cladking
Well-Known Member
My question now is not so much if evolution is true (which I don't believe it is), but rather about the dating process of artifacts. That's a tough one to understand because of the atomic structure and carbon analysis.
There are numerous ways to date various things that are very old and there are some assumptions involved that can confound our estimates. But that the earth is geologically and otherwise billions of years old is probably beyond dispute. At the very least the markers agree with this conclusion. C14 dating is useless before 55,000 years ago because of its short half life and loses a lot of accuracy at about 40,000 years ago.
I'm in general agreement that our reductionistic science has generally failed to understand the mechanisms of what causes species to change and what these changes actually represent. We did not "evolve" from a fish however we each probably had a very similar very fish like ancestor. The fact that taxonomies of all sorts are not real precludes the current understanding of "evolution". While it's true that things change they do it is steps and this even include a fish like ancestors whose nearly fish like off spring lived part of its life on land (or at least in mud). Life will expand to fill every niche and all life in individual.
We may never understand it perfectly, because the Bible says we will never know everything.
We will never really know anything. Even in a couple centuries when we know two billion times as much we'll still not really know much of anything. We'll never know if God set all things in motion or will be ever be able to predict the future. We will merely get better and better at engineering a future for our niche as it expands across the cosmos (if we survive the next century).
Since I believe in the Bible, it does say that the earth will be refreshed, restored, to a far better world than we have around us now.
...When the meek inherit the earth.
I believe it is coming faster than our fearless leaders would have it.