I know that religion is something of a taboo taboo topic here, since discussions usually spiral endlessly due to its inconclusive nature. However, today Bill Nye (whom we all know) and Ken Ham (I'd never heard of him? but he runs a Creationist organization) debated Creationism publicly and I had a few thoughts on the subjects that I wanted to discuss somewhere. I would have used the taboo topics thread or the 'science is interesting' thread, but I thought the discussion I would like to have is more narrow than taboo topics usually covers and unfit for the science thread, which usually focuses on discoveries or developments. If any mod thinks the discussion would be better held in either of these topics or in any other topic, then by all means it should be moved.
Of course I haven't got any authority to force this, but I would appreciate it if everyone who posts here could watch the video. It's fairly long, and I don't know if the complete video been uploaded yet, but it will be publicly available on
debatelive.org for the next few days so it should be easy to watch. (I missed the first hour, but I plan to rectify this tomorrow.)
To start us off, I have an argument against a fairly important portion of Mr. Ham's argument. Often, he attempted to refute Bill Nye's statements about history (celestial movement, tectonic plates' consistency, radioactive decay) by asserting that they were based on assumptions - most frequently, the assumption that we can not be absolutely sure that the processes operated in the same manner or at the same speed in the past as they do today. I find
this statement to be debatably true, but I seriously disapprove of its application in a debate. Here's why:
Suppose that someone presents a Bible to you which is very similar (if not identical) to, say, King James’ Bible, with the exception that Genesis recounts the earth’s creation in a different order. This Bible makes assertions which are similar to but objectively different from those contained in the ostensibly 'real' Bible. How do you determine the legitimacy of each text? Do you believe the Bible you are familiar with, or do you believe this new text?
If you stick with the old Bible, then are you not making an assumption about the past, i.e. which Bible was actually written or dictated by God?
And if you choose the new Bible, then are you not denying a teaching of a Bible, and does that not then allow you to deny any teaching in any Bible, and does that not further allow you to deny every teaching in any Bible?
If you do not choose either Bible over the other, then must not at least one still be false, and if one is false, then how can the other one be believed?
Any belief in any Bible must stem from an assumption of some kind.
Note that this is not about disproving the Bible, this is just about demonstrating that believe in the Bible rests on a single, very important assumption, and is therefore no more valid than any Scientific proposition. Agree, disagree?