Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6830|North Carolina
It's based on more than just my opinion though...  The further back you go, the murkier exact dates are for the development of life and the planet, but there is a wealth of evidence that shows the Earth has been around for at least a few million years.

The commonly accepted age of the Earth is around 4.5 billion years.

I guess what I'm trying to say is that believing the Earth is 6,000 years old is completely illogical given the mountain of evidence that contradicts this idea.
GorillaTicTacs
Member
+231|6798|Kyiv, Ukraine
The reviews are in, the "movie" is a joke.

9% on RottenTomatoes, and I don't think its the subject matter, it just simply failed to make an honest point.

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/expelle … e_allowed/
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|7099|Canberra, AUS
Carbon dating has issues, not the least of which it can't date anything older than a couple of tens of thousands of years.

On the other hand, dating using other methods (I can't remember which exact isotopes, but I think uranium is one of them) esp. using zircons is MUCH more accurate and allows much longer dating.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6555|North Tonawanda, NY

LividBovine wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:

What's wrong with isotope dating methods?  I understand how it is done, and I believe it to be accurate.
http://www.allaboutarchaeology.org/accu … ng-faq.htm

Basically they assume several key areas of Carbon facts.  They assume that the decay of carbon 14 is constant and they assume the levels and ratio of carbon 14 and 12 have remained constant.
The assumptions for carbon dating are far from absurd in execution.

See these claims debunked:

Radiometric dating gives unreliable results.
Carbon-14 dating gives unreliable results.
Carbon dating is based on the atmospheric C-14/C-12 ratio, but that ratio varies. Thus the carbon dating method is not valid.

Read through the others here.

Spark wrote:

Carbon dating has issues, not the least of which it can't date anything older than a couple of tens of thousands of years.

On the other hand, dating using other methods (I can't remember which exact isotopes, but I think uranium is one of them) esp. using zircons is MUCH more accurate and allows much longer dating.
Exactly.  Radioisotope data has been confirmed to match many other pieces of known information.

LividBovine wrote:

Perhaps.  But that argument is based on your opinion. 

My post was answering senortoenails.  He wanted to know what was wrong with this particular testing method. 

At least I steered clear of all the more biased sites
Bah.  The site you link to asks me if I am a follower of Jesus. 
The source it uses for questioning carbon dating is "Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Creationism".

Is that 'not biased'?  Unbelievable.

Edit:  Combined three posts into one.

Last edited by SenorToenails (2008-04-19 02:14:09)

Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|7099|Canberra, AUS
Seriously, if I see another person say 'carbon dating is false ---> evolution is false', I'm gonna bash my head on a table.

I mean, how can people be so STUPID?

P.S. Evolution is fact. Or I would hope so, or we would have absolutely no idea as to how some of these batshit crazy diseases spring up. I mean, I would like to see a creationist explain why chloroquine simply isn't working any more.

Last edited by Spark (2008-04-19 01:54:46)

The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6555|North Tonawanda, NY

Spark wrote:

Carbon dating has issues, not the least of which it can't date anything older than a couple of tens of thousands of years.

On the other hand, dating using other methods (I can't remember which exact isotopes, but I think uranium is one of them) esp. using zircons is MUCH more accurate and allows much longer dating.
There are quite a few.  (Wikipedia)

argon-argon (Ar-Ar)
fission track dating
helium (He-He)
iodine-xenon (I-Xe)
lanthanum-barium (La-Ba)
lead-lead (Pb-Pb)
lutetium-hafnium (Lu-Hf)
neon-neon (Ne-Ne)
optically stimulated luminescence dating
potassium-argon (K-Ar)
radiocarbon dating
rhenium-osmium (Re-Os)
rubidium-strontium (Rb-Sr)
samarium-neodymium (Sm-Nd)
uranium-lead (U-Pb)
uranium-lead-helium (U-Pb-He)
uranium-thorium (U-Th)
uranium-uranium (U-U)
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|7099|Canberra, AUS

SenorToenails wrote:

Spark wrote:

Carbon dating has issues, not the least of which it can't date anything older than a couple of tens of thousands of years.

On the other hand, dating using other methods (I can't remember which exact isotopes, but I think uranium is one of them) esp. using zircons is MUCH more accurate and allows much longer dating.
There are quite a few.  (Wikipedia)

argon-argon (Ar-Ar)
fission track dating
helium (He-He)
iodine-xenon (I-Xe)
lanthanum-barium (La-Ba)
lead-lead (Pb-Pb)
lutetium-hafnium (Lu-Hf)
neon-neon (Ne-Ne)
optically stimulated luminescence dating
potassium-argon (K-Ar)
radiocarbon dating
rhenium-osmium (Re-Os)
rubidium-strontium (Rb-Sr)
samarium-neodymium (Sm-Nd)
uranium-lead (U-Pb)
uranium-lead-helium (U-Pb-He)
uranium-thorium (U-Th)
uranium-uranium (U-U)
I would have said that U-PB, U-U, K-Ar were most common.

