vendredi 15 mars 2024

CMI and AiG Still Boycott Geocentrism


This one was refeatured in early March this year:

Anisotropy Synchrony Convention
Different one-way speeds of lights
12 May 2012, Updated 16 Jun 2021 | Feedback archive → Feedback 2012
https://creation.com/asc-cosmology


This one is refeatured 16.III.2024

How can distant starlight reach us in just 6,000 years?
by Mark Harwood | Feedback archive → Feedback 2009
https://creation.com/how-can-distant-starlight-reach-us-in-just-6000-years


Here is the solution they have to Distant Starlight:

6,000 years have passed since the Creation Week. If the models outlined above are correct, the light we see today from any star that is greater than 6,000 light years away from the earth will have originated on Day 4 itself. This would include most of the visible stars, all of which are part of the Milky Way galaxy. We are effectively looking at God’s creative activity on Day 4 as we gaze into the universe!

So what do we make of supernova 1987A? At 170,000 light years away we are looking at an event that occurred on Day 4 but whose light did not reach us until 1987.


The question they are NOT asking is, is any star that far away?

Is there a possibility for the supernova to be only one light day away?

Well, if stars are generally smaller and closer. And this means, if the parallax measures of some several light years away are not valid trigonmetry. What would that take? Geocentrism would do.



If the star is moving, instead of one distance and two angles, we have one angle. And if that is part of the task of some angels, the star, any given star, could be moving./HGL

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