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Metsfanmax wrote:Well, how far down the Biblical rabbit hole do you want to go? For starters, the glaciers all melted more than 10,000 years ago, which would I believe be in conflict with the established Biblical timeline for when the flood was supposed to occur, about 4,000 years ago.
Metsfanmax wrote:Well, how far down the Biblical rabbit hole do you want to go? For starters, the glaciers all melted more than 10,000 years ago, which would I believe be in conflict with the established Biblical timeline for when the flood was supposed to occur, about 4,000 years ago.
mrswdk wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Well, how far down the Biblical rabbit hole do you want to go? For starters, the glaciers all melted more than 10,000 years ago, which would I believe be in conflict with the established Biblical timeline for when the flood was supposed to occur, about 4,000 years ago.
People who say that just have their time scales all confused. Eden was much longer ago than that, which we know because Romans were actually a metaphor for dinosaurs.
notyou2 wrote:Scotty's right. The floods happened very suddenly when God turned on the hair dryers and melted all the ice in a day.
Phatscotty wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Well, how far down the Biblical rabbit hole do you want to go? For starters, the glaciers all melted more than 10,000 years ago, which would I believe be in conflict with the established Biblical timeline for when the flood was supposed to occur, about 4,000 years ago.
Biblical rabbit hole? Why are we talking about the Bible, or even the 'established' timeline of the Bible? There are over 200 religions and cultures over the world that recorded and passed on orally and in written form a very similar story about the great flood. Shall we conclude all their stories have the same timeline?
Timelines and the one version out of 200+ that you choose to start with aside, I'm not sure any of this relates to how so many have come to the conclusion that there was no great flood.
I would be curious to see your source for the official established timeline for a story in the Book of Genesis, if you would be so kind.
Metsfanmax wrote:Well, how far down the Biblical rabbit hole do you want to go? For starters, the glaciers all melted more than 10,000 years ago, which would I believe be in conflict with the established Biblical timeline for when the flood was supposed to occur, about 4,000 years ago.
Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Well, how far down the Biblical rabbit hole do you want to go? For starters, the glaciers all melted more than 10,000 years ago, which would I believe be in conflict with the established Biblical timeline for when the flood was supposed to occur, about 4,000 years ago.
Biblical rabbit hole? Why are we talking about the Bible, or even the 'established' timeline of the Bible? There are over 200 religions and cultures over the world that recorded and passed on orally and in written form a very similar story about the great flood. Shall we conclude all their stories have the same timeline?
If you want to debate a hypothesis, you need to be specific about its nature. Since presumably most or all of the existing cultural stories about a great flood will differ in the details about how it happened, it is not enough to specify whether a "great flood" occurred, but when, how, and for how long it lasted. We cannot make any progress on the issue until that has been indicated. So if you are not talking about the flood of Genesis, then which one are you talking about? Or do you want us to try and simultaneously discuss all 200 stories at the same time? I have started off with one particular narrative that I thought would be relevant to you, but if you prefer a different narrative, please be specific.Timelines and the one version out of 200+ that you choose to start with aside, I'm not sure any of this relates to how so many have come to the conclusion that there was no great flood.
I can't speak for everyone, but perhaps it has to do with the fact that there's no strong contemporary geological evidence to suggest that a global flood occurred.I would be curious to see your source for the official established timeline for a story in the Book of Genesis, if you would be so kind.
Obviously I have very little knowledge about Biblical scholarship, but I was referring to the well-known Ussher timeline. As far as I am aware other timelines that are still young Earth creationist in nature don't put the age at greater than 10,000 years, i.e. after the end of the last glacial maximum.
Phatscotty wrote:We'll probably never get all of history from all humanity, but think about how much history we could gain and what it would do to our understanding of history if we got up to 10%. How about 5% to 6%? a 1% increase in discovering and understanding human history will likely change 'everything we know'.
2dimes wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Well, how far down the Biblical rabbit hole do you want to go? For starters, the glaciers all melted more than 10,000 years ago, which would I believe be in conflict with the established Biblical timeline for when the flood was supposed to occur, about 4,000 years ago.
