I'm sorry if this is out of line, but I feel compelled to ask; why are you a creationist? Were you raised that way or did you adopt the belief on your own?
I'm just pointing out that both Creation and Evolution are Religions. At some point in the past there MUST have been a supernatural event (ie Creation or the Big Bang) that started the world.
Ah, but if they were bizarre back then, how do you know they won't become bizarre again in the future?
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Edited 9 years ago
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· 9 years ago
First of all, evolution is not a religion, and nobody said physics won't get wierd again. Eventually the universe must somehow come to an end and I have a feeling when that happens physics will go wonky again.
So if you are unsure that physics is constant and unchanging, how can we trust that the natural laws will work in the future? And if you reply to this comment, how do you have certainty that I will be able to read it? If physics can change, at all, it would be impossible to be sure that it will work at any given time in the future.
It doesn't just change from day to day. But according to deep space observations it's possible that the speed of light used to be faster in the beginning. Also all that could be possible and you're really not using an argument, you just appear to be foolish.
Well, if the natural laws could change, how can we reason? How can we say with certainty that anything is true? We have faith that they won't change, so that we can make scientific observations and use reasoning to explain our world.
In any world view, reason is completely dependant on the fact that the natural laws will not change.
In the Evolutionist world view, there is no way to be certain of anything, seeing as everything could change in the next minute for all we know.
However, in the Christian world view, it makes sense that God would create unchanging laws of logic. These are God's standard for correct reasoning.
I just said things don't change from day to day. It probably takes millions of years for a little change. Also given the structure of the universe, the changes aren't rapid vast differences but rather small ones, since there are galaxies almost as old as the universe. Also a change is logical. As I said it's not going from one thing to a completely new thing. You could most probably explain and foresee the changes if they were studied enough. Also: how can you be certain God made logical laws? If he created the Big Bang (which is what I believe, if anything) then the laws may not be logical.
In any world view, reason is completely dependant on the fact that the natural laws will not change.
In the Evolutionist world view, there is no way to be certain of anything, seeing as everything could change in the next minute for all we know.
However, in the Christian world view, it makes sense that God would create unchanging laws of logic. These are God's standard for correct reasoning.