Drich could prove the Noah's Ark story to me and I still wouldn't believe in his "bible based Christianity", simply because he's a pompous asshole - exactly the type of Christian I found abrasive and counter-effective when I was still a believer.
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A question about the flood myth, baraminology, and Pangaea
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(February 22, 2016 at 9:23 am)RobbyPants Wrote: Anyone who knows anything about the flood myth in Genesis knows that the story is impossible for a huge number of reasons. One of them being that the story gives us the dimensions of the ark. So, given how many animals Noah was told to gather, we can figure out how much volume on average each creature would have. Not only is there not enough space for them to survive until the water abated, they wouldn't have even fit. That's a very interesting analysis of the fairy tale. I haven't seen it analyzed like that before. I think people like the Genesis story because it's a Jewish fairy tale and they simply love all Jewish fairy tales. RE: A question about the flood myth, baraminology, and Pangaea
February 22, 2016 at 9:26 pm
(This post was last modified: February 22, 2016 at 9:27 pm by Wyrd of Gawd.)
(February 22, 2016 at 2:53 pm)FebruaryOfReason Wrote:(February 22, 2016 at 2:35 pm)Drich Wrote: ... Magic comets came to Earth and took the excess water to new worlds across the galaxy. (February 22, 2016 at 6:48 pm)Stimbo Wrote: How long after the flood did it take for the salt water to separate from the fresh? Dripshit fears facts, Stim. (February 22, 2016 at 3:14 pm)Drich Wrote: wow.. you sure added alot to the flood story.. Tectonic shift, barminology, and pangea... No I didn't. I didn't invent baraminology or the notion that the plate shift was caused by a global flood over a brief period. I'm not saying you believe this. I'm not saying most Christians believe this, but a notable number do, and this thread is discussing their beliefs. (February 22, 2016 at 3:14 pm)Drich Wrote: Rather how God used the faith of a singular man and his family as a reason for God himself to save creation, by only killing the wicked. And all the kids and almost all the animals.
The flood story...the zombie that won't die even after it's been crucified, beheaded, roasted, disemboweled, and filled with hot lead.
It's a fucking war story. (February 22, 2016 at 6:40 pm)Drich Wrote:(February 22, 2016 at 6:05 pm)Jenny A Wrote: If the were a world wide flood, there would be a world wide sedimentary flood layer all at the same level. There isn't. Therefore, no world wide flood. There are many, many other impossibilitissues associated with the Genesis flood story, but the biggest unanswered question is where is the sediment layer? Yes, those "d-bags" who call themselves geologists. Or are only geologists who study floods "d-bags?" That's childish even for you. (February 22, 2016 at 6:40 pm)Drich Wrote: A body of water moves to a previously dry area, and along the way picks up and deposits a sedimentary flood layer. why? because a body of water over takes dry land in a localized area. This would be like busting open you above ground pool and it washing all your stuff into your neighbors back yard. There are more problems with your explanation then with the lack of of a sedimentary layer. The first problem is Genesis itself which says: on that day all the springs of the great deep burst forth, and the floodgates of the heavens were opened. 12 And rain fell on the earth forty days and forty nights." "Bursting forth" doesn't sound slow and gradual to me. And then there's that pesky forty days and nights of rain. So if Genesis is accurate there was more to it that water gradually rising out of the ground. But let's look at what that "gradual" rise would mean. To cover Mt. Everest the water would have to rise from sea level to 29,000 feet in 40 days (960 hours). That would be a rate of over 30 feet an hour. Over 16 and a half feet an hour if you only want to cover Mt. Ararat at 16,800 feet. You don't think that much water percolating out of the soil that fast would leave a mark? Really? You can say more of it was rain, but then you are back the lack of evidence of flooding. But Genesis doesn't say it percolates, it bursts forth" out of the "springs of the deeps" whatever those might be. That suggests localized springs not all over percolation. But wherever it come from it would have run downhill from there, because that what water does, it runs downhill. And even if it all welled up from land at or below sea level, or from beneath the oceans, you still have to account for forty days of world wide rain leaving no trace. In most of the world two or three days of steady rain creates flooding of a more conventional sort. So, yes, I would expect to see evidence of something like conventional flooding world wide. The rain fell world wide according to the story for 40 days and nights. That's a lot of streams, lakes etc. slipping their banks--all of them in fact. And then there's the shear volume of water necessary. Others have already covered the rather major problems of where did an extra 3 billion cubic kilometers of water come from and where did it go. My question to you is if all that water exited the core of earth and then sat on top of it for 150 days before beginning to recede, don't you think the shear weight of all that water would leave a mark on the soil? That's a hell of a lot of pressure. Of and then there's salt. Did it all stay handily in the oceans instead of spreading out and salting the waters of the flood? Otherwise that sedimentary layer we're missing ought to be salty too.
If there is a god, I want to believe that there is a god. If there is not a god, I want to believe that there is no god.
What about the kangaroos? Checkmate, creationists!
With all sincerity, it's just more adaptation of creationist myths to make themselves feel more secure. They try to weave in scientific theories and world views and think that it'll somehow blossom into something plausible (which, as you demonstrated so well, never really does). The big problem is that most creationists would see this as a goldmine if they were to come across it. They think this really is the truth, in their deluded world view, and that's the problem. It upsets me a little that people think this way. It's damaging science, and potentially decent people. (February 22, 2016 at 11:26 pm)Living in Death Wrote: With all sincerity, it's just more adaptation of creationist myths to make themselves feel more secure. They try to weave in scientific theories and world views and think that it'll somehow blossom into something plausible (which, as you demonstrated so well, never really does). Really, the only way they can make themselves feel more secure is by rejecting the story outright, and coming up with some plausible narrative for why fictitious story is in the Bible. Now, this approach has it's own problems, but at least it jettisons the problems of defending things that cannot be true and defending creepy people who kill children and animals because they're mad at the adults. Any person I know IRL that I've talked to about this myth either expresses strong doubts about or flat-out rejects this story. (February 22, 2016 at 11:26 pm)Living in Death Wrote: It's damaging science, and potentially decent people. Especially that last one. I've learned a couple of years ago that flood apologetics are the worst. It's this somewhat unique blend of butchered science and murder apologia that makes a person look like a complete ass. At the end of the day, I realize how far they're willing to go to reconcile their beliefs, and it's disturbing. |
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