Actually, it does no such thing. It might make the 7th day holy though.
Not all days were holy, but the day identified by the number 7 was.
Close enough. But that means there was no light. Not, as you claim:
It means there was no day, the world wasn't spinning near a star yet but was covered by water and darkness.
Which the Genesis authors simply neglected to mention?
They mentioned it, the world went from water and darkness (further from the sun at the snow line) to day and night with the sky ruled by two great lights. Those lights weren't so great further from the sun where the world was covered by water and darkness.
The authors also said the water was one before God divided it with Heaven - that means the water, including our water, was located where Heaven is now. Thats the firmament, the hammered out bracelet - the asteroid belt.
And that means more of our water is on the other side of Heaven - the waters above were separated from the waters below. The waters below became our seas and the water above can be found beyond the snow line.
Which is incorrect. 'Signs' is something we find in astrology, not astronomy. (Which, interestingly, is exactly what I commented.)
You ignored etc... It means more than just signs. How do you know what astronomers were doing back then? They were watching the sky for signs, like the heliacal rising of stars to tell the time of year or the age. Like Jesus being the lamb and the fish, Aries was giving way to Pisces.
You may have noticed Genesis follows the order of whole numbers: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 , 7.
But why?
Still not showing any god being replaced. Marduk, in the Babylonian version, took over the role of creator god. It may surprise you to know that each Mesopotamian city had its own city god. This was the central god for that city. Ergo, they would use their city god in the rol of creator god if that befitted their mythology.
Did earlier versions give Marduk the role of creator? The link said Anu, Enlil and Ninurta were the heroes of an earlier version and Marduk replaced one of them (Ninurta) and his father Ea replaced Enlil. Anu remained because he was the father of both Enlil and Ea.
No, it wasn't. What on Earth would make you think that land (a matter) could be without form? Everything material has form.
I didn't say land or matter was without form, I said (dry) land submerged by an ocean is not in the form of dry land.
The first part of that statement is correct.
The Enuma Elish is recorded knowledge
It was an explanation of what was most likely to happen.
From a single impact... Not multiple impacts. And I dont buy that either, there is not a near 100% chance an object at the asteroid belt would fall into the sun because of a collision.
No. I'm pointing out that you have more chance of winning the lottery 10 times in a row.
Thats near 100%... But that was your prediction from a single impact. You said multiple 'precise' impacts could have delivered the Earth to this location from the asteroid belt. Well, if they weren't quite precise the Earth might have ended up a little closer or a little further from the sun. And yet those multiple impacts would have been precise for delivering Earth a little closer or further from the sun.
You fail to acknowledge the conclusion: no such impacts occurred. Ergo, Earth didn't start out t the asteroid belt.
Earth has been hit many times, the period 4+bya preceding the appearance of dry land and life is called the late heavy bombardment because the Earth was pummeled so badly our evidence of that earlier world was nearly destroyed leaving us some zircons...and of course the water.
And recent research suggests during this period several large impactors collided with the Earth. The Enuma Elish describes several "winds" striking Tiamat as Marduk deals the final blow before having another wind take part of her corpse to a new location (here).
I'll explain the sentence to you (i.e. what you wrote):
1) Ptolemy described the visible
2) that doesn't preclude planets that were unseen.
You may notice that visible contradicts unseen.
Now do you understand what you wrote?
The word was preclude... Visible planets do not preclude the existence of unseen planets. I know an unseen planet is not visible (you built my alleged lie on that straw man?). And I know a seen planet doesn't mean unseen planets dont exist. Your picture of Ptolemy's "universe" shows 11 concentric circles surrounding the world. That makes 12... Not 5, or 7...
I'm not sure why you expect a link from me to something which is public knowledge. Am I the guardian of public knowledge?
When I said the planets were wanderers you claimed:
Sure. Except only Mercury is described as 'the wanderer'. So no need for your generalizations.
Where is your link claiming only Mercury was described as "the wanderer"? Did you cherry pick your evidence? Well, you haven't shown any evidence yet... But your argument does ignore the significant data showing Mercury wasn't the only wanderer.
