I recently saw an argument that at first sight might have seemed very intelligent. It was the usual "variable speed of light means fast radioactive decay rates", and as a counter-argument it was pointed out that a high value of
c would increase the energy ouput of the Sun and cook the Earth. As a counter to that, the creationist said that E = mc^2 couldn't apply if
c varies, because the theory of relativity assumes that it is constant.
Of course, the other theories do the same assumptions about
c (that it is invariant to all observers and thus, in pun-language, constant; but as far as I know, the actual value of it is not very relevant other than for experimentation purposes) so by the same logic they wouldn't apply either. Not a problem to the creationist, of course; "maybe the theories also varied in such a way as to make the universe and Earth appear old by keeping a high value of
c, but a low output for the Sun". Yeah, and maybe your little hypothesis lost all credibility a very long time ago and you might just as well say a magic sky pixie made the Earth a short time ago and magically made it seem old
Some clever dude wrote:* archology was founded onproving the bible wrong, yet everything that archologist have found have continued to do the oppisite and has always proven the bible correct.
Archology? Well no wonder it failed to prove the bible wrong; they were building
churches!
Of course, one wonders if the Romans also built arches to prove the bible wrong, or if the great science of archology can also strive to disprove other works of literature (likely, since the bible didn't exist at the time). Maybe there's even a branch of archology devoted to disproving Shakespeare.