QuantumPion said:
Please clarify what you are referring to.
by saying that this is based similarly like the flipping of a coin, you are bringing it down to chance that your assumption, like the false assumptions that the rates of decay are constant, not only is this a common sense rationality, it is based on scientific proof:
http://news.stanford.edu/news/2010/august/sun-082310.html you declare that it is always constant, that would be a lie.
"If I take one U-238 atom, it could decay any second or in 10 billion years. If I take a billion billion billion U-238 atoms, the number that decay every second will be very close to lambda"
you seem to place this on the assumption that the more chaos you have the more ordered the data. this is not true, even within error margin. fluctuations occur throughout time, and many different elements have been found out to be decaying faster and slower depending on the element. with many dating methods we have seen varying and severely inaccurate ages.
Edit by Evo: Deleted links to religious sources
all backed by scientific research, read the sources. many of the dating methods were proven to be incorrect by using this method. if real science journals from Stanford university, and others say it is not a constant, and cannot be trusted for the age of the rock. how could you possibly think that you can date a rock back that way when it has been scientifically observed to be fluctuating at least every 33 days.
thus scientific research proves that the reliability of the "constant date-back" method that you used to be completely unreliable, and scientifically inaccurate.