Are you against the notion of Aliens being evolved before the Earth even formed? I am just curious, because you seem to believe that humans are the only beings in the universe capable of advanced thought.
Apparently you've missed the fact that I'm quite open about my preference for science fiction as my primary fiction reading material (and forgotten that both of us used to be active in the Test of Time threads in the Civ II forum here). No, I'm not at all opposed to the idea of aliens evolving before Earth was formed... in fiction, or as a "wouldn't it be really great to find out if it really happened" long-term goal (a really
long long-term goal). I sincerely hope we do find alien life some day.
But we live in the real universe, and so far nobody's even confirmed life elsewhere in the Solar System, let alone aliens anywhere else. There's not one shred of evidence that aliens had anything at all to do with Earth in the past, or in the present.
I barely read books to my kids, much less told them any bed time stories.
That's a shame. Most kids love to be read to, or to be told stories. My grandmother would read to me, but the others in my family preferred to teach me to read so I could read the stories for myself.
Of course it is important that kids be able to tell the difference between fiction and nonfiction.
I do not recall telling them anything that I made up. That would be lying and/or deceitful. I have told them about stories from my child hood about what happened to me or my parents and grandparents. Things have changed so much, some things seem pretty alien to them, that I took for granted, like "not wearing seat belts". I am not a religious person and have not consciously taught them any religious ideas on any topic. I have posted more in this thread alone, than I have ever mentioned to my kids.
So why do you cling to such odd notions, then? Maybe you don't tell your kids stories, but you've been spinning plenty of them here.
I said that they were debating on what a Son of God was since the time of the Flood. You pointed out that Tiberius Caesar was not deified, so it would seem that Jesus was the last human that a claim of divinity was made about, until the Catholics centuries later decided to create a Pope with that aspect.
Nope. Bzzt! Wrong. Tiberius wasn't deified, but Caligula declared himself a god (and his sister Drusilla a goddess), Claudius deified Augustus' second wife Livia (Claudius' grandmother) after her death, and Claudius himself was deified. And there were others... many others.
One list of deified Roman rulers
And here's another list of deified Roman Emperors.
And since then, I seem to recall reading about people who pray to various saints. Even though they're not on the same level as God, being prayed to does imply some sort of divinity. So there have been plenty of people who have either claimed divinity for themselves or others did it for them.
The whole issue started when I claimed Adam was a Son of God, instead of an evolved hominid. Berzerker was equating the blood of the dead gods as some kind of mechanism for evolving human life. It then went to the point that there were many male and female humans created at the same time and Adam was one of them. But from the account he seems too different. It just seems to me that at some point humans stopped being Sons of God. Now you may claim that they never were, but that is not what the text says that this thread is commenting on. From what I have heard, the ancients used to discuss how many angels could fit on the head of a needle?
I am to believe that they just made up these angels and then debated what they could do. I guess they did not have theater yet for entertainment.
Theatre has been around in some form or other for at least 2500 years.
Yesterday's news hardly explains what happened in North America 300 years ago. It would seem to me that humans have forgotten to remember anything. They really do not have to any more. Sometimes it is hard to comprehend that there are people around the world who can speak 3 languages fluently, and we complain locally that our kids do not know math and science skills, and they cannot even speak English. Humans are very capable of retaining information. I do not see the issue that you are trying to claim that humans cannot retain knowledge for long periods of time. I do not see that much information being added from 2000 BC to even 500 AD. Have you seen what is even in the first 5 books of the Bible? Would any one today even be able to memorize the whole of it? Even the Quran in 500 AD is not as long, and Muslims claim all that information was retained and passed down orally. They even added information. Memorization was important when I was growing up and it was not that difficult, but kids, today, do not even see the need. Everything is online, whether it is true or not.
My point is that it's hard enough to render an accurate account of yesterday's news just by telling someone about it, because memory is imperfect, and the retelling normally takes on at least some tinge of the speaker's own point of view and biases. How much more difficult must it be for an accurate oral retelling of events over tens, hundreds, or thousands of years, particularly when most of that time there was little or no literacy.
I don't disagree that people today are more careless and dismissive of the need to remember things. We're so used to Google and Wikipedia to do our remembering for us. Why bother remembering stuff when we can just look it up?
I'll admit to being lazy and making use of Google and Wikipedia to look up facts quickly instead of pulling out one of my reference books. But there was a time when I memorized a whole rock opera - Jesus Christ Superstar, actually - from overture to curtain call. This was 35 years ago, and I still remember most of it, both visually and aurally. But sadly, some of it's faded over the years, and I do make sure to avoid any other productions of JSC because I don't want to contaminate my memories with other things that were never part of the production I want to remember.
But you're talking about a timespan of millennia, and even though some people did have excellent memories and language skills, you're just not going to convince me that everything was remembered perfectly, word for word, for all that time before these stories were written down.
