christian_soldier
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Orion said:1. How you get a universe that has the age of billions of years ....
Please state your source. :roll:
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Orion said:1. How you get a universe that has the age of billions of years ....
Orion said:1. How you get a universe that has the age of billions of years ....
christian_soldier said:Please state your source. :roll:
There are lots of scientific observations.christian_soldier said:Please state your source. :roll:
These statements are made in consideration that all things are status quo. Man's understanding of the physical realm is tainted with an egotistical "we know best" ideology.Quath said:There are lots of scientific observations.
1. It appears that uranium-238 and 238 were created at the same time. hey are both radioactive and long term, they will decay away and not exist. So using known ratios today, we can calculate when they were equal (50/50). This gives a good indication of the time frame for the star that exploded that created all the elements.
2. We can see galaxies that are billions of light years away. So it took light billions of years to reach us. So the universe should be old enough to allow for light to spend billions of years in travel.
3. We can compare our star (Sun, Sol) to other stars. We know about how fast stars change and we can deduce that our star is about midway through its cycle and is about 5 billion years old.
4. We can tell that galaxies are moving away from each other. At some point every galaxy would havr touched. That time would have been billions of years ago.
5. If the universe had cooled down from a Big Bang billions of years ago, people expected that there should be some background microwave radiation at this cooled down temperature. They not only found this radiation but they were able to use it to determine that spacetime is flat across time.
6. Biologists and geogolists have long argued that the Earth appears old. When you try to scale stuff like features or migrations or DNA mutation rate, you need millions and billions of years to explain it.
7. Radiometric dating is very successful because radiation is very well understood. (It is hard to model but it is understood.) So the methods we use from carbon dating to potassium-argon dating to rubidium-strontium dating are very well understood and give the appearence of a very old earth.
8. Some comets have orbital periods in the millions of years. They appear to come from the same region of space (Oort clud).
So if God created the universe/Earth a few thousand years ago, then he did it in such a way that it looks like he didn't do it.
I guess you can ask God when you see Him face to face. I do not have a problem believing His Word.Orion said:Solo, I've seen that argument before. The "Adam was created with the appearance of age", so the universe could have been too.
That would mean that there is evidence of things that never actually happened. There are supernova remnants that are millions of light years away that would have never actually happened, meaning that God created the remnant of an exploded star, which would be a false history.
The author of the OP is struggling to find out the truth, and he has asked a couple of questions along the way. The age of creation was one of them. No biggie.aLoneVoice said:Just curious about something....
How did this thread go from the OP title of "Am I to forgive one who doesn't ask for it?" to discussing the age of the universe?
:robot: (did he/she/it have something to do with it?!?)
Orion said:Am I to forgive one who doesn't ask for it?
Quath said:This gives a good indication of the time frame for the star that exploded that created all the elements.
Orion said:Solo, I've seen that argument before. The "Adam was created with the appearance of age", so the universe could have been too.
The Big Bang formed spacetime and energy. The energy cooled off and formed some stable configurations (matter). Some cooled down enough to form an endless gas of hydrogen (simple proton). Hydrogen collided enough to make helium and lithium.christian_soldier said::-? And that star came from where and was comprised of what and exploded why? :-?
Quath said:The Big Bang formed spacetime and energy. The energy cooled off and formed some stable configurations (matter). Some cooled down enough to form an endless gas of hydrogen (simple proton). Hydrogen collided enough to make helium and lithium.
The universe kept expanding and cooling. The matter started to clump together and large stars formed. Gravity confined the hydrigen and helium enough to make the heavier elements up to iron.
The star was large and unstable and exploded. This sent huge amounts of neutrons spewing forth that created the heavier elements. Eventually, this stuff started to recollapse into a solar system. So we are all made of nuclear waste (or in more romantic terms -- starstuff).
Potluck said:How about a smaller version of creation to ponder first.
Christ fed the multitudes fish twice in the NT. If you recieved one of these how old would you say it is by what you see in your hand? 4 months? 6 months old? A year?
Would you have believed minutes old? If you weren't told and/or didn't believe they were created anyway you would obviously have estimated their age by the evidence you observed... the fish in your hand.
Can you explain this age difference by what you see? Before tackling the universe it may be best to first ponder the "smaller" miracles of creation.
Orion said:They were in a remote place. Where did all these baskets come from?
