For your (facepalming) amusement

Because 2 seconds after that those beliefs get pushed into science classes in school. Creationism is not science. It's not even legally science.

Put it in the philosophy class if you must, but leave it out of science class.

At the same time, make courses on epistemology mandatory. Alot of debate on the subject would be cleared up if people were just familiar with the different philosophies on what sources of knowledge are valid. Science admits only empirical evidence, but creationists generally do not assume empiricism to be the One True Epistemology, and *that* is why we make such a kerfluffle over kids being taught "The History of the Universe According to Science" ("Evolution" being the blanket term generally used by creationists) in schools. The conclusions made by science are being taught with little or nothing being taught about its underlying assumptions, or worse, with its underlying assumptions being hammered home as undeniable Truth with a capital T.

(Granted, not all Creationists *realize* that this is why they are making a kerfluffle, but those that don't have at least some sense that what to them are "common sense" assumptions are not being held by the other party, and react, even if they aren't able to quite put their finger on what is wrong).
 
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Keep O'Reilly out of the science classroom!

This whole concept of "I believe God made it appear as if _____." is more of a philosophical argument about the ever-so-slight uncertainty of empirical evidence than a scientific argument (I'm not really a relativist, but it is a fact nonetheless). If people want to believe it then I'd rather they do that than make flawed arguments against what's been empirically proven. Just keep it out of the science classroom, political decisions, and places where people could use their "logic" to convince themselves that it is 100% true like it appears to me that Bill O'Reilly.
 
I believe it is around six thousand years old, but as God was creating it, he made it look way older. In the creation story we can see that God made Adam and Eve mature, not as babies, he made the animals mature and everything else, so why not make earth old as well.

I am not trying to make fun of your beliefs, but I wonder why exactly you believe god would do this. This is an argument I here quite frequently from Christians who are intelligent enough to realize that the evidence does not support creationism. The argument is basically that you can not trust the scientific evidence because god could have created the universe out side of the laws of science, anyway he wanted.

I don't understand why he would do this though. It is one thing to require followers to have faith in the absence of evidence, but why would he create a universe that provides evidence that at the very least casts large doubts on creationism?
 
positive: He doesn't try to argue with pseudo-scientific arguments.

negative: He doesn't seem to have any background on current scientific theories whatsoever. I certainly hope that "he cannot explain how the sun comes up and goes down" was more a poetical argument in a universal context (The arguments he uses are long-standing metaphors for the unexplicable), since I'd expect every child that finished a school to know that the earth is revolving and that that is a pretty sound explanation for that particular phenomenon.

His argument can, perhaps, be phrased in a more scientific manner: "Why are the laws of physics such that angular momentum is conserved, so that the Earth continues rotating and rotates with a predictable, constant period, so that we can predict when the sun will rise and set?"

It's somewhat of a layman's statement of a questionized version of the anthropic principle: "Why is the universe such that we are able to inhabit it?"

Of course, the anthropic principle is a weak argument for either side of the debate, and has been used by both.

sad: This is really a missed opportunity to point out Hawkings surrender to the metaphysical in his last book, where he has no other explanation to offer for the existance of our particular universe than the multiverse hypothesis, which is about as much scientific a concept as is God himself (since it sin't falsifyable nor proovable). If the man would keep taps on science and take it seriously, he should have noticed that. So he mumbled around with (I hope) metaphors instead of making the one argument that would expose some degree of hypocrisy in Hawkings last book.

Indeed.

There's not much that can be said against that. As long as you're not trying to get "scientific" arguments out of your hat to prove it (which you didn't, but many creationists nowadays are doing it), since that's basically accusing God of sloppy workmanship. As it stands, the assumption "God magically aged the earth,

It doesn't even need to be magical aging. It could be that, if the universe was brought into existence in six days, the effects of the various miracles that did it are such that when we try to reconstruct the history of the universe according to the current laws of physics, we see patterns that aren't really there.

therefore any analisis we make of it must show that it is way older than it actually is" makes perfect sense as a statement of faith, as noone will be able to find any proof for or against it.

Anyways, the debate wasn't really around creationism, but rather around the fact that the man gives the impression of not knowing that the earth is revolving, and not knowing that scientists indeed can offer pretty sensible explanations where the earth comes from (although, as already stated, Hawkings last argument where the whole universe came from was somewhat of a facepalm moment too). I really, really, really hope O'Reily was being poetical. If not, that would be reason for major concern about the educational system...

Yes, but O'Reilly was trying to make an argument for creationism, so it can be hard to talk about the one without talking about the other.