I suppose it's possible that some people could memorize long parts of the first 5 books of the bible. But I tried to read that long list of "begats" and other census-type stuff and it's mind-boggling why anyone would even bother. Maybe the same sort of people who memorize years' worth of sports trivia would be able to memorize this stuff (it's names and numbers, after all). I just skipped to the end, figuring that if I ever wanted to know any of it for some unimaginably weird reason, I knew where to find it.
I don't see how your statement could apply equally to all of them.
The North American Indian's way of life is not that complicated and full of detail. I am not even going to try to get into the mind of any of them, and point out what they think or even teach. For the most part, they were pretty isolated, and had no outside information that would change anything for 10,000 years. I am sure their lives were rich in detail about animals, and the natural life around them, but they did not have to retain much information as it relates to even 17th century technology, much less everything that happened yesterday in Toronto, or New York City.
Wow. So you think they just sat around the campfire, maybe did a little hunting or had the occasional war with their neighbors, and that was it?
Some of the Native North Americans had very sophisticated and complex societies. And you think that only information that relates to European technology and concerns is worth retaining?
This thread is not in the History section, and I have not seen any one claim it should be there, but you. I do not start threads in the History section about the Flood. I do make a comment when another poster mentions it, but afaik I have not initiated any topic on the Flood. I am not sure if you accept the birth of Jesus as dividing between time periods, but the people during the time of Jesus seemed to think the Flood was also a division between time periods. I am not sure why some people make a big deal about it, and I realize that it probably offends them. If there is another way to easily view what has happened in the last 10,000 years and break it down into chunks, I would be glad to use it. I apologize if my usage of the Flood, and the birth of Jesus as pointing out references in time was misleading or confusing. I guess there are some people who know exactly when the Flood happened, but people in 3,000 BC seem to think that it happened before they were alive. North American Indians say it happened 10,000 years ago, but you seem not to take their oral traditions as meaning that much. I guess there have not been that many notable floods since that one, unless the one prying the information out of them was asking leading questions. Other than that, I am not the one trying to re-write the Flood accounts that some ancients claimed happened.
You've talked about the flood in several other threads in OT, and did some pretty fancy pretzel twisting to try to convince me that it happened. It hasn't worked.
What do you mean, you're not sure if I accept "the birth of Jesus as dividing between time periods"? I'm not even going to state definitively whether he existed at all. I wouldn't have a problem with the claim that he was an ordinary person who had some good ideas that eventually got hijacked by some of his followers and twisted into something else that was used as the excuse for some pretty horrible things, like slavery, genocide, suppression of women's rights, and so on. It's the supernatural nonsense I have a problem with.
If there is another way to easily view what has happened in the last 10,000 years and break it down into chunks, I would be glad to use it.
Most societies broke it down according to who the ruler was at any particular time. The Romans thought of events as being either pre- or post- founding of Rome, and that was their "year 0".
Would you STOP attributing things to me that I never said? When did I indicate disrespect for Native American oral traditions? Like anyone else, they don't have perfect memories, and they've gone longer without literacy. And not all of them have flood myths.
I am not sure how any of this has to do with claiming that one species eventually led to all species.
You claimed that scientists made it up. No, they didn't. There's this thing called the scientific method, that is a procedure to figure out if a hypothesis is true or not. Very often, it turns out not to be true, and the scientist goes back and tries again to figure out whatever the problem is.
I agree, the Jews had no grounds to condemn Jesus to death. I make no claims on the details. The Hebrews claim the universe came into being as soon as God thought it. Scientist claim the universe came into being even sooner. No one is claiming to explain the details of how that worked. I keep saying that scientist need time. I need time to even post this. God does not need time, but that seems to be a useless fact to point out to one who says there is no God. If there is no God, why quibble over what a God can or cannot do?
There are politicians and others who try to force this nonsense into science classes. There are some who want to make prayer mandatory in schools. Some think it should be illegal not to swear on a bible in court or other places where people are expected to promise to be truthful and honest. I can't even sing my own country's anthem in good conscience, because it excludes atheists and others who don't believe in God.
People did not accept that Jesus was God either.
Some people insist that Jesus is God (that they're two aspects of the same being).
You were complaining about what a day meant.
I know what a day is. It's the length of time it takes for a planet to make one full rotation on its axis. Some people define a day as the period of time when the Sun is over the horizon, or at least when it's not dark. So yeah, I don't go for this nonsense that "well, a day back then could have really been thousands of years...". It's just disingenuous tap-dancing, in a desperate attempt to claim that the bible really is a science book. It isn't.
You accept that one species can change into another one.
I accept evolution, yes. There is evidence for it.
Humans may be capable of contemplating life, but that does not mean every single human does. You are claiming they did something that they themselves have not even claimed. That is fabricating what they did.
I did not say every single human did, or does. STOP PUTTING WORDS ON MY KEYBOARD THAT I NEVER TYPED.
What evidence will work for you? Can I force God to come to you in a bright light, and give you such evidence? Nothing in writing is going to give you any evidence. I am not sure re-creating it in a video is going to provide you with such evidence. I cannot go back in time with a video camera, and give you evidence. Do you demand evidence for everything that has happened in the past, or trust what humans have written about it? I do not think that it was an extraordinary event, but some events only happen once in human history. Why are you obsessing that it could not happen? I guess I am a hypocrite, because I tend to pick and choose my so-called extraordinary events. I am sure the people who accept the events that I don't are also hypocrites, because they also pick and choose which events they accept as well.
