Posted on 01/23/2009 8:11:29 AM PST by GodGunsGuts
A Brief History of Intolerance in Modern Cosmology
by Dr. Jerry Bergman
January 21, 2009
Abstract
A review of some recent well-documented cases of intolerance in the cosmology field illustrates a common problem in science. Many relate to the Big Bang theory, such as the case of Geoffrey and Margaret Burbidge and Halton Arp. None of the accounts involved Intelligent Design advocates or creationists. This selection removes this compounding factor from the evaluation, but the cases have direct relevance to both Intelligent Design and creationism because both groups face the same resistance. It was concluded that it is critical for science to advance that new ideas must be evaluated on the evidence and not because they challenge established science. This problem has persisted during the entire history of science, the most well known example being Galileo...
(Excerpt) Read more at answersingenesis.org ...
ABG-Anything But God.
Here's a scenario: You, being a believer in a young earth, naturally teach your children the same as fact, it's what you believe reality to be, right? So why not?
The kiddie’s school science course’ approved and vetted teaching is that the some version of the “BiG Bang” (hereafter BB) is fact and truth and reality. But your kiddies aver not and explain Dad says ‘au contraire!’ to BB.
But if the BB really is fact, and you, being familiar with the BB, deny that reality, isn't that a fair definition of mental imbalance? Denying reality in the face of overwhelming fact? Hmmm. Infinite possibilities here!
But you, being an adult, the school psychologist says may believe any error you wish but teaching craziness to little Johnny or Johnette is child abuse and must be reported to “The Proper Authorities”.
Bring in the skinny broad social worker clutching a clipboard to her chest because she “knows how men are!” to quiz the kiddies about “all the other abuse” and you can finish the story.
You will believe, the truth is out where?
Scientists may not know what caused it, but folks who believe in God can assume that He brought it into being.
I hadn't read your comments, before I posted mine, and I've never heard of Gerald Schroeder, but it seems I was thinking the same thing as he!
we’ve plowed this ground before but when you wish give a shout and I’ll gird my loins, draw my sword, lace up my boots, jump in the saddle, aahhh.....what have I left out?
The Age of the Universe
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1576941/posts
The link to this thread has been posted in crevo debates several times with very little response to it.
Notice the original thread has very little evo participation. What little there is is mostly derision, as expected.
For all the demands by evos to back up Scripture with science, they are clearly not interested in seriously considering the matter.
Hell must have frozen over, but I agree with you GGG.
Science now seems to be more about funding and grants than anything else.
Also Swordmakers ideas on the Electric Universe seem to fit the facts better than the standard cosmology.
More answers might manifest themselves if they would only ask Him, but I dunno. God will reveal to us what He wants to revealed to us, nothing more.
That said, I don't begrudge the Scientific Community their desire to explore. I enjoy hearing and reading about new discoveries and Man's tilting at frontiers. God gave us an inquisitive mind and the freedom to let it roam. I submit we, in the main, may not use it altogether in the way He intended. But freedom is all about making choices...
Meant to add on my previous reply that 44’s apparent enamorment with the Scientific Method, but more specifically to the Scientific Community, is indicative of the sad state of science. Science can now best be described as Political Science.
I’ve been arguing for a while that science is not immune to godless liberals (hijacking evolution theory) no more than anything else:
journalism
law
politics
history
etc.
==weve plowed this ground before but when you wish give a shout and Ill gird my loins, draw my sword, lace up my boots, jump in the saddle
Nothing like that. I was just curious which creationist cosmologies you consider nonsense. Who knows, I might even agree with you. But then again, I don’t recall crossing swords with you on this issue, so perhaps you know a little something about what my response will be that I don’t :o)
All the best—GGG
Maybe God is revealing Himself slowly to those non-believers, using their intellect and the disciplines they have decided to study, to show not only how He created the Universe and everything in it, but the sheer beauty of each system of life as it came into being, and adapted along the way.
In the meantime, we, who already believe He can do all things, can rejoice that those who have difficulty accepting Him through faith alone, can begin to believe through their own careful scientific observations. I'll rejoice for them, when they come to believe, even if they, as Thomas did, have to 'touch' Him in order to do so.
Time to breakout the iceskates :o)
And the wet version of the big bang, wherein the universe was a ball of water 2 light years in diameter, collapsed to form everything. It takes a judo on Genesis to make it support this. As propounded by Dr. Humphreys.
So the further out we see, the further back in time we're looking. And what information about the beginning is that showing us?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observable_universe
The age of the universe is about 13.7 billion years, but due to the expansion of space we are now observing objects that are now considerably farther away than a static 13.7 billion light-years distance. The edge of the observable universe is now located about 46.5 billion light-years away.
Estimates of the matter content of the observable universe indicate that it contains on the order of 10 [to the 80th] atoms. The vast majority of the energy density is contributed by dark matter and dark energy.
One thing it tells us is that there was a beginning, not an easy concept for some, I guess. Another is that if the farthest objects are 13 billion years old we can’t really say much about their condition at this moment seeing they’ve had 13 billion years to change or not.
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