As for concern for the educational system, that's why epistemology needs to be taught in schools. If kids are taught according to a philosophy their parents don't trust, then their parents will pressure them not to believe anything they hear in that class, which some might take a bit overboard. By going over what different philosophical systems say about how we gain knowledge, and teaching science in terms of "When we apply empirical epistemological assumptions, we see this picture of the universe", you can probably do away with some of that overreaction.

Noticing that the universe in Genesis is still surrounded by water pretty much solved that question for me. If that isn't metaphorical or mythological, God's just asking too much of me. Luckily for us, it's not a question our salvation depends upon! :lol:

Part of the problem is that Genesis seems to have a really fuzzy boundary between the historical and the symbolic. Whereas the transition between the two is generally clearly marked in the rest of scripture (The prophets tell us the circumstances they were in, and then say "I received this message from the Lord" or "I saw this vision", and then proceed with the vision. The Gospels tell us what situation Jesus was in, and then they say that he started to tell a story beginning with the words "suppose a woman has ten silver coins..."). In Genesis this boundary is not so clearly delineated. Certainly I agree that if every word of the creation account is literal, the universe at that time was something we would now consider very strange.

Another issue is that language is always symbolic. Even this very sentence you are reading, while quite literal in meaning, already contains two layers of symbolism. The first is the symbolism of strings of sounds (spoken words) for concepts, the second is the symbolism of written letters for sounds and written words for spoken words. In getting to you this message was encoded as a series of bits and that bitstream was encrypted and decrypted at least once (going to my wireless router, if not yours too), which entails at least another two layers of symbolism. This makes terms like "literal" and "symbolic" dangerous. From my computer's point of view, the "literal" interpretation of this sentence (the meaning of the sentence in the form my computer sees it) is a rather long binary number. So what we're really asking about the creation account is "how many layers of symbolism is it wrapped in, and are all parts of it wrapped to a consistent 'depth'".

But yes, fortunately it is our belief in and reaction to the death and resurrection of Jesus that saves us, not our doctrinal correctness on every inch of scripture.
 
I don't understand why he would do this though. It is one thing to require followers to have faith in the absence of evidence, but why would he create a universe that provides evidence that at the very least casts large doubts on creationism?

Giving possible answers to that question would result in a pretty lenghty (several pages) and off-topic excerpt about systematic theology and the relation between science and theology in general, so let's just say that there are theological frameworks that can give reasons for such a behaviour, although after the basic set-up, the only reason that would really ask for a magical aging of the world and not let it take its course over a few billion years is "to speed things up". Which seems a bit strange for a being that isn't matter, and therefore completely out of the frame of time. Then again, there would'nt have any real reason for him NOT to do it, but the only really obvious reason that remains is to make it fit genesis and reconcile a more literal interpretation of the bible with the facts we find. It would have a potential tool to AVOID conflicts between religion and science, because it offers an opportunity to have your cake and also eat it. Problem is, most creationists seem to be in it ONLY for the sake of a conflict, which is a *very* questionable attitude based on new testament moral teachings.

A thing I can't stop wondering about when considering american evangelicalism is that their universities do amazing and very solid theological work, but only little of that seems to be reflected by american churches, and even less by religious politics. But explaining that would be just as off-topic here...

Part of the problem is that Genesis seems to have a really fuzzy boundary between the historical and the symbolic.

Yeah, that IS a problem. As is who exactly where the citizens of the city Kane founded...

It doesn't even need to be magical aging. It could be that, if the universe was brought into existence in six days, the effects of the various miracles that did it are such that when we try to reconstruct the history of the universe according to the current laws of physics, we see patterns that aren't really there.

I never saw it that way... And I can't quite imagine the kind of miracle that produces nice layers with all kinds of dead animals in them, other than magical aging. Plus, there's the continuity thing: Stellar evolution is a pretty sound theory by now, and we can see processes coming to fruitition that started thousands and millions of years ago. Such a continuity would suggest the same processes then and now.
 
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I believe that God created the Earth. What is wrong with that?

Nothing at all, I quite appreciate that belief. It is just that I believe that the planet you call Mu Arae d was my better piece of work. :cheers:
 
If we're not yet evolved like in A.C. Clarke 2001, and we're going into a new middle age made of demons, angels, religion wars, and other bs, it's because of people like this one and annexed suckers.
 
About the question, how long in the past our laws of physics are valid, there is of course the answer: As far as we can see. The spectra of distant quasars and the nuclear reactions that cause them, are perfectly the same as they are today, on Earth.

