onejayhawk
Afflicted with reason
Obviously, there is a difference. The Iliad is mostly fiction.Well, you see, that's the difference between the Iliad and Genesis.
J
Obviously, there is a difference. The Iliad is mostly fiction.Well, you see, that's the difference between the Iliad and Genesis.
Obviously, there is a difference. The Iliad is mostly fiction.
So these zircons have been preserved precisely because of their ability to survive through cycles of going into the deep crust of the earth and back up through extreme conditions over billions of years. By their very composition they were obviously not the first rocks.
The generally accepted science still says that most of our current water came from the late heavy bombardment half a billion years later, but there is no reason to say that there would have been no water before it, and for rocks to form earlier, which it obviously did only to go through the tectonic cycle and leave little to no remains. These zircons say nothing much about the overall composition of the entire surface at this time, other than that there was some water, which is not surprising at all since it's pretty much all over the solar system in some amounts, even if we probably needed a lot more to form the oceans we have today.
What about the nuclear weapons (or other WMDs) you mentioned twice? Don't make preposterous claims and then not even try to back them up.
I did back it up, I cited the Bible and the fact a human being can be vaporized leaving their outline on rock or concrete. Lot's wife is evidence a weapon was used and many cultures claim the gods have powerful weapons.
Where is the rock that didn't form in water? Plate tectonics began around the late heavy bombardment ~4 bya followed by life. Water > dry land > life.
"There have been older dates from Western Australia for isolated resistant mineral grains called zircons," says Carlson, "but these are the oldest whole rocks found so far." The oldest zircon dates are 4.36 billion years. Before this study, the oldest dated rocks were from a body of rock known as the Acasta Gneiss in the Northwest Territories, which are 4.03 billion years old. The Earth is 4.6 billion years old, and remnants of its early crust are extremely raremost of it has been mashed and recycled into Earth's interior several times over by plate tectonics since the Earth formed.
As opposed to almost entirely fiction? (Or, at the very least, a lot of myths mixed in with unfalsifiable accounts that might once have happened.)
That he cited references? Of course, it is.Of course. It's so obvious!!
trader/warrior said:As to where the rock that wasn't formed in water, my original argument meant to be hinting that we only have the zircons because only zircons has the properties to survive through all those forces, though my knowlege of geology and stuff is way too sparse to say anything in that regard really. So the non water formed rock is in the same place that the water formed rocks the zircons had to come from are, not there anymore, destroyed. Also the oldest known crustal rock known has been dated to up to 4.3 billion years old, so we could very possibly find something up to the age of the zircons, it's just very rare. I can't find anything on whether these crustal rocks were formed in water or not, just that they were volcanic deposits and contain the hilariously named "Cummingtonite".
That he cited references? Of course, it is.
You can dislike his support, but he did give it.
He just repeated his assertions without any actual references (not even a chapter/verse citation from the Bible) other than "some researchers...", so, no, he gave no actual support. Mechanical gave a text dump from an Ancient Aliens site about the Pyramids, even if he didn't provide the actual source, but Berzerker failed to provide any backing for his claim that the Sodom/Gomorrah event was caused by WMDs. What's more, given my recollection that the event was caused by God for the unstated sins of the populace, claiming that the Bible backs him up is somewhat farcical.
As opposed to non-fiction.
Or because when it was written, it was true and could be refuted.
As I stated, you can dislike his support but you cannot claim his position is unsupported.
By him, certainly. This is the Internet and one thing it does well is site after site, whether reputable or dodgy. He didn't even cite the Bible, which is fairly basic for a Biblical story, I'd say. Hell, you provided more evidence for his claim of WMDs than he did, so whilst the claim "his position is not unsupported" is technically true, it's utterly meaningless.
The meaning needs to be weighed but there is weight to be found.
How do you manage to say so little with so many words? Are you in training to become a Jedi?
Interesting take. I am usually accused of being laconic.
That would not really be my argument. I would just expect people to read and conclude that such things could not possibly have happened in the way they are described. (Unless you believe in miracles and then there's not really anything to discuss.)
Well, I don't believe that because no short time span was involved. In geology, there's no such thing as a short time span, only a relatively short time span - relative to geology.
Some fuzzy logic there. The people who worshiped many gods weren't the skeptics. The people trying to point out the absurdity in having gods, again, weren't believers, they were (Greek) philosophers. The demyhtologization of ancient stories has nothing to do with ID; again, those are totally different phenomena. I can perfectly well believe in God without taking everything in the Bible as literally true. And I share this belief with the Roman-Catholic church, not the smallest of Christian denominations. I can even believe that the universe was created by God without resorting to literal beliefs. The pretense that the one has anything to do wit the other I would classify as either (misguided) fundamentalist or anti-intellectual belief. I personally belief in using my intellect rather than ignoring this Godgiven ability. I cannot fathom why intellectual capabilities, supposedly derived from God, should be ignored when it comes to religious texts. I can't fathom how such ignorance can help understand any text, religious or otherwise.
Lastly, it is not me who is claiming the Bible is a Holy Book. It's religion that does that. I only recognize the fact that it does.
This might have been true when it was written, but not when it was compiled generations later. By the time we get the stories about Moses and Abraham - never mind the flood - the compilers had already forgotten their own recent history.
How do they get the story of Lot 'right' (despite its total lack of witnesses) and the story of Joshua so completely wrong? Now, if there was some reason to think the story of Lot was more recent than their own toppling of Canaan, then maybe what you say would have credibility. But the compilers confidently slot it before Joshua; even in their own books it's pre-history.
Either we have a group of people who kept records and very specific ones, or else over a time span of 300 years, they came up with the most specific and elaborate history ever made by one people group which was finished by 300 BC. Not sure how they could forget, as seeing how they seemed to have specific memories or imaginations.