FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Yesterday at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 08-05-2007, 11:26 AM   #261
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Outer Mongolia
Posts: 4,091
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by khalimirov View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Scifinerdgrl View Post

Poll results here: http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.php?t=216187 Only 3% have never read any of it.
Surely you don't believe those poll results More than half have read it cover to cover?

I've read the KJV Bible - twice - once at age 13 and again at age 16.

Are you calling me a liar?
JGL53 is offline  
Old 08-05-2007, 11:35 AM   #262
Contributor
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: California
Posts: 18,543
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Roger Pearse View Post
In this thread we seem to have 245 posts, lots of second-hand rhetoric, and... what? Is there any point or direction to all this?
Did you actually read this thread, Roger? It appears you have missed some of the important themes. To help you out, let me summarize two that I am particularly fond of:

1) Is it reasonable to conclude that the holy book of your own religion is unique if you do not read the holy books of other religions?
2) What is the nature of scientific integrity?

------------------------------
By the way, 'second-hand rhetoric' is quite a nice turn of phrase. It has that Zing! factor that really makes an emotional point. But what do you mean by it, exactly? Does it refer to the fact that certain points get made again and again, without substantive response? Or is it referring to arguments that are originially made by one person being repeated by other people? Could you be talking about cut-and-paste from other web sites?

The first seems like something that isn't a flaw with the arguer, but with the respondent. The second might be somewhat objectionable, as it amounts to "me, too!"-ism. The third would be tantamount to plagiarism, so I would understand your objection.

Were any of my ideas correct? Or did you mean something else entirely?
Smullyan-esque is offline  
Old 08-05-2007, 12:05 PM   #263
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: FL USA
Posts: 213
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by afdave
The Bible is in a class by itself when comparing it to other books.

1) It is far and away the best selling book in the history of the planet
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_books
Aside from the fact that the above is a fallacious argument (appeal to numbers/popularity) as has been noted, let's not forget the fact that the Bible has had HUNDREDS OF YEARS to build up it's numbers as the "best-selling book". To compare numbers accrued over hundreds of years to those accrued over a decade say is neither a fair nor valid comparison IMO:
  • One thing to NOT FORGET here is that the Bible has been in print for hundreds of years, so the fact that there HAVE been so many sold is not a big surprise since countries populated by Christians have been large and in charge of what could and has been published.
  • The fact is that suppose the Bible came out NOW as opposed to having a 1600 year head-start (books in the first Bible not agreed upon til 400 years after the alleged death of the alleged Jesus) with all the indoctrination and/or censorship of other POVs that has so aided it's supremacy? What would happen, IOW, would the Bible still rank as the "best-seller"?
    • If one restricts the time period as beginning with the appearance of the Gutenberg press in 1440 which made mass printings possible in the Western world, the Bible has had a 560 year head-start to beef up the numbers?
    • Guess what the first book printed was by the Gutenberg press? You, got it, the Bible!
    So the Bible was off and running from the get-go.
Now let's do a comparison to the HP series and see just how the Bible stacks up. I think the following says it all, considering that Harry Potter (HP) books have outstripped tha Bible in sales NOW, i.e., the number of Bibles sold versus the number of Harry Potter books sold over the past 10 years. From this article:

Quote:
But how does it [the Bible] fare to other steady sellers?

Statistics show in the past 10 years, 250 million copies of the Bible have been sold.

12 million copies of Merriam-Webster Dictionary have been sold.

But in one day, 8.3 million copies of the latest Harry Potter book flew off store shelves.

The series, not counting the last book, has sold 325 million copies over 10 years. That's more than the population of the United States.


"It is surprising that it would sell more than the Bible but it's good that people are still reading," said Holcomb.

Still, at roughly six billion sold entirely, one of the oldest favorites probably won't lose its slot anytime soon.
If one compares the current track record of the Bible (last 10 years) to the Harry Potter series (over the 10 years HP has been in existence) then the Bible takes a back seat to HP to the tune of over 75 million copies.

One other thing to remember is that a lot of Bibles sold have simply been handed out to various captive audiences by missionaries. I consider people who come to them [missionaries] for help or have them simply invade their lives under the cover of providing assistance to be a captive audience and have Bibles and other prosyletizing gimmicks foist on them in addition to any food, medicine, etc. that these people really might need. I find this to be quite despicable (help used as a lure/cover/excuse for conversion attempts). These people didn't want them to begin with, but the "numbers" of Bibles "handed out" go into the pot of numbers for the Bible as "best seller" anyway.

Oh and BTW, dave, I have read the Bible through twice (as a teenager and an adult) That is not counting the fact that my parents started early with the indocrination
  • I listened for hours to a reading of the Bible (books for the blind) because access to things like TV were heavily restricted (only got 1 hour per day, parentally-approved)
  • went to church regularly (got medals for my attendance record and my ability to memorize verses)
  • listened to still more records made especially for kids that concentrated what I call the "adventure, daring-do" stories of the Bible, e.g., David and Goliath, Samson (great sound effects when he brought the temple down on the Philistines!), etc.
  • spent part of many of my childhood summers in Christian summer camps
The above is a very short list of the indoctrination tools used on me and my siblings. However, reading the Bible (really reading what it ACTUALLY says, not what apologists/prelates/preachers say "it says") was the final thing that resulted in my complete and total abandonment of Christianity.

What amuses me to no end is the stupidity of some Christians in the complelely unwarranted ASSumption that atheists are atheists because they have never read the Bible. It's as though they think (or would like to believe) that the Bible is some kind of magic talisman that when touched or especially read, is capable of instantly converting the "heathen". In a way that is true, but the conversion is actually one of deconversion when one actually reads that often inaccurate, bloodthirsty, badly written, violent tome, word-for-word. If the author of this mess is your God, Dave, then the very last thing I ever would want is to be in the company of such an Entity, afflicted with massive personality defects that dwarf those of the most heinous serial killer, as the despicable Creature so graphically described in the Bible for ~~~gasp~~ an eternity. I am reminded of the line "Heaven for climate, but Hell for company"

mfaber (gladiatrix):devil1:
mfaber is offline  
Old 08-05-2007, 01:18 PM   #264
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Athens, Greece
Posts: 1,057
Default

I'm bored to check... Has dave explained what the point of his question was yet?
Faid is offline  
Old 08-05-2007, 02:02 PM   #265
mung bean
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Nope, but I'm sure you can guess. Needless to say he's been disappointed.
 
Old 08-05-2007, 09:21 PM   #266
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: ♥
Posts: 714
Default

Yes, I have. I read the entire thing, and when I closed the book for the final time, I was an atheist.
Chidori is offline  
Old 08-06-2007, 04:21 AM   #267
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Indianapolis, IN
Posts: 1,804
Default

I read it twice cover to cover between the ages of 12 and 16. It beat the snot out of the incessant droning of people giving thier 'talks' in church.

My mom caught some shit from people because I was reading during the church services. When she told them it was okay because I was reading the bible they went nuts.

Since I was reading cover to cover with no one to tell me how to interpret what I was reading Satan would be the one to