Thanks anyway though, my memory can slip details sometimes.

---

One more thing. The idea of a young earth is centuries out of date. CENTURIES.

Last edited by Spark (2008-04-19 01:57:34)

The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6555|North Tonawanda, NY

Spark wrote:

Seriously, if I see another person say 'carbon dating is false ---> evolution is false', I'm gonna bash my head on a table.

I mean, how can people be so STUPID?
I don't get it either.  This crap gets almost as irritating as those 'young earth creationist' whackos.

Spark wrote:

I would have said that U-PB, U-U, K-Ar were most common.

Thanks anyway though, my memory can slip details sometimes.
I was going to mention K/Ar, U/Th/Pb, and Rb/Sr but then I decided to look it up.

Turquoise wrote:

It's based on more than just my opinion though...  The further back you go, the murkier exact dates are for the development of life and the planet, but there is a wealth of evidence that shows the Earth has been around for at least a few million years.

The commonly accepted age of the Earth is around 4.5 billion years.

I guess what I'm trying to say is that believing the Earth is 6,000 years old is completely illogical given the mountain of evidence that contradicts this idea.
The belief that the earth is 6000 years old is nothing short of ludicrous.  There is too much evidence showing that the earth is far, far older.  That is hardly just an opinion.

Edit:  Response to Turquoise.

Last edited by SenorToenails (2008-04-19 02:21:13)

LividBovine
The Year of the Cow!
+175|6804|MN

Turquoise wrote:

While it is true that carbon dating has its faults, the fact remains that assuming the Earth is only 6,000 years old is just stupid.
I am merely being sarcastic in this response about it being stupid to assume that the earth is only 6,000 years old.

LividBovine wrote:

Perhaps.  But that argument is based on your opinion. 

My post was answering senortoenails.  He wanted to know what was wrong with this particular testing method. 

At least I steered clear of all the more biased sites
I did try to choose one that was not christian based, but failed.  I guess I need to look at the whole site next time.


I am uncertain as to wether or not the Earth is much, MUCH older than 6,000 years, I actually don't even care.

I am not a believer in the Bible being taken completely literaly.

I had just read lately about the assumptions that carbon dating used.  I had not taken the time research it further than that, and posted what a quick link. 

My appologies!
"The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation" - Barack Obama (a freshman senator from Illinios)
GorillaTicTacs
Member
+231|6798|Kyiv, Ukraine

LividBovine wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

While it is true that carbon dating has its faults, the fact remains that assuming the Earth is only 6,000 years old is just stupid.
I am merely being sarcastic in this response about it being stupid to assume that the earth is only 6,000 years old.

LividBovine wrote:

Perhaps.  But that argument is based on your opinion. 

My post was answering senortoenails.  He wanted to know what was wrong with this particular testing method. 

At least I steered clear of all the more biased sites
I did try to choose one that was not christian based, but failed.  I guess I need to look at the whole site next time.


I am uncertain as to wether or not the Earth is much, MUCH older than 6,000 years, I actually don't even care.

I am not a believer in the Bible being taken completely literaly.

I had just read lately about the assumptions that carbon dating used.  I had not taken the time research it further than that, and posted what a quick link. 

My appologies!
The fact that this debate exists is just sad.

Scientific method has been completely usurped by the religious right in the last 20-30 years.  It used to be that they were laughed at, now its mainstream...much like the far right since the 1940 through 1970's.  I can't believe that the "powers that be" would allow this kind of ignorance to fester.

We're losing our competitive edge in the country, and now the very existance of "science" itself is a debate.  An "opinion", a "theory".

The real debate should be:

For the economic health of America...which is better?

- Ignorant consumers who blindly buy crap they don't need for reasons they don't care about with money they don't have?
- Intelligent/creative/competitive work force?

The follow up then is why keep them so ignorant?  You can sell just as much crap and make just as much money off smart consumers as dumb ones, its just more difficult.

Third follow up:  Why is the American religious right so helpful to the corporate and war-hawk neo-liberals in their agenda?
Mekstizzle
WALKER
+3,611|7045|London, England
It is true that whilst the rest of the world (even some parts of the Middle East) is becoming more educated and less religious, the entire opposite seems to be happening in the U.S...

Last edited by Mek-Stizzle (2008-04-19 04:53:21)

Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6830|North Carolina

GorillaTicTacs wrote:

The reviews are in, the "movie" is a joke.

9% on RottenTomatoes, and I don't think its the subject matter, it just simply failed to make an honest point.

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/expelle … e_allowed/
The fact that it even got 45% among the RT community is rather sad.
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980
Seems like a lame movie. Must remember not to bother watching it.
IonYou
Member
+3|7058
Britney Spears is proof of intelligent design.

