|  | "Give thanks unto the Lord, call upon his name, 
make known his deeds among the people.  Sing unto him, sing psalms unto him, 
talk ye of all his wondrous works. . . .  Seek the Lord and his 
strength, seek his face continually.   . . .  Fear before him, 
all the earth: the world also shall be stable, that it be not moved.  
Let the heavens be glad, and let the earth rejoice: and let men 
say among the nations, The Lord reigneth.  Let the sea roar, and the 
fullness thereof: let the fields rejoice, and all that is therein.  
Then let the trees of the wood sing out at the presence of the Lord, 
because he cometh to judge the earth.  O give thanks unto the 
Lord; for he is good; for his mercy endureth for ever." 	
(from I Chronicles 16:8-34) 
 Data Collection
 Having data implies a data collection 
process.  On both axes of the 
matrix, data is as good as data collection 
methodologies.  It is much easier to document scientific data 
collection procedures than the creation of scriptures.  Most 
scientific data collection occurred in the 
last few hundred years, and by definition, it is a repeatable 
process.  True there are economic, time, and resource limitations 
on data collection.  However, with enough money, most scientific 
data referenced in scientific journals can be recollected.  
Exceptions are events like a supernova, asteroid impact, 
earthquakes, measurements impossible because of extinction, etc.  
It is hard to collect seismic surveys today where there are new 
housing developments, or extensive oil field infrastructure.  
However, it is possible, given enough time and money and 
resources.  If data points, lines, areas, volumes, 
time-lapse studies, etc. are not collected carefully, they can be 
useless.
 
 For the religious, the scripture and 
theological records fall into the same category as scientific data.  
It is amazing how emphatically those with faith can be, based on 
scriptures which have been modified and changed over the centuries.  
The primary scriptural source for this book is The Holy Bible.  More 
specifically it is the King James Translation of the Holy Bible.  
Not the original Greek, Hebrew, nor Aramaic, nor the Catholic Bible, 
nor the Jehovah Witnesses translation, nor the New World 
Translation, nor any of countless other translations.  
Consider the difficulty in translating from ancient languages into 
modern languages.  It seems reasonable to acknowledge ignorant 
translators, careless transcribers, or designing and corrupt priests 
have committed many errors in getting the Bible as we know it to us.  
Consider the votes at the First Council of Nicaea in 324 A.D., where 
the nature of the Godhead was determined politically.  Or consider 
the fifty-four scholars who worked from 1604 to 1611 to create the 
King James Version of the bible from John Wycliffe's 1382 translation 
of the Latin Vulgate, William Tyndae's 1523-1530 translation from 
Hebrew and Greek, from the 1560 Protestant Geneva Bible, from the 1568 
Bishop's Bible, and from the 1609 Catholic Rheims-Douai Bible.  
Or consider the printing inaccuracies, revised text, updated spelling, 
corrected punctuation, increased italics, and changed marginal notes 
following the original 1611 printing in the 1762 Cambridge and 1769 
Oxford editions.1.32
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