Search results

  1. Bjerknes

    The Plausibility Argument

    Then we come to the "it was always there" argument. This is too taxing for my brain. Indeed, I saw where he was going with that. But if this theory was true, that means the Bible has corrupted an entire people.
  2. Bjerknes

    The Plausibility Argument

    :lol2: :lol: Spelled totally wrong, and totally taken out of context. This guy shot radio waves into space, and later first confirmed the noise in their findings were bird droppings. After years of study, they confirmed that what they acquired was cosmic microwave background radiation that...
  3. Bjerknes

    The Plausibility Argument

    1. No, again, they don't. One physical system can lead to the birth of another. That's why if you mix certain chemicals together, randomly or not, they become another substance and do not have the same composition. Ever taken a chemistry course? 2. No, it does seem strange, because the...
  4. Bjerknes

    The Plausibility Argument

    In all honesty, it doesn't make any sense to me whatsoever. But then again, I've been drilled so much in physics and meteorology that whenever I choose the simplest line of thinking on an exam, I usually bomb it. No, it doesn't. Before the big bang, there must have been other physical...
  5. Bjerknes

    The Plausibility Argument

    Juve Rev, you remind me of a used car salesman.
  6. Bjerknes

    The Plausibility Argument

    From somebody who studies meteorology, I think Occam's Razor is a cop out. Like the physicist stated, Occam's Razor should never be used to make or defend a conclusion, which is what people always tend to do because it's "easy. Well, it's not that easy. Hundreds of years ago people thought...
  7. Bjerknes

    The Plausibility Argument

    There are comprehensively and overwhelmingly millions and billions and trillions of different conditions found on millions and billions and trillions of different planets that are composed of millions and billions and trillions of different permutations of gaseous mixtures and atmospheric and...
  8. Bjerknes

    The Plausibility Argument

    It's funny how people try to apply Occam's Razor to anything from science to history when they probably don't even understand what Occam meant. In today's world, I find this "principle" pretty much useless. “To begin with we used Occam's razor to separate theories which would predict the same...
  9. Bjerknes

    The Plausibility Argument

    :lol2: Yeah, I could certainly see God establishing physical parameters and physical constants. "Well, I'll make the acceleration of gravity on Earth equal to 9.8 m/s^2, that seems like a good constant for Earth. If I make it less, James Naismith will have to make a longer support for his...