There is a tiny chance, that some things we consider constant, are actually no constants, but composed of multiple dimensions, that are just constant in our current view of the universe, and only show their complexity under extreme circumstances.

But for today, that knowledge is the best we have.

The 4.5 billion years, that Earth exists, are not that short in a 13.69 billion years old universe, but it is short enough to say that we can have high confidence in the evidence and the conclusions we draw from it.

Contrary to a Earth, that was just 6000 years old, when Newton lived. We have already found music instruments (bone flutes), that are over six times older than that, and that age is not just defined by radio isotopes alone, but also the geology of the place in which they have been found.

The funny and important thing, that you should NEVER forget: The bible doesn't tell you anything about the age of Earth. There are the pedigrees of various people that trace themselves back to Adam, in a very incestuous way, but there are gaps, that had been filled by Newton with guess work. Other people just took Newtons guesses for fact later.
 
Oh the irony - O'Reilly lecturing about "That British guy who makes a fortune out of being an atheist" while he makes a fortune out of being an ignorant moron.
 
If we're not yet evolved like in A.C. Clarke 2001, and we're going into a new middle age made of demons, angels, religion wars, and other bs, it's because of people like this one and annexed suckers.

Statements like this don't put you in too good a light either, you know. You could try using a bit more objectivity next time, it helps. a lot. (it also helps you not sounding like an annexed... wait, what? does this phrase actually mean what I think it means? Anyways, it'll make you sound less like a Dawkins parrot).
 
Oh the irony - O'Reilly lecturing about "That British guy who makes a fortune out of being an atheist" while he makes a fortune out of being an ignorant moron.

Which British guy? Richard Dawkins? :lol:
 
He is good. I would have only managed to turn "I don't know" into a 30 second reply.

But he is almost right in a point, I have to admit it, though he used the wrong name for it. He said it takes much more faith to not believe.

That is pretty near to what science has found out: It takes a lot of discipline and effort to not just believe everything.
 
That is pretty near to what science has found out: It takes a lot of discipline and effort to not just believe everything.

Except he's not referring to that, he's claiming atheists follow more absurd beliefs than christianity.
 
Like my hobby of NOT collecting stamps takes more effort then collecting them?
 
Except he's not referring to that, he's claiming atheists follow more absurd beliefs than christianity.

What? Like that all species of the world fitted pairwise into a boat with known dimensions, and repopulated the world in its current diversity without the creation of new species in less than 4500 years? :lol:

The problem with wisdom is, that not all are realizing it when it them.
 
Giving possible answers to that question would result in a pretty lenghty (several pages) and off-topic excerpt about systematic theology and the relation between science and theology in general, so let's just say that there are theological frameworks that can give reasons for such a behaviour, although after the basic set-up, the only reason that would really ask for a magical aging of the world and not let it take its course over a few billion years is "to speed things up". Which seems a bit strange for a being that isn't matter, and therefore completely out of the frame of time. Then again, there would'nt have any real reason for him NOT to do it, but the only really obvious reason that remains is to make it fit genesis and reconcile a more literal interpretation of the bible with the facts we find. It would have a potential tool to AVOID conflicts between religion and science, because it offers an opportunity to have your cake and also eat it. Problem is, most creationists seem to be in it ONLY for the sake of a conflict, which is a *very* questionable attitude based on new testament moral teachings.

I wouldn't say they're in it only for the sake of a conflict. It's more the perception that the other side is out to brainwash their kids, and that it will be the beginning of dark times if they don't do something about it.

And frankly, the way the other side acts doesn't help. A lot of "evolutionists" (using the sense of the term in common use among American young earth creationists) are just about as uneducated as the average creationist, remembering more what they've heard about evolution/the big bang/etc. from Hollywood than what they've heard from science classes, not knowing anything about empiricism or what "science" really means, and thinking that their Hollywood "evolutionism" makes them smarter than the creationists because it's more "scientific", and that being smarter gives them the right to mock. Add to that scientists like Hawking who know what empiricism is but sometimes make non-empirical pronouncements (like multiverse speculations) from the throne of "science", and young earth creationists start feeling like they're being mocked by a bunch of know-nothings.

(C.S. Lewis's The Funeral of a Great Myth addresses the issue of what I have called "Hollywood Evolutionism" quite well)

A thing I can't stop wondering about when considering american evangelicalism is that their universities do amazing and very solid theological work, but only little of that seems to be reflected by american churches, and even less by religious politics. But explaining that would be just as off-topic here...