Think about it, man is the most intelligent animal on earth, and the only one with a sense of humor. Equating intelligence to humor, the creator must have one hell of a sense of humor to create Britney, therefore the creator is highly intelligent.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7025|132 and Bush

Another review: http://hotair.com/archives/2008/04/18/m … -expelled/

http://expelledthemovie.com/playground.php
The bloggers at CPAC received an invitation to screen a new documentary on academic intolerance called Expelled: The Movie this evening. The documentary features Ben Stein on a quest to understand the near-hysteria caused by scientists who so much as broach the idea of intelligent design in papers or in research. It follows Stein as he interviews professors denied tenure, editors fired, and journalists shunned for touching the subject even at its most innocuous levels.

Before discussing my feelings about the film, which is still in post-production and will not go into release until April, I should explain my approach to the ID/evolution debate. I believe evolution is demonstrably proven in enough examples to say that its effect on variation in species cannot be denied. The example I used tonight in discussing this with another viewer (certainly not the only example) is antibiotic effects on bacteria. Antibiotics that kill 99% of bacteria eventually promote the survival and the expansion of the 1% that resist them, created superbacteria that require another set of antibiotics to cure, and so on.

That said, evolution does not interfere with my faith in God. God certainly could have created the universe with a design that included life. The rational laws of nature would include evolution, as well as the myriad of other rational and mathematically provable mechanisms that undergird nature. In fact, the impulse of man to discover the rational laws of nature began with the belief in a rational God, as scientists understood nature’s rationality to reveal an intelligent Creator.

I’d go deeper than that, but Dinesh D’Souza covers it nicely enough already in his book What’s So Great About Christianity, and it’s getting late enough as it is. Suffice it to say that evolution doesn’t present a threat to my worldview.

Rationally, we have to admit that some use ID as an excuse to teach the more literal form of Creationism that has been used to argue against evolution entirely, especially against teaching evolution in primary-school classrooms. That admission does not appear in Expelled, which is a glaring omission. It tends to take out of context the frustration some scientists have about ID, and its place in polarizing the debate over its use. Properly framed, ID accepts all of the science without accepting its transformation into its own belief system.

What do I mean by that? In this, the film does an excellent job of demonstrating atheism as a belief system. Atheism as represented by Richard Dawkings and others in this film gets exposed as exactly the kind of belief system they claim to despise. They can’t prove God exists — and they can’t prove God doesn’t exist. They make the common fallacy of arguing that absence of evidence amounts to evidence of absence.

But in a way, this is all secondary to the real issue of the film: academic intolerance. The debate over ID vs Darwinism sets the table for a truly disturbing look at academia. Science should be about the free debate and research of ideas and hypotheses for duplicable results and provable theorems. However, as the examples Stein and the film provide amply show, the Darwinist academic establishment will brook no dissent from the orthodoxy — and scientists have to be shown with hidden faces to speak to the issue for the film.

Amusingly, Stein asks people how the first cell came to be. None of the scientists could give him a straight answer. Dawkins himself admits he doesn’t know and that no one else does, either — but postulates that aliens could have brought life to this planet, and then postulates that another alien civilization could have brought life to that planet, and so on. He then concedes that one entity could have been the original source … but insists that entity could not possibly have been God. For this he gives absolutely no evidence at all, relegating it as a belief system somewhat akin to Scientology.

All of this is extremely effective, as are the many allusions made to the Berlin Wall during the film. The theme runs throughout, and it explicitly refers to the defensive academic establishment as having built a wall that tramples on freedom of thought and discourse. Less effective is the heavy references to the Nazis in the movie. Although emotionally affecting for some obvious reasons, the fact is that while the Nazis were mostly Darwinists (along with a lot of other things), the vast majority of Darwinists aren’t Nazis. Certainly the eugenicists in Nazi Germany were mightily influenced by Darwinism, but America had its own eugenicists, which the film points out.

I should point out that the film has not finished production, and that changes will be made between now and its release in April. The filmmakers just completed an interview with Christopher Hitchens and will include it in the final cut. I believe other changes may be made which could address some of the criticisms I’ve written here.

Overall, though, the film presents a powerful argument not for intelligent design as much as for the freedom of scientific inquiry. If scientists get punished for challenging orthodoxy, we will not expand our learning but ossify it in concrete. Expelled: The Movie is entertaining, maddening, funny, and provocative, and well worth your time.
I'll watch it. I wouldn't want to be accused of staying in a box.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Mekstizzle
WALKER
+3,611|7045|London, England
I don't think Scientists are too closed in. They just lock out Religion/God. That doesn't mean they're close minded and not open to new ideas. People act like it's a Giant Conspiracy to stop further knowledge, more like the Religious people are the ones trying to stamp out innovation...
AussieReaper
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
+5,761|6577|what

Scientists put forward their ideas in a completely opposite way that the religious community do.

