Zone1 How old is the Earth in your opinion?

how many years old do you think the Earth is?

  • less than 6.000

  • 6.000

  • 7.000

  • many years more

  • about 4.5 billion

  • nobody knows

  • I dont want to know


Results are only viewable after voting.
I promise you that it is what would happen.

Try it.

Odd, I just don't see it that way. By their own theories - they cannot "Fix" the issue of time between Quantum Mechanics, Theoretical Physics and General Relativity. So in a way, they are already stating that time isn't necessarily "observable" or a "constant" or is "observable" and is a "constant" - depending on the area of science.

Regardless, not much of an issue to me - one does not need science to believe in God. I find it remarkable that when I view science - all types of science - I see evidence for God. But to each his own - and if folks want to laugh, that's ok too.
 
Odd, I just don't see it that way. By their own theories - they cannot "Fix" the issue of time between Quantum Mechanics, Theoretical Physics and General Relativity. So in a way, they are already stating that time isn't necessarily "observable" or a "constant" or is "observable" and is a "constant" - depending on the area of science.
Which still lends no support to the change of its rate. And, since it's a property of spacetime itself, the rate of everything within would also change accordingly, anyway.


No, we are stuck forming theory in a deterministic universe. Else there is no theory. The concept of evidence simply would not exist.

Instead, all of the evidence points in exactly the same direction.
 
I don't think anyone would laugh at them. Do they laugh at each other when discussing "The Problem of Time"?


In theoretical physics, the problem of time is a conceptual conflict between quantum mechanics and general relativity. Quantum mechanics regards the flow of time as universal and absolute, whereas general relativity regards the flow of time as malleable and relative. This problem raises the question of what time really is in a physical sense and whether it is truly a real, distinct phenomenon. It also involves the related question of why time seems to flow in a single direction, despite the fact that no known physical laws at the microscopic level seem to require a single direction.
I use to think time didn't exist. That time was just a convenient way of demarcating the expansion of the universe. Now I a not so sure. It very well may be that time is the only thing that exists. That everything else is just information existing in the mind of God.
 
I use to think time didn't exist. That time was just a convenient way of demarcating the expansion of the universe. Now I a not so sure. It very well may be that time is the only thing that exists. That everything else is just information existing in the mind of God.
I can see why. It makes sense.

And no, God wouldn't violate anyone's "free will", by seeing all time at once. So we could both have free will and have a God that knows everything that will ever happen.
 
The Bible does not require a young Earth or a literal six-day creation. That is a misreading of Genesis.
 
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