You said I was making generalizations, I expect you to back it up.
Indeed. Now explain why other mammals with big heads have less trouble giving birth than humans.
Because their birth canals provide more room for those big heads than women. I already posted a link showing our hominid ancestors didn't suffer nearly as much as anatomically modern women.
None of which are large numbers. 1,000 would be a large number. Or 684. Or 600,000 Hebrews arriving in Palestine.
I didn't say 9, 12 and 13 were large numbers, I said they were larger than 5 or 7.
Are you arguing something? Because none of the statements in that paragraph follows from the previous.
You said Arakhor was over estimating me when he called me deceitful whereas you said I was intellectually dishonest. If you're right and deceit is easier than intellectual dishonesty then Arakhor is under estimating me. And if he's right you are the one over estimating me.
Broad generalizations are by definition inaccurate. That's kind of why we call them broad generalization.
So where is this broad generalization and why is it inaccurate?
But since you missed my repeatedly pointing out your broad generalization, here it is again: 'Earth started out at the asteroid field'.
That wasn't your complaint, here's what you said:
This is an example of cherry picking: you're focusing on numbers appearing in different ancient cultures and presenting this as 'evidence'.
Evidence of what? I pointed out the Inca and Sumerians both incorporated 12 into their cosmology and you called that cherry picking. How is it cherry picking? Where is the significant data that contradicts my claim about the Inca and Sumerians? Then you decided it was a broad generalization (why?) and by definition inaccurate (how?).
For soem reason even this fact fails to be processed by you, and we still hear you claiming 'Earth started out at the asteroid field'. Without any evidence whatsoever. Calling that a broad generalization is an understatement.
Why is it a broad generalization?
Simple. You neglect the possibility that the number 12 occurs in 2 cultures by sheer coincidence. You immediatley assume a connection. For which, again, we have no evidence.
I've cited the use of 12 in several cosmologies from around the world and there's many more. At what point do these coincidences become evidence of a connection? How is what I said inaccurate?
Broad generalization no 2. Here's no 3:
See above. (And various pages of this thread.)
Then you should have no problem quoting it... Where is this significant data contradicting me?
Didn't Trump mock somebody with a disability?
Which is your response to:
I don't see any mention of sun, moon, planets in there.
You aint reading the debates, how would you know what was mentioned or not? I'm not the one here arguing the number 7 refers to the sun, moon and 5 visible planets. Others made that argument... Argue with them.
1) science does not support Genesis
2) Genesis sometimes is in accordance with science.
Try processing that for a few seconds. (Keep in mind Genesis is not a science book, so no presence of science in Genesis is required. It might be about elves and ogres or the big bad wolf.)
There's a difference between the science doesn't support Genesis and sometimes the science supports Genesis...but its just a coincidence when that happens, got it.
The world was watery. This is not fact, it's fiction. The world didn't become watery until much, much later.
Genesis doesn't say the universe was watery, it says the world was covered by water before dry land and life appeared. Thats around 4 bya during or following the late heavy bombardment. Even if you were right about when the world became watery, Genesis is supported by the science if it was covered by water before land and life showed up.
Btw, just how much later are you talking about? The link I posted suggested our water predates the lunar cataclysm ~4.5 bya and was present when the Earth formed.
People were made in the image of the gods on the 6th day and were told to be fruitful and fill the Earth (now there's DNA evidence of one very large migration out of Africa about 70kya). We were in Africa over 200kya but didn't leave for 130k, but once we did leave it took only ~55ky to reach S America.
Its like a slave owner freed a multitude of slaves and told them to spread out. According to Mesopotamian myth the first peoples were created to serve the gods. Genesis refers to a time when there was no Adam to till the ground. And when there was, his job was to maintain the Garden.
And what makes daylight, pray?
Rotating near the sun
A subtle difference, I'm sure.
Nothing subtle about chopping up sentences to remove context...
But God didn't create the stars, he made them to serve for signs and seasons etc for earthly observers. They were given a new role in Earth's sky because the world (and eventually the dry land) acquired night and day, ie spinning closer to the sun.