DDHv wrote:There are tons and tons of sediments. Look at the Grand Canyon. There is a disconformity at the top of the Muav Limestone, and Karst topography at the top of the Redwall. Also there is the modern erosion on top. But there are at least 14 uncomformities, and most of them don't show signs of above-water erosion. According to Wikipedia, six of them, using the usual circular fossil date reasoning show gaps of over 100 million years!
Your point being? The bible states, in no uncertain terms, that the last of these events was witnessed and survived by humans. That simply isn't true. The biblical chronology, which can be dated back with surprising accuracy by extrapolating from statements in the bible, says that Noah's flood happened somewhere between 4 and 5000 years ago. For that particular event, no corroborating evidence can be found (because it would require a massive die-off in animal and plant life followed by a degree of speciation not seen outside of lab-grown bacteria cultures). So, again, my point is that the biblical story of the flood is either allegorical, or an overblown representation of some actual historical event, or both. But it is NOT a good account of history.
More personally: My mother told me that when she got badly sick as a child, they couldn't get her to a doctor. The grandparents prayed for her to be healed, in the name of Jesus, and she got well. Tonsil removal when a young adult led to the surgeon commenting that he had never before seen tonsils with a scar tissue cross on each. Hearsay evidence.
The plural of anecdote is not data. Confirmation bias. A whole range of cognitive biases play into this. It is not proof of anything beyond the human mind's ability to make connections between distant causes and effects, and how it can mislead us.
Later, A job produced small nicks on each hand, two or three a week. This allowed an experiment. Picking a hand at random, I prayed in Jesus name for one hand, not the other. The hand prayed for healed faster. For you this is hearsay.
The placebo effect is real. The effect of prayer on healing is not (at least according to several studies to that effect).
The point is to look for solid data that contradicts our paradigms. The hardest part is knowing our assumptions. The next hardest is checking the solidity of the data since none of us has seen everything. We confuse theory and facts.
Your assumption is that god exists. This, just like 1+1=2, is an unproveable, axiomatic statement, and given that nothing in the physical world requires it to be true in order to explain something, it is basically a null statement. Its value in terms of scientific inquiry is null.
Dumb mistakes are very irritating.
Smart mistakes go on forever,
Unless you test your assumptions.
Have you absolutely, conclusively, reproducably proven that god exists? No? Well, guess we have a problem here.