That is a very good observation. It is all about the "stretchiness" of space. So space "expanded" (as opposed to matter moving). This expansion was stronger than gravity and may be linked to the dark energy recently discovered.Potluck said:Black holes are believed by "astronomers" to have such a huge gravitational field as to not allow even light to escape. As it "ingests" more matter it grows smaller and stronger feeding on all matter around it. Nothing escapes it's pull. Yet, we ignore this consenses of "astronomers" about black holes as being true but claim that all the mass of the universe was gathered and exploded? All matter would produce quite a gravitational field so how could it explode?
/Pot gets ready for the astronomical exercises in mental gymnastics.
Heh. Not really. Just following the evidence where it leads.christian_soldier said:Wow. You believe all that? You are more a man of faith than I am.
It turns out that cause/effect is something we assume to be real, but quantum mechanics shows that on the deepest level, it is not part of reality. This is what Einsteon objected to but was shown to be wrong about. So the Big Bang doesn't really need a cause or the cause could appear from the Big Crunch. More precisely, we don't know enough about the Big Bang, but we do know that fundamentally the universe does not work on "cause/effect."The Big Bang was caused by WHO?
Orion said:You mean like the miracle not mentioned? The one where 12 baskets were available to "pick up the leftovers"? They were in a remote place. Where did all these baskets come from?
Orion said:Heidi, . . . don't you think it would have been worthy of noting that sort of miracle if, all of the sudden, 12 baskets suddenly appeared?
Potluck said:Fashioning baskets from what was available was as second nature to them as going to the cupboard for a plate and saucer is for us. There were no manufacturing facilities as we know them today, all things were handmade. Baskets can be made from just about anything and just about anywhere. And I'll bet they were very good at it.
I was in Salt Lake City for 14 years. Get out into the desert and that's desolation, nothing there but scrub brush and sage. And I believe I can make a basket from that. No biggie.
Matthew 14:19 And he commanded the multitude to sit down on the grass, ...
Obviously something was growing out there. Things do grow in the desert. Not all deserts are the vast areas of sand people think of when the word desert is used. In fact, only a scant few are.
I don't see any problem here.
:smt102
Besides, out of all those people I really don't see why some of them couldn't have baskets anyway. It would be like us carrying purses or handbags or fanny packs or even backpacks wherever we go. People carry things anywhere and anytime even if they don't know where they are going following someone else. I'd say it would be more of a miracle if nobody at all had any baskets.
Quath said:So the Big Bang doesn't really need a cause or the cause could appear from the Big Crunch. More precisely, we don't know enough about the Big Bang, but we do know that fundamentally the universe does not work on "cause/effect."
So the Big Bang doesn't really need a cause or the cause could appear from the Big Crunch.
but we do know that fundamentally the universe does not work on "cause/effect."
I believe in the scientific process. This process shows that cause/effect are not the underlying part of reality. However, since information does not travel faster than light, then information does not travel to the past. So on a bigger scale, we have "cause/effect." But that is similar to using Newton's laws to solve physics problems. You can get away with it for the most part, but it is not complete enough to solve all problems. Likewise, we can assume cause/effect for the most point, but there are times when it is not a valid assumption (currently we see a lot of this in quantum entanglement).Relic said:Like I tried to point out in a previous post, folks. Quath believes in the god of chaos... thinking cause and effect are not relevant in all things.
I am not saying the Big Bang is caused by the Big Crunch. I am just saying that the "cause" for something quantum can be associated with something later in time. Or the Big Bang could just happen because it doesn't need a cause. So what is the difference in our views? You believed in an uncaused God and I believe that the universe could be uncaused. Why is my belief sillier than yours?He believes in things that have not been proven in science! Quath believes in unproven hypotheses: an assumption used as a basis for investigation or argument. But yet he won't admit it! He just comes back as will say it is not his belief but what others think.
A part of being a scientist is learning to be happy with personal ignrance. I don't know a whole lot. I go where the evidence leads. If we found evidence for a God, I would be a believer. If we found out that aliens had planted fake fossils and evolution was not true, I would change my stance on evolution.Quath, tell us what you believe, not what the scientists are exploring, thereby you think, you have a means of staying impartial to all of what is in your postings :-? Slick tricks. You just love to be opposite to anything a Christian believes. :-?
I would not say that. What I would say is that I will not believe that a God exists unless I see evidence for this god.So, Folks, according to Quath, no "GOD" could ever be at the root of all creation.