Chanakya
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- Joined
- Apr 29, 2015
- Messages
- 5,811
"Explain every variable in the universe to me right now or admit there could be a God."
God of the gaps doesn't gap anymore than that.
Bingo!
"Explain every variable in the universe to me right now or admit there could be a God."
God of the gaps doesn't gap anymore than that.
Using "clock" in the wider sense of a means to measure time, then all radioactive decay dating systems are clocks. They make use of the well known phenomenon that, although individual radioactive decay events are entirely random, statistically a sufficiently large selection of them follow a law precisely. That is, indeed, an inescapable conclusion of the fact that there is such a concept as "half-life".
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Ninja'd by Dave.
Great minds think alike.
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The decay of any individual atom is, to the best of our knowledge, entirely random, but the half-life of a larger sample is deterministic enough to be used as a very precise clock.
I don't know of any clocks, as in time-pieces, but radioactive decay is extensively used for dating in geology, paleontology, and even occasionally in forensic dating. That sort of clock....
Clock / Dating are different things though.
We determine how old things are with radioactive decay, we don't (to the best of my knowledge) don't tell the tame based on the type of radioactive decay being discussed.
ftfy.
And again none of this makes any gaps to shove a God (or a maybe God, or a you can't prove there isn't a God) into.
Have you ever heard of the research by Dunning and Kruger? It explains why sometimes people perceive things as "crap" when they are not.
You THINK you fixed it when in fact you have not... because you do not know enough about the topics of science involved... but you THINK you do.
Only in the sense that measuring a millimetre is different to measuring a thousand miles. The scale and the techniques used are different, but the same dimension is being measured.
You just proved that I am an example of the Dunning Kruger effect. I was under the impression that the Atomic Clock used the radioactivity of Caesium 137.

Only slightly.
We measure time by the number or seconds in a minute and the number of minutes in an hour and so on.
So we start by defining what a second is. And we define a second by the numerical value of the caesium frequency, ΔνCs, the unperturbed ground-state hyperfine transition frequency of the caesium 133 atom, to be 9192631770 when expressed in the unit Hz, which is equal to s−1.[1]
The United States official time is kept by the NIST-F1 Cesium Fountain Atomic Clock in Boulder, Colorado. It isn’t based on radioactive decay, but it does use the radioactivity of the caesium atom to keep time.
We use radioactive decay to date the age of materials. How is this not like an atomic stopwatch?
Goodness gracious!!!
Have you guys heard of the Piezoelectric Effect?? Look it up.
Atomic (Cesium) clocks work on the that... Cesium is used instead of say Quartz because its frequency is very high and thus affords a much more accurate timing.
NOTHING to do with half-life or atomic fission... the Cesium used in atomic clocks is not even radioactive.
You said VERY PRECISE CLOCK.
Carbon dating and other radioactive half-life dating systems measure time in YEARS... DECADES and CENTURIES accuracy which is suitable for geological and archaeological timing with an accuracy of +/- Decades or Centuries.
The reason for this +/- Large amount of time is precisely because of the RANDOMNESS of the atomic decay process and thus PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTION is used to STATISTICALLY have an average for the LARGE SPREAD IN DIFFERENCES in the time of individual atoms' decay.
None of this means there's a god.
The decay of any individual atom is, to the best of our knowledge, entirely random, but the half-life of a larger sample is deterministic enough to be used as a very precise clock.
Well, the point was that while decay of individual atoms appear completely random, the resultant decay rate is deterministic enough so we can use it to measure time.
This thread has come so far from the original track that your post almost looks like a derail. But correct. All in all, anything discussed here for the last numerous pages have naught to do with the putative existence of a god.
Hans
Did you get my point about a random process leading to a deterministic function?
No, that is not correct. The half-life of a given isotope is quite precise.
As can be seen from Figure 1a, for the majority of the plotted isotopes (94 out of 120) the half-life is known with less than 5% uncertainty.
This thread has come so far from the original track that your post almost looks like a derail. But correct. All in all, anything discussed here for the last numerous pages have naught to do with the putative existence of a god.
Hans
This thread has come so far from the original track that your post almost looks like a derail. But correct. All in all, anything discussed here for the last numerous pages have naught to do with the putative existence of a god.
Well, the point was that while decay of individual atoms appear completely random, the resultant decay rate is deterministic enough so we can use it to measure time.
Hans
None of this means there's a god.