The short answer is that there is a lot of distrust for the theology taught at seminaries, some of which is well founded and some of which isn't. We can discuss it more deeply by PM if you want.

Yeah, that IS a problem. As is who exactly where the citizens of the city Kane founded...



I never saw it that way... And I can't quite imagine the kind of miracle that produces nice layers with all kinds of dead animals in them, other than magical aging.

Alot of young-earthers will attribute this to the flood. I find this rather doubtful.

Plus, there's the continuity thing: Stellar evolution is a pretty sound theory by now, and we can see processes coming to fruitition that started thousands and millions of years ago. Such a continuity would suggest the same processes then and now.

Generally I agree with you. I tend to be an old-earther with misgivings about my own old-earth interpretation of the creation account that push me in the direction of young-earthism.

The general caveat to your argument here is that if the laws of physics have not remained constant, or have remained constant but have been grossly violated on a universal scale at some time in the astronomically recent past (as would be suggested by a six-day creation), then the metrics by which we measure the time which these processes take may be skewed. I don't see this as a particularly likely scenario, but it is worth keeping in mind.
 
I wouldn't say they're in it only for the sake of a conflict. It's more the perception that the other side is out to brainwash their kids, and that it will be the beginning of dark times if they don't do something about it.

Ok, I can kind of understand that, although it does seem strange to me personnally. Generally, when I feel threatend by something, the first thing I do is trying to understand it better, but of course not everyone is that way. I can also understand that the hard-working family man doesn't have the time and the strenght to study subjects he's not really interested in, but I think it would not be too much to ask of a politician or an active player in the field.

And frankly, the way the other side acts doesn't help.

Defnitaley not, but, as hard as it sounds, I expect a lot more in terms of understanding and loving the opponent from christians than from other people. After all, Jesus defined love as our primary trademark.
That aside, there's rarely an innocent party involved in a conflict, and some evolutionists seem to be just as ignorant towards certain things. I still can't but wonder how on earth Dawkins could seriously propose that religion is the major reason behind all conflicts on earth. That's about as reflected as a blackbody... And then there's my favourite quote from one of his german followers (alas I memorized only the quote, not the name behind it): "I'd still believe in evolution even if every bit of it was disproven". Science? yeah...

The short answer is that there is a lot of distrust for the theology taught at seminaries, some of which is well founded and some of which isn't. We can discuss it more deeply by PM if you want.

I'd like that a lot. The political situation in the US has me worried for several reasons, but the major one is that I see the evangelical church going a direction I consider most harmfull to the kingdom and the gospel. I'd like to better understand what's going on (I made myself a picture, of course, but there's nothing like insider information). If you find the time, feel free to write up a short summary of your thoughts and send them.
 
Alot of young-earthers will attribute this to the flood. I find this rather doubtful.

This is one of my biggest annoyances with "flood geology" and "young Earth" creationism. If there was such a global flood-catastrophe, things would be layed out entirely differently. Fossils would be jumbled up, jumbled together, disarticulated... not layed out in neat little chronological layers.

What is even worse, is we have events that mimic (more or less) what is suggested in "flood geology", that are vastly different from more common, long-term geological processes. For example, the land formations left after the gigantic Missoula Floods are quite different to the more common winding canyons caused by long-term erosion. And fossil beds created in floods, underwater landslides or similar events are dissimilar to those created due to usual geological processes...

A more pressing question of course, is: where did all the water come from?

And also: How did every animal on Earth have a viable breeding population from two pairs of animals? Moreover, how could literally millions of animals even be placed on such a structure? What about plants, or aquatic organisms? Not even aquatic organisms, adapted to an aquatic lifestyle, could have survived such an event. And trees and suchlike don't take well to being drowned under kilometers of water either...
 
Religion is in fact a major excuse for wars. It is a rally point. It helps creating a us against them. Only the Norse religion and similar polytheistic religions really called for war as part of their message, but still that is no excuse to see clerics of self-declared peaceful religions jump to the help when the political powers need a new reason for war. Even today, many wars are defined by the religion of the combatants - and the resulting cultural and political differences. It is shortsighted to blame religion for wars, just like it isn't the truth to say that religion has always been innocent. A pope that calls for a crusade and blesses people for rape and murder, is a much bigger sinner as all those sinners he blessed.

Also: If you only define your view on things by the biggest idiots you can find in each group, you are about to live a very miserable life in agony and ignorance. Creationists are not automatically Christians, quite contrary actually, since the creation myth has much lower value in the religion as other, more crucial values. And believers in Evolution are not automatically scientists, but sometimes just as well, only uncritical consumers of science.
 
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