J
jfl
Guest
but what, exactly, constitutes "life"? the turing test?
Biologists have a standard set of criteria for what constitutes a living thing.
1. A living thing must be composed of individual living cells.
2. A living thing must be able to take in nutrients and expel waste materials, i.e., it must be able to metabolize.
3. A living thing must be able to respond to external stimuli from its environment.
4. A living thing must be have homeostasis, i.e., the ability to maintain a certain set of internal biochemical conditions.
5. A living thing must be able to grow and reproduce itself.
6. A living thing must be able to evolve- if you accept the Darwinian point of view.
the sun was Created, fine - but not right at the beginning.
Some creationists accept the Big Bang theory of the origin of the universe. My understanding is that all matter and energy in the universe originated in the Big Bang event, thus the matter and energy for the earth’s sun did come about “in the beginning”.
not until there had been "evenings" and "mornings" and "days". logically, if a day is defined in terms of the sun and moon, then if there were days before the sun and moon,
Have you ever heard of the Great Iron Catastrophe? According to this theory the primordial earth’s oceans were filled with iron that gave the sky a reddish tint due to reflected sunlight- the same way today’s oceans give the sky a blue tint. As long as the sky had this reflected reddish color sunlight could reach the earth (thus plants were possible before day 4 of the creation week), and an observer on earth could discern between day and night, but the sun wouldn’t have been very visible due to the sky’s red color. Eventually something caused the iron in the oceans to sink towards the earth’s core, thus turning the ocean and sky blue meaning the sun became visible from the earth’s surface.
then we can't be talking about days as we understand them, can we, on the strength of what the Torah itself says?
Actually the days of the creation week could have been literal solar days, but this doesn’t mean they were 24 hour days. There is archaeological and documentary evidence indicating that the earth hasn’t always had 24 hour solar days or even 365.25 solar day years. Also, the Indian Ocean earthquake that caused the tsunami that killed so many people a while back shook the earth so much that the earth’s orbit around the sun was altered. The earth may readjust itself in time, but after the quake the earth no longer had 24 hour solar days.