Hey, I haven't seen a thread on that yet, but maybe some of you people have decent input.
around two years ago, I read Seraphim Rose's book on Genesis and early man, where he basically argued for Young Earth Creationism. I found his arguments very convincing, partly because his case was coherent with the Orthodox worldview, which is always a huge factor for whether or not I accept a viewpoint. His arguments, outside of a criticism of incoherent arguments for Darwinism, were largely based on Biblical Theology and Patristics.
However: I've recently used my free time more to look into genetic anthropology and the creation of different races, and they all presume very large windows of time, usually in the 30-50 000 year range.
I think it's safe to say that you have to be a general creationist in order to be Orthodox, but what do you people think about the time frames?
In this video, Hamilton's guest makes a case that while archeology gets a lot right, they often make mistakes about carbon dating and their understanding of received historical chronologies, particularly the serial/simultaneous interpretation of Egyptian dynasties, which in turn throws off carbon dating because they are used as reference points which you need in order to use the method.
Is that what's going on with anthropology? They think admixture happened at point in time X because they used carbon dating of Egyptian artifacts as reference points? Is carbon dating a trustworthy method to begin with, given that there are several factors that influence radiocarbon decay and thus invalidate?
around two years ago, I read Seraphim Rose's book on Genesis and early man, where he basically argued for Young Earth Creationism. I found his arguments very convincing, partly because his case was coherent with the Orthodox worldview, which is always a huge factor for whether or not I accept a viewpoint. His arguments, outside of a criticism of incoherent arguments for Darwinism, were largely based on Biblical Theology and Patristics.
However: I've recently used my free time more to look into genetic anthropology and the creation of different races, and they all presume very large windows of time, usually in the 30-50 000 year range.
I think it's safe to say that you have to be a general creationist in order to be Orthodox, but what do you people think about the time frames?
In this video, Hamilton's guest makes a case that while archeology gets a lot right, they often make mistakes about carbon dating and their understanding of received historical chronologies, particularly the serial/simultaneous interpretation of Egyptian dynasties, which in turn throws off carbon dating because they are used as reference points which you need in order to use the method.
Is that what's going on with anthropology? They think admixture happened at point in time X because they used carbon dating of Egyptian artifacts as reference points? Is carbon dating a trustworthy method to begin with, given that there are several factors that influence radiocarbon decay and thus invalidate?