I was not clear in what I wrote. I meant to say not even those I listed are utterly wrong.
Those I cited e.g. Clerk-Maxwell's ether, > phlogiston, Copernicus and his circular orbits, or even ANE ideas of a flat > earth!!! were good approximations of their day and have a tremendous amount RIGHT with them even if shortcomings became apparenet later.
I should think before I write!!
Thanks George, - can never get past you !!!!
Michael
----- Original Message -----
From: George L. Murphygmurphy@raex.com
To: Michael Roberts ; Don Winterstein ; asa ; george murphy
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2007 2:28 PM
Subject: Re: [asa] YEC--What can we offer them?
......> > > However when we look at YEC "science" > no matter how charitable we are we simply have to say that it is > > TOTALLY AND UTTERLY > WRONG > > There are very few scientific ideas > from the past we could describe like that e.g. Clerk-Maxwell's ether, > phlogiston, Copernicus and his circular orbits, or even ANE ideas of a flat > earth!!! > > Science progresses by researchers > finding that predecessors were partly wrong and often realise why they were > partly wrong. > > Michael > >
I think one has to be careful about saying that even some of these examples are completely "wrong." E.g., the ANE flat earth (& I'm talking now only about the shape of the earth, not the heavenly dome &c) was a decent approximation to the portion of the earth to which people in ancient Sumeria, Palestine &c had access. If someone asks me to sketch a map of how to get from Akron to Columbus I'll do it as if the earth is flat. Again, it's an approximation - you can approximate a small portion of the surface of a sphere by a tangent plane. Of course it's a quite different matter for people who have access to data about more extensive portions of the earth to claim that it's a sphere.
Shalom,
George
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Received on Wed Jul 11 10:49:48 2007
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