Hu... It's not perfect ? By definition ?
I was not implying that the world is not perfect. I was asking why some people feel they have been cheated by living on a not so perfect world.
Actually, that's exactly what it means. If you were standing on a comet outside the solar system, all you would see is night.
That simply does not follow. (For one, the age of the universe is not based on the age of our star, but the other way around.)
The Big Bang is actually still happening. In fact, the universe is expanding at an exponential rate. The 'noise' from the original explosion can be seen on any TV which is not set to a channel: that white noise is residual from the original Big Bang. all other explanations for it have been eliminated. What is nonsense (both logically and scientifically) is your personal interpretation of the Big Bang.
In short, scientific theories, such as gravity, evolution and the Big Bang, aren't 'just theories'. They are scientific theories, which, to all intents and purposes, means they are solid fact. Quite unlike Genesis, which is indeed 'a theory' and, as theories go, not a very good one.
I'm inclined to refer to what I said above. Moses (if he was a historical person, which is far from being certain, to put it mildly) did not write Genesis. In fact, Genesis doesn't have a single author. as already mentioned, Genesis contains two creation stories, which differ slightly.
See also Sommwerswerd's reply.
You are suggesting that day and night are the same every where in the universe based solely on the solar system we live in. Then you said that the rest of the universe is not based on the solar system. Day and night is a concept and metaphor based on the fact that God separated the light from the darkness. Saying that the first instance of Light in the text and even in the universe does not make sense if you interpret it as light coming from the sun. It is the interpretation that is wrong, not the text nor even how it was written. From a human standpoint a day any where in the universe is 24 hours, but unless the way the earth rotates is the exact same throughout the universe, then a day may not even be 24 hours. The Light came first, and then the darkness. But the first day started out in the darkness, not the light. Therefore that light was not from the sun, but it does fit the description of how the universe was lit up at the very beginning, and then the first day or time started in the darkness of the first recorded time frame Night. The next two days had no light. That is not hard to understand, as the current cosmology said that after the initial light there was darkness for thousands and perhaps millions of years. That is according to the math, not actual observation. The only thing hard to reconcile is that current education cannot accept the time frame suggested in the text but they want the rest of the universe to conform to a standard 24 hour period based solely on the rotation of the planet they live on.
Why would you call the Genesis account a theory? Where is there proof from history that humans first called it a theory? And about the whole "there are two separate stories, meaning that it has to have two authors" is just a theory, that cannot be proven scientifically, thus not a fact. I hate the cliché accusation that humans cannot keep their facts and theories straight, especially if they are trying to prove something....
You cannot really call them 'the Books of Moses' as if they are actually attributable to Moses. The versions we have were edited and compiled long after the Israelites had forgotten their own history. To assume they preserved authoritative writings from before then just isn't feasible.
The compilers of the Pentateuch both thought that the Exodus happened at scale AND thought the Israelites conquered Canaan as foreign invaders. Not just as associated texts (like the book of Joshua), but literally within the texts themselves (the book of Exodus).
I can understand looking for wheat in the chaff when it comes to the Pentateuch. But it's easy to give it waaaaay more authority than it deserves.
The Jews are the only group of ancients that claimed in the text that they did preserve it from the very hand of Moses, even up to the point of their exile into Babylon, which is the alleged start of their recording of the myth. The accusation that they were not capable of doing so is also theory and not fact until it can be proven otherwise.
The possibility that there are some greater and grander beings than us in the Universe... beings that would see us as little more than ants or some low form of bacteria... has nothing to do with the "God" of the Bible, or the question of whether the Genesis creation account is accurate.
Greater and grander beings than us, existing somewhere in the universe beyond our powers of detection... still does not change the fact that a solar system is formed by matter coalescing from a nebula into a star and then the gravitational force of the star causing planets to form around it. It does not change the fact that the Moon was formed by the Theia planetoid colliding with Earth in the planet's distant past.
No matter how many advanced alien races there are out there, the Earth simply could not have come into existence before the sun, unless you want to fall back on "Santa Claus God has magic so he can do whatever he wants" which is no different from saying "because I said so". No matter how many advanced aliens there are out there, it does not change the truth of my 5 year old's observation that "The moon is not a light" and the person who wrote Genesis obviously had no understanding of this.
My point remains, that the Bible, from its very first chapter and verse, is obviously, clearly, profoundly, wrong and thus can not be the work of an infallible, omnipotent being. Considering the possibility of advanced alien races has no bearing on this whatsoever.
Can you prove to a person looking up at the moon at night that it is not a light source? Even though it is just a reflection it is the moon that appears to be the light giver. God did not say that the moon is the source of light, but that it would rule the night with light. Once again the literal interpretation that light can only come from the sun, does not make sense when we know that it comes from every star in different wavelengths. Why would it not make sense that God created all the stars at the same time, and then allowed their light to shine after a period of darkness? The assumption is the point that the oldest thing on earth is not as old as the observable light cone of the observable universe. The misunderstanding comes from thinking that the universe started out as a point instead of starting out already 14 billion light years across. No one knows the exact size, and I am not even going to attempt to prove what it's size was at the beginning. (We already did that in another thread.) The only reason that it "has" to start out small, is because the smaller it gets, the more reasonable the explanation can be for there to have been no God at the beginning. The energy of the big bang could come from the addition of light to matter already existing, it does not have to come from the energy of an exploding mass that later had to take eons to cool, and form star systems.
The logic of even have to say, "Let there be light" implies that there was no light any where in the universe, and this is stated after the statement that God created the universe. Would it have made more sense if God had just stated that it was created without light? Would that not be implied in the fact that there was no form and void? Saying that there was darkness first would also be redundant, that is also stated in the term void. Then there was so much light, that God had to physically separate it to make it dark again. That indicates that the light was every where in the universe at the same time. That would rule out the sun, or every star for that matter being in the same state they are now. The sun and all the stars were there though. That is the physical part of the universe that we can observe to this day. They all went dark for a period of time until the morning of the 4th day having no light to give directly from their own manufacturing. After the 4th, and in an ever expanding form, the galaxies could be seen as stated by God. That is not trying to put science into the text. That is understanding what was written with the current knowledge I have. As in the myriad of translations one can see how the same text was put to words in the then context of human understanding. I am just as sure of my comprehension as some here are sure that the Bible cannot be correct, as it has gone through so many revisions. Yet the simple and concise words are still here today. There does not seem to be much added, and who knows what has been taken away. If there has been omissions, it does not seem to have hindered my acceptance of the text, but I guess we may never know. And yes the same author can write from several different perspectives. Humans are capable of that. I am not even sure how that can be an argument at all for validity or even authorship.