For example, a scientist puts forward a "theory" and presents the data which they believe supports this. It's called Darwin's Theory of Evolution for a reason. It's just a theory. Darwin never said that this was the means and end to all of evolutions questions.

And even before putting forward a theory, a scientist starts with a hypothesis, which they try to disprove!

The religious teachers however, put forward an idea that they claim cannot be disproved, because you can't prove God(s) doesn't exist. And they don't want to question the claims they have made, because they believe in the divine creator so fervently. And they don't want you to question it either, because doing so would encourage you to find ways to disprove God(s) exists.
https://i.imgur.com/maVpUMN.png
Protecus
Prophet of Certain Certainties
+28|6946
"I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours"

                                     --Stephen Roberts
Superior Mind
(not macbeth)
+1,755|7117
Life is so old and complicated I reckon we will never know how and why it began. It may have been a mix of causes. Perhaps the first microbial life was the result of chemical and electrical reactions on Earth. Perhaps Earth was terraformed by an ancient alien race then forgotten about. Maybe the idea of gods comes from aliens that did genetic experiments on ancient humans species. Maybe life came from a chunk of a destroyed planet that hit earth that contained frozen microorganisms. It doesn't matter. What is is. Until someone invents a time machine we will never know. Until then just live and enjoy the fact that you are alive in the first place.
Schittloaf
not fulla schit
+23|6327|MN

SenorToenails wrote:

Schittloaf wrote:

who made teh big bang ? who made the gasses and the atoms ?
What made god?  These arguments are foolish, especially when used to try and debase science.

Schittloaf wrote:

what does the bible share with 3 other religions?
A story for creation.

Schittloaf wrote:

btw try to win Ben Stine's money!
I used to love that show.

Schittloaf wrote:

evolution doesnt explain anything just assumes... do you know how the scientists date ?? carbon dating accurate?? read up boys then spew your opinions.
What's wrong with isotope dating methods?  I understand how it is done, and I believe it to be accurate.
its not accurate , in order for the "scientists" to determine the age of a fossil they use the rock layers to determine estimated date . pull a fossil from limestone and don't tell the "scientists" where you pulled it and carbon date it . the results will make you laugh.  do you know they have carbon dated live animals that "scientists" know is only 6-12 months old and results showed 100-1000 of years old .. lol fail for the carbon dating.

suppose you believe in Global Warming too lol
Mekstizzle
WALKER
+3,611|7045|London, England

Schittloaf wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:

Schittloaf wrote:

who made teh big bang ? who made the gasses and the atoms ?
What made god?  These arguments are foolish, especially when used to try and debase science.

Schittloaf wrote:

what does the bible share with 3 other religions?
A story for creation.

Schittloaf wrote:

btw try to win Ben Stine's money!
I used to love that show.

Schittloaf wrote:

evolution doesnt explain anything just assumes... do you know how the scientists date ?? carbon dating accurate?? read up boys then spew your opinions.
What's wrong with isotope dating methods?  I understand how it is done, and I believe it to be accurate.
its not accurate , in order for the "scientists" to determine the age of a fossil they use the rock layers to determine estimated date . pull a fossil from limestone and don't tell the "scientists" where you pulled it and carbon date it . the results will make you laugh.  do you know they have carbon dated live animals that "scientists" know is only 6-12 months old and results showed 100-1000 of years old .. lol fail for the carbon dating.

suppose you believe in Global Warming too lol
Tbh, your God is more worthy of lol than Scientific analysis and evidence



Fucking Romans. Why did they have to convert to Christianity...
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6555|North Tonawanda, NY

Schittloaf wrote:

its not accurate , in order for the "scientists" to determine the age of a fossil they use the rock layers to determine estimated date . pull a fossil from limestone and don't tell the "scientists" where you pulled it and carbon date it . the results will make you laugh.  do you know they have carbon dated live animals that "scientists" know is only 6-12 months old and results showed 100-1000 of years old .. lol fail for the carbon dating.
You have just used some classic claims to 'debunk' science.  I bet you don't have any understanding of science whatsoever.
Creationist claim: Carbon-14 dating gives unreliable results.
Creationist claim:  Living snails were C-14 dated at 2,300 and 27,000 years old.
Creationist claim:  A freshly killed seal was C-14 dated at 1,300 years old.

Schittloaf wrote:

suppose you believe in Global Warming too lol
This has nothing to do with the topic at hand.

As a side question, are you happy living in your own little world?  One where you can just decide to ignore logic and evidence when it suits you?  Given your obvious disdain for 'scientists', if you were maimed in a car accident would you hope that medical science would find a way to improve your quality of life?  I will never understand how someone can go through their life with a 2000 year old blindfold on and expect to be taken seriously.

Board footer

Privacy Policy - © 2025 Jeff Minard