You accept extraordinary claims without any evidence. I don't. I require evidence.
I have seen paintings of North American Indians and their religious symbols in the Astrology and occult stores in the malls that I frequently visit. From what I have read and seen North American Indians seem to have believed strongly in the spirit world. Every people group that ever existed, except for the most atheistic have had their own brand of religion, but it all seems to have the same component of communication with a messenger between humans and the divine.
Your point? Just because they believed it, it doesn't make it fact. The Southwest US landscape is attributed in some myths as the bodies of monsters slain by the Hero Twins.
Guess what - they're not the corpses of monsters. They're just rock formations that were made naturally, by erosion and weathering.
None of this follows. You want me to accept that they sat down and contemplated their current news story. You are equating someone remembering what happened in the news yesterday, that they made up. But not the day after. You want me to believe that everyday they "made up" the news of the day.
I don't know how to make it any simpler.
I'm talking about
how imperfect the human memory is. If I asked you to recite - from memory - yesterday's newspaper or last night's newscast, the only way you could do so would be if you had a photographic or eidetic memory. Most people don't have those abilities. I'm saying that every day, people remember the previous day
imperfectly. If asked to relate what happened, they will hit the highlights, but either miss or blur the details, and even make up some of those details to compensate for what they don't remember.
Think of it as the problems inherent when trying to get witnesses to describe a traffic accident or fight. Almost nobody gets it exactly right, the first time, and two different witnesses can have wildly varying accounts.
The Hebrews wrote down the event of the bright light the same day it happened. For 40 days they were writing down the event. That is what people do when things happen that are newsworthy. If an event happens and humans do not think that it is newsworthy, they do not write about it. They certainly do not come back hundreds of years later and contemplate a non-worthy news event, and make up a story about it as being newsworthy.
They do if they later decide it was newsworthy.
Funny, about all that stuff in the bible that uses the number 40. Forty days and forty nights for the ark. Moses wandering around for 40 years, when the reverse trip only takes a few weeks. There's a joke that the reason it took 40 years to go from Egypt to Canaan was because Moses was a typical guy who wouldn't ask for directions. Then the 40 days and 40 nights for the Ten Commandments. Do you really expect me to believe that all these events took exactly 40 days and 40 nights/years?
Or they settle on an idea, until enough evidence (people may be useful in the process) can convince them otherwise. Just because something seems right, it does not make it right. That would be dogma. At least that is what I am being accused of, because they claim I am wrong, and they are right.
That's why the scientific method is so useful. Some of us are saying you're wrong because your claims are based on mythology and tabloid-quality pseudoscience, not real science.
There's an interesting question asked by Lawrence Krauss in one of his videos: He uses the hypothetical example of choking. Would the person choking prefer being helped with the Heimlich maneuver, or should people just pray instead?
If spiritual stuff makes people feel better, fine. But it's no substitute for proper medical procedures.
This thread has hit more icebergs on the sea of speculation than the Titanic.
Then maybe you should stop speculating.
The reason why Christians do not, is because it does not fit into their current form of dogma. That is; we read something into it long ago, and that cannot change, because we have decreed there is nothing new that will change it. With the advent of the scientific method we see that new information can come along. But it is too late, dogma was set. The same can be said for new scientific "eureka" moments. If they become dogma, ie fact. They cannot be changed later. If they can, then those who allow science to change are just as hypocritical as a religion that changes their dogma.
WHAT???!
You're honestly sitting there and saying that science is hypocritical because it changes when new information comes along that disproves what we thought we knew before?
That's how it's
supposed to work.
Those ice cubes melt because we're near a light (the sun) that warms the planet. Removing the sun means those ice cubes stay frozen, it doesn't mean this planet disappears. It becomes a frozen vagabond just like billions of other planets out there ejected or abandoned by cosmic events.
If the Sun never existed, then Earth would never have existed, and neither would the freezer, the ice cubes, or the electricity that ran the freezer but failed, causing the ice cubes to melt within a space that has no working light bulb.
You're talking about the Sun. I'm talking about light. In this context, they are not the same things.
If the big bang was preceded by a big crunch, wouldn't that previous universe contain water?
Why do you keep assuming that if the "Big Crunch" is a fact, that the preceding universe would be anything like ours? There's nothing requiring one universe to be like any other, including one in which water exists.
Before the Earth was revealed from under the water there was no Earth's sky. And while those celestial objects existed with or without the Earth, they did not appear in Earth's sky until after the 3rd day when the dry land became exposed. Thats why the sun and moon can exist before the 4th day, they only appeared in Earth's sky at that time because the Earth was not yet dry land from which to see Earth's sky.
Just because there was nobody to see the sky, that doesn't mean there wasn't one. Even the Moon has a sky.