crispybits wrote:So when talking about things like radiometric dating, the line is "well you can't assume things have always been constant, in the past the rate of this or that might have been much higher/lower", but when it suits we switch to "assuming the rate of this going back as long as it suits me is constant I can draw THIS conclusion"
Funny
Crispybits,
I'm consistent. Play this scenario out, I'm conjecturing that the reason there is not millions of years of sediment deposit is there was a massive acceleration of tectonic movement during the global flood of Noah, Genesis 7. And now we see the slow continental drift.
What most humans do in error, is take the rate of continental drift that we see today, divided by the distance traveled= equals the age of the continents from Pangea. There is a severe problem with this, and that is the absence of sediment along the ocean floor leaving a trail as the tectonic plates moved the continents. This absence of sediment is further compounded with the small amount of sediment deposits that the rivers have formed so far. Putting this information together means at some point in the past the continents moved quickly and now have slowed. Hence giving an old age with distance traveled based on today's rate of speed, but in reality, the movement was recent in geological age.
So you bring up a valid point, which reveals I'm in harmony with my evidenc that radioactive rates of decay have not always been constant.