@TrevorGoodchild @pepsi_man

Radiometric dating only works if you know the starting conditions

I find Carbon dating less problematic in it's assumptions because you can assume a certain amount of carbon isotopes in the atmosphere being the same in the past as today but I did not say that it is not problematic

Other dating methods are more problematic in my opinion

Let's say you have Uranium turn to lead and try to find the date by the ratio of Uranium to Lead

What was it before 100% Uranium

Follow

@TrevorGoodchild @pepsi_man

If matter was not created out of nowhere then something that once had a certain percent of Uranium had to exist before it had that certain percent so if you assumed it started 100% Uranium and turned to lead then you could guess a date but if it was 100% Uranium then it must have been something before it was 100% Uranium and something before that and so on

Also you could start at some other % Uranium

It is very arbitrary because you do not know the starting point

· · Web · 1 · 0 · 0

@TrevorGoodchild @pepsi_man

For example an object could have had some lead in it that was already there and did not come from Uranium as it's starting point

You can not really know how much lead it started with and how much Uranium unless you know what it was like in the initial condition it was formed

And if you witnessed it in the initial condition it was formed then you would already know how old it was from when it was formed and not need a dating method to date it

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Merovingian Club

A club for red-pilled exiles.