That wouldn't even slow down a true believer. They are all assholes.
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Current time: November 24, 2024, 7:57 am
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Hubble's Law in the Quran long before Hubble's own discovery
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(January 5, 2018 at 4:48 am)AtlasS33 Wrote: The verse says: That's a phony translation, which makes the whole thing is phony because the word "manager" didn't exist until 1580 A.D. https://www.etymonline.com/word/manager
Could you elaborate Wyrd? I don't follow. Couldn't there have been a word that meant the same thing in Arabic?
(January 5, 2018 at 4:48 am)AtlasS33 Wrote: Snipped gibberish Once again wrong. Your book shamelessly took the teaching of the first Sumerian Collander scrolls. "This is from the great epic known as gemellimesh; Translated reads; 'The skies doth expand forever farther than we can ever reach. It doth expand from a point so small the eye cannot see, smaller than a single grain within a plank of wood. Search the skies my students with not just your eyes but your minds." This was written somewhere between 2030 and 2056 BCE and it confirmes the following; Plank time, Expanding space, and the big bang. Sorry your late to the party Atlas. RAmen.
"For the only way to eternal glory is a life lived in service of our Lord, FSM; Verily it is FSM who is the perfect being the name higher than all names, king of all kings and will bestow upon us all, one day, The great reclaiming" -The Prophet Boiardi-
Conservative trigger warning.
(January 5, 2018 at 8:44 pm)Nay_Sayer Wrote:(January 5, 2018 at 4:48 am)AtlasS33 Wrote: Snipped gibberish I agree that religions borrow or steal motifs from prior religions, but no, it does not NOT "confirm" "Plank Time" or "expanding space" or the "Big Bang" anymore than the ancient Greek's use of the word "atom" confirmed quarks, or electrons or protons or neutrons. All that ancient squiggle confirms is people guessed and made those bad guesses on prior polytheism whom, those polytheist were as ignorant of modern science as monotheists. POINT IS, that nobody, worldwide had any clue of what we know today.
I don't think he was quite serious, Brian.
(January 5, 2018 at 8:50 pm)Brian37 Wrote:Sir I'll have you know Ancient Pastafarianeese is not squiggle; Like Latin, Esperanto and Donald Trumps tweets, It is a language very few can read and understand.(January 5, 2018 at 8:44 pm)Nay_Sayer Wrote: Once again wrong. Your book shamelessly took the teaching of the first Sumerian Collander scrolls.
"For the only way to eternal glory is a life lived in service of our Lord, FSM; Verily it is FSM who is the perfect being the name higher than all names, king of all kings and will bestow upon us all, one day, The great reclaiming" -The Prophet Boiardi-
Conservative trigger warning.
Quote:the teaching of the first Sumerian Collander scrolls. Wait. I thought the Collander Scrolls were written by the FSM? (January 5, 2018 at 8:25 pm)vulcanlogician Wrote: Could you elaborate Wyrd? I don't follow. Couldn't there have been a word that meant the same thing in Arabic? Some translations use the word "guardian" instead of "manager". They are not exactly synonyms. http://www.thesaurus.com/browse/guardian?s=t [/url] [url=http://www.thesaurus.com/browse/manager]http://www.thesaurus.com/browse/manager It might seem to be nitpicky but when newer words are used it tends to shift the meaning of the original thought. The word "manager" is from the 1580s. https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=manager. The word "guardian" is from around 1510 https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=guardian. I can't read Arabic but if a version of the Koran uses a word that can be translated into either "guardian" or "manager" then that copy of the Koran was written in modern times. So that could mean that every idea in it has been altered from the original 640 A.D. version. We know that the Koran had a major alteration when it was put into numbered chapters and verses to mirror the Bible's format. So even if it's written in the Arabic language it doesn't mean that it is the original version. It's like reading about Guardian Angels in some versions of the Bible. That idea is from the 1630s and replaces the idea of the cherub from the late 14th Century. https://www.etymonline.com/word/Cherub RE: Hubble's Law in the Quran long before Hubble's own discovery
January 6, 2018 at 6:56 am
(This post was last modified: January 6, 2018 at 7:44 am by WinterHold.)
(January 5, 2018 at 10:00 am)Cyberman Wrote: Congratulations, Atlas, for making your claim unfalsifiable. And that's not a good thing. The whole point is showing why I believe in what I quoted and said; and to show my believe criteria that is based on mere logic and authenticity. I judged, and my judgement was as follows: this is an ancient book, that said clearly that the universe is expanding. If negation of the previous exists; I will gladly take it and even advocate it. The game is life, not human nature. Actually; if somebody created a brand first, it's a crime by international law for somebody else to claim authorship over the brand. That's why on so many -if not all- websites, you find "All Rights Reserved" at the bottom, add to that the complicated long walls of text, that lawyers and law students spend years to study how to deal with it, with this exact reason in the end: who said it first? And as many other "human natures" and validation facts, some people -if not many- manipulate facts to produce the version they want of the nature. To me life itself is the game..not instincts like telling the reality of what happened. (January 5, 2018 at 11:52 am)Mister Agenda Wrote:AtlasS33 Wrote:I'm Arabic. So I will give literal translation of the Arabic verse: The word is mentioned in other contexts elsewhere in the Quran; it's ancient: Quote:Sura 4,The Quran: Quote:Sura 2, The Quran: Quote:Sura 29, The Quran:All the above are the Arabic for "expand", in tenses suiting the context they are in. All are derived from the same word "سعة"=capacity, which the verb from it is يوسع=expand واسع means wide The verb expand, means يوسع The adjective means موسع The plural adjective is موسعون (January 5, 2018 at 2:21 pm)Gawdzilla Sama Wrote:(January 5, 2018 at 9:17 am)Brian37 Wrote: No he is not. I like him. I also like Catholic lady. But in both cases, I say the same thing. "That was then this is now". Humans made horrible guesses back then, and it turned into religion. But today, because most humans get sold religion at birth old habits are hard to break. The thought of being finite for most humans frightens them. I don't think it should, but it does, and that fear ends up in the form of religion. Everybody preaches in your house; from food companies "advising you to taste their products" to the internet preaching users to stay away of malformed URLs. (January 5, 2018 at 2:36 pm)Brian37 Wrote:(January 5, 2018 at 2:21 pm)Gawdzilla Sama Wrote: He sounds as bad as a drunk poe. Preaching in my house. cognitive dissonance is not the right term when contradiction is what makes the belief makes sense. If the idea of God as the creator of everything was to make sense; one has to accept that God created both good and evil. When taken as a block; the conclusion is a unique single creator, unlike us, who are always subject to one single behavior. We are a binary specie. (January 5, 2018 at 2:48 pm)downbeatplumb Wrote:(January 5, 2018 at 4:48 am)AtlasS33 Wrote: The verse says: It's not vague; it specified expansion, not shrinking. (January 5, 2018 at 3:27 pm)Minimalist Wrote: Skeptics Annotated koran https://atheistforums.org/thread-52929-p...pid1681683 on this post I gave a word-by-word literal translation of the original verse. It means what language dictates through its rules and constraints. (January 5, 2018 at 7:16 pm)AFTT47 Wrote: Italian philosopher Giordano Bruno correctly proclaimed that stars were distant suns with their own planets - in the 16th century. Does this demonstrate he had divine knowledge? No. He had a spot-on imagination based on a strong observational skill in this one. Expansion of the skies is a genius idea if somebody had it: like Hubble, who based his conclusion on scientific observation. But no way somebody expects it without a telescope. |
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