lamont
Contributor
Uncle Pug:Naturally, everyone wants to confine discourse within a framework of their own making.
If you control the framework then you can control the discussion.
If you are the definer of terms then you are determiner of what is meaningful.
You are the decider!
The problem that I have is when people stumble into my framework and then proceed to make absolute fools of themselves.
When people who desperately want the Earth to be only a few thousand years old and start arguing with me that the light from the Andromeda galaxy isn't really 2.5 million years old because the speed of light might vary over the distance between here and there, that annoys me greatly because they have no background in astronomy, quantum mechanics or electromagnetism and don't realize how radical modifications to the speed of light would destroy all our observations due to the effect that the modification of the speed of light has on the force of electromagnetism and the effects it would have on chemistry and spectral lines to begin with.
If someone wants to believe that God created the universe a few thousand years ago with the photons already in flight to make it look just like Andromeda is 2.5 billion years ago and just like the universe is 10 billion years old, but its just a big joke on the astronomers and cosmologists pulled off absolutely perfectly and undetectably -- well, that's outside of my framework. I don't have much to say about that other than that I'm going to bet against it.
But when someone stumbles into a scientific framework and starts to think that they can randomly twist and turn dials like the speed of light to make astronomical observations fit with their preconcieved notions of what must be correct, then that annoys me because they're just wrong.
Keep your religion out of my science and I'll keep my science out of your religion. I've got no problems with seperate frameworks.