jwu wrote:The flood...point taken (albeit i would the creation model consider to be falisfied then...but that's a matter for that other thread).
Is there anything else?
Life cannot be created out of non-life by natural processes.
A corollary of this would be that life does not exist outside of the earth.
These predictions would be falsifiable by the SETI program detecting life elsewhere.
micatala wrote:
1. IF the flood did occur, it occurred more than 6000 years ago, conservatively. This is based on evidence from bristlecone pines and other plant data. Now, this doesn't go against our assumptions since we have not assumed in this thread anything about when creation or the flood occurred, only that creation was a one time event and a global flood did occur.
I'm not sure what you're arguing here.
2. The water canopy is an untenable hypothesis.
I'm open to changing my mind. Why do you think it's untenable?
3. Radiometric dating is fairly reliable, at least for ballpark figures. We would not confuse 6000 years with 6 million years.
This should be discussed in another thread as I suspect there can be much discussion about this.
The PGE are used as an estimate, not as an accurate indicator.
5. It seems to me that for Noah and company to survive the flood event, supernatural intervention would have had to occur at that point. This would violate the additional assumption I had asked for.
Why so?
6. I admit I did not look EVERYTHING. I would note that I did not find what I considered an adequate explanation of the observed sequencing of fossils. It is very hard for me to accept that, under the conditions of a global flood, especially where a lot of 'stirring' occurs, the fossils would not be more mixed up. Why are there NEVER any dinosaur fossils with humans? Surely, some dinosaurs would have hydrological properties similar to humans. Why no trilobites with more modern animals? etc.
There certainly are a lot of questions that the geologic record presents to us - to both creationists as well as evolutionists. And these as well should be in separate threads (in addition to the several threads already that touch on the geologic record).
micatala wrote:
1. Which model is simpler? Occam's razor says we should always pick the simplest hypothesis to explain any phenomenon. SImplest is often defined as the one which requires the fewest or most basic assumptions. THis can be a somewhat subjective judgment at times.
2. Which model has the greatest explanatory power. The creation model has a problem here, since allowing the intervention of a supernatural deity as an explanation in the past means you could not rule it out in the future. This makes prediction somewhat difficult, if not impossible (unless we can read God's mind).
And I would maintain that the
global flood has the greatest explanatory power as well as being the most elegant.
For instance, it answers all these questions in one fell swoop:
- Extinction of the dinosaurs
- Why the prehistoric world had large animals/plants and now it does not
- The origin of the Grand Canyon and other canyons
- The existence of the mid-Oceanic ridge
- The formation of the continental shelves
- The formation of ocean trenches
- Magnetic variations on the ocean floor
- The formation of submarine canyons
- The formation of coal and oil
- The existence of frozen mammoths
- The formation of major mountain ranges
- The phenomenon of parallel rock stratas
- The apparent jigsaw fit of the continents
3. The model which has the widest applicability. Evolutionary principles are inherently applicable to life anywhere. The creation model, as proposed so far, only considers life on earth, and only the particular life we see on earth.
Are you saying that evolutionary principles applies elsewhere besides the earth? If so, please start a thread to show this.