are.
Relax...
Again, you have no answer.
Double bunking?
Time/space shifting?
3:1 File compression (zip)?
And last, but not least, Bose noise-canceling headphones.
What if the tail of a comet, composed entirely of ice, were to pass close to the earth? Wouldn't that create a huge rainstorm? I think the Bible mentions the waters under or within the earth, and we do know about ground water and artesian wells. Couldn't a lot of water flowed under the earth's crust if a large earthquake created a deep crack?
Just a couple of possibilities.
Not being an expert I can't say so with any authority, but I think the Tower of Babel, which is post flood time period, was somewhere around 2,500 B.C. Even Biblical scholars don't know for sure, but that's an approximate guess.
I don't see what good it does you. Let's cut to the key premise of your marvelous flood geology.
Now we can see our major disagreement is not the mechanism of widespread flooding (so lets not hear anymore about how its impossible for the world to be flooded), because we both believe that it happened, but at what time it occurred, and why.
We have no agreement on mechanism that I know of, which you acknowledge by adding the "and why" at the end. You also forgot to include "for how long."
You also forgot to include "How do we know which one?" You see, my region has at least three periods of being underwater, of which that in the Silurian is but the latest. None of them match up in any way with your Cretaceous inundation out west. None of them individually look like the flood of Noah.
Masking all the "floods" throughout history in a big Boolean AND to try to cover more ground will not fly for people with a brain, either, since I have three of them just in my part of the geologic column. They clearly did not happen at the same time if superposition means anything.
There seem to be at least that many out west. The Grand Canyon's very top layer is already too old to be from your Cretaceous inundation. Nevertheless, the top two levels (the Kaibab and Toroweap Limestones) are marine sediment, but the younder is 250 million years old. There are dry-desert sandstones and dry-land shales before the next marine limetones. Then you get more shales, etc.
Let me anticipate a dumb-bleepism from somebody or other. How do we know the top layer isn't young? Aside from any fossil and radiometric character, if you continue away from the canyon itself the "top" layers vanish under other layers. Stratigraphically, they're quite far down the column as the canyon is a very eroded region. Note the graphic on that page and where the Kaibab limesone falls. But here's the stratigraphy of the canyon itself.
Now, limestone is from lots of calcium-shelled critters dying and dropping to the bottom in a process usually thought to take lots of time. (Otherwise, ridiculous numbers of the little buggers need to be alive and struggling for room/food/love all at once.) Shales are hardened mud, often very finely layered to suggest some sort of periodic deposition and hardening. How one flood puts a few million years worth of fossil sea critters into a layer of limestone with fine layers of hardening mud over that, then some more layers of fossil sea critters, then some more layered mud, then a big thickness of desert sandstone, then some more limestone .... That's some flood story you got there. What those lavas are doing interspersed with your flood sediments is another question, since they aren't pillow lava from underwater extrusion. What that crazy tilted unconformity is doing in there is another question.
Again, since no one was there according to the millions of years ago theory...
That's right, there was nobody there. Nobody. Eyewitness testimony is a tad below physical evidence in reliability anyway.
...I don't see how there is certainty that the flooding wasn't simultaneous...
I don't see how that's anyone else's problem. I've already caught you totally misstating the evidence for the geological ages in common use. You are obviously unfamiliar, no doubt militantly so, with those parts of science which you are throwing out, which is most of it.
No doubt you will continue to think it unfair but you don't have a horse to put in the race just now. Pig-ignorantism won't run.
You: Why does the world look old?
Hello? Read it again, OK?
So massive horizontal worldwide sedimentation ...
Looks like a description of the geologic column. No way that's one great flood, no.
... with essentially unidirectional paleocurrent indicators isn't indication of a world-wide flood?
Looks like gibberish. "Unidirectional paleocurrents?"
Except that we usually don't.
"You" don't seem very reasonable.
placemarker
What physical evidence? Where has anyone ever actually observed sedementary rocks made to know that it took X years to do so? You are just grasping at straws of suppositions that you are claiming no one is allowed to question.
That looks like a cliff face to me...
I'm more interested in that mountain I believe its in Syria, where the top half of the mountain is all blackened... that seems a much more interesting study...
My faith is my answer.
I thought you'd have figured that out with your scientific mind.
You said: "Wyatt Archaeological Research claimed they had a sample fo Christs' blood."
I would like to see the DNA analyisis of that one.
This tinfoil trash pops up every year. Even CBS once broadcast a "fake but accurate" documentary about finding Noah's Ark.
Sorry - the Iron Age was called such because mankind began using weapons and tools made of iron - which were much harder than the previous weapons and tools made of bronze - from the Bronze Age, which in turn had replaced the earlier Copper Age with it's even softer copper weapons and tools.
None of these names have anything to do with Nebuchannezer's (or anyone else's) dream.
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