Thats the second time you accused me of wrongdoing without backing it up, bravo.
I backed it up right in the next part of that post... of course if you fly off the handle and reply to my post without reading the whole thing then you might miss that...
Democritus was the Father of Greek astronomy, not Plato... And Plato dismissed Democritus and his sources who spoke of "atoms" etc..
You are wrong twice.
1: Democritus believed in a flat earth as attested in Aristotle's
On The Heavens.
2: Plato believed in a spherical earth as attested in his dialogues
Phaedo and
Timaeus. Although Pythagoras had come up with the idea earlier, Plato and his student Aristotle were the main popularizers of the notion that the earth was spherical.
Before this time, in the era in which Genesis was written, the notion of the earth as flat was simply taken as a given. Prove me wrong with a citation from ancient texts or stop talking about what you don't understand.
Genesis doesn't say the flat Earth rose up from the waters
Yes it does. This part of the Genesis narrative comes from the Egyptian creation myth which speaks of a primordial mound, the first dry land, rising out of cosmic waters.
The earth's flatness is clearly implied throughout the narrative by the presence of a domed firmament. If the earth were spherical, half of it would have no sky.
The Egyptians, Hebrews, and Babylonians all believed in this cosmology. There was no competing idea that would have necessitated the author to clarify that he believed in X as opposed to Y. The author saw no more need to make the earth's flatness explicit than he saw a need to make the sky's blueness explicit.
Thats what the science tells us, and thats what Genesis tells us...
Science tells us the opposite of Genesis in nearly every line. Do you really want to analyze the text and compare it to scientific findings?
Let's start with the problematic cosmology. Flat earth, domed vault sky, both wrong.
The dry land arose out of water - wrong.
The sky separates "water from water" - wrong.
The first life was land plants - wrong.
This primordial life included fruit-bearing plants (angiosperms) - VERY wrong.
Stars, sun and moon came a day after plants - VERY wrong.
Waterborne life and birds are coeval - VERY wrong.
Birds came before animals on land - VERY wrong.
You could write each form of life that Genesis specifies on a notecard, and mix those notecards up and draw them at random, and probably get an order that is closer to the observed order of the progression of life forms than the order Genesis specifies.
I dismissed your "window" as a metaphor
Genesis 7:11, Genesis 8:2, Job 37:18.
Once again, this was not a theory or hypothesis among the ancient Hebrews. It was received, standard, accepted, given knowledge, that is referred to tangentially in the same way that the Bible only tangentially confirms that things fall vertically to the ground when not held up by something.
its obviously a metaphor - there is no literal "window" through which rain falls.
This is a circular argument.
You know there is no literal firmament, hence the Bible must not
literally mean a firmament... because the Bible is scientifically right... then you go on to cite the text to show how much the ancient Hebrews knew
Abra(ha)m was a Sumerian... Born in Ur, the capital of Sumer's 3rd dynasty. Or we could go back even further... Upon entering the "promised land" Joshua tells the people about what to them was ancient history - when their fathers lived in the land of the 2 rivers serving the watchers (gods). The Hebrew calendar is based on the calendar of Nippur which goes back to ~3976 bc. You do understand the creation story in Genesis preceded Judges, or Exodus...?
None of this word salad contests my point.
There is evidence the Hebrews were technologically inferior to neighboring civilizations through the Bronze and Iron Ages. Hence it is a safe inference that their knowledge of science at the very best extended no further than their contemporaries... that inference is then backed up in spades by their version of cosmology evident in the Tanakh.
You claim that Genesis is talking about a spherical earth, planetary collisions, and plate tectonics?
You should stick with less stupid and more believable notions, like the idea that Moses invented the jetski.