macguy said:
Haha, I noticed you put Bob b as the person who wrote the quote. I thought you were responding to his last post but regardless he stated his source.
Bob b:
The most important factor is the number of children born by each female, which according to the UN is amazingly high in subSahara Africa.
Notice that he doesn't say "I think the fertility rate is amazingly high"...We do have to ask him for the link though as some are most likely lazy enough to search for it. He however, didn't state that the fertility rate is around 12. How are you arriving at this conclusion? We are talking about different things! Don't you realize that? What's with all the accusations...
I will chalk this entire point up to a tad bit of confusion. With all the talk of fertility rates, population growth rates, and 12 children per family [Bob B, Post #5], I don't think we are even on the same page in regard to this issue. Or the same chapter. We may be in the same book, but I'm not even counting on that. :chuckle:
macguy said:
Yes, a slim amount but it's nevertheless again possible for those who have the money, time and willingness to do so.
No objection.
macguy said:
The average life span on earth has nothing to do with the historical life span which you are implying.
You will have to elaborate upon this, because I can't seem to make out what you are saying. We are discussing the average life span on Earth. I cited statistics relating to the historical average life span on Earth. YEC's claim that humans in Biblical times lived much longer than the average Joe today. The statistics I cited suggest a very different scenario; one of gradually decreasing life spans the further one looks into the past. To sum it up, science concludes that humans in Biblical times (which I am assuming is 4,000-6,000 years ago) lived much shorter [on average] than modern humans. You contend the opposite. Now, do you have any extra-Biblical evidence to support this contention?
macguy said:
People are capable of living 150 years as is shown by people who live around that age today
As I stated earlier, the oldest a human has ever lived (on record) is 122 years. That is
28 years shy of 150! Besides that, it is extremely
rare for someone to live beyond the age of 100.
macguy said:
The ages were decreasing and then increased because of the rise of medicine and not because of natural means.
Maybe you can give me a timeline? Approximately when did humans live to the ripe old age of 150, when did their average life spans decrease, and when did they begin to increase due to modern medicine?
macguy said:
It would be expected that such occurrences cannot be observed because that's the past! All that is need is to show that it's a feasible concept and evidence is what I am investigating at the moment. I would love to show you but doing so would requires that you'd read a book called Genetic Entropy & the Mystery of the Genome which gives scientific evidence for it. Of course I don't expect you to go read it so I am looking for some internet resources. Did you just completely ignore that comment?
When you have evidence that it is feasible for a person to live to the age of 150, get back to me. Then once you do that, you can provide evidence that it is feasible for someone to live to 930 [Adam].
And I apologize for my somewhat indignant tone, but it is beyond me how anyone can conclude that the current global population could have been reached in such an incredibly short amount of time (4,000-6,000 years). It just boggles my mind.