Established by whom? Old Testament timelines are terribly vague. The seven day earth creation could be 7 earth days or more likely as alluded to, a lot of earth years.
Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:We'll probably never get all of history from all humanity, but think about how much history we could gain and what it would do to our understanding of history if we got up to 10%. How about 5% to 6%? a 1% increase in discovering and understanding human history will likely change 'everything we know'.
Well I don't think that learning more about human history will teach us more about dinosaurs or relativity, but sure -- I agree with you that there's a lot of value in continuing to study the history of humanity. And indeed, I support the people who actually spend their lives dedicated to actively learning about this. What I don't have much patience for is people who engage in idle speculation on internet forums with people who are mostly just as ignorant about the subject as they are, when they could be out scouring the available evidence -- or finding new evidence of their own. There's so much to learn out there, man, and you're not going to learn much of it on the Conquer Club forums.
Phatscotty wrote:2dimes wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Well, how far down the Biblical rabbit hole do you want to go? For starters, the glaciers all melted more than 10,000 years ago, which would I believe be in conflict with the established Biblical timeline for when the flood was supposed to occur, about 4,000 years ago.
Established by whom? Old Testament timelines are terribly vague. The seven day earth creation could be 7 earth days or more likely as alluded to, a lot of earth years.
The 7 days could also be 'great days', which represents (around/about) 60,000 years, referring to solar revolutions.
It also could simply be the 7 days 'the watcher' took to first notice Venus would always appear in the morning sky just before the sun was about to rise, discovering the first thought and preceding the first step of evolution in Stanley Kubrik's 2001 A Space Odyssey
DoomYoshi wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Well, how far down the Biblical rabbit hole do you want to go? For starters, the glaciers all melted more than 10,000 years ago, which would I believe be in conflict with the established Biblical timeline for when the flood was supposed to occur, about 4,000 years ago.
Biblical rabbit hole? Why are we talking about the Bible, or even the 'established' timeline of the Bible? There are over 200 religions and cultures over the world that recorded and passed on orally and in written form a very similar story about the great flood. Shall we conclude all their stories have the same timeline?
Timelines and the one version out of 200+ that you choose to start with aside, I'm not sure any of this relates to how so many have come to the conclusion that there was no great flood. I would be curious to see your source for the official established timeline for a story in the Book of Genesis, if you would be so kind.
Over 200 cultures all started similar manners of civilization including agriculture. Agriculture works best in flood plains, but if the floods come early or late, your livelihood can be ruined. It's not surprising that floods became the chief "big bad".
In 1816 a volcano erupted that caused the sky to darken worldwide and it snowed in New York in July. This is a real even and yet it's not part of our American mythology at all. Why is Johnny Appleseed more well known than the year without a summer? Why are there hundreds of accounts of Santa Claus but few accounts of the reproductive pathways of chaetognaths? Why does every culture have an account of dragons but only one (modern) culture has an account of DNA?
Phatscotty wrote:Luckily, I do have the patience to wait for someone who wants to and can talk about the all the water resulting from the melting of the last ice age. Just curious, and this has nothing to do with religion or religious texts. What do you think happened to all the water resulting from the melting of the ice sheets marking the end of the last ice age? Hint, the North American ice sheet spanned from the North Pole to Kentucky and over Canada the ice sheet was stacked up to 2 miles thick.
phats wrote:Nobody knew what a dinosaur was until 1938, so everybody 'knew' there was no such thing as dinosaurs in 1937.
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:phats wrote:Nobody knew what a dinosaur was until 1938, so everybody 'knew' there was no such thing as dinosaurs in 1937.
wut
Metsfanmax wrote:TA1LGUNN3R wrote:phats wrote:Nobody knew what a dinosaur was until 1938, so everybody 'knew' there was no such thing as dinosaurs in 1937.
wut
Come on, I was ready to let that one go =/
For 15 years -- from 1868 to 1883 -- Hadrosaurus foulkii was the only mounted dinosaur skeleton on display anywhere in the world. In 1879, it became the first dinosaur skeleton to be displayed in Europe when the Royal Scottish Museum in Edinburgh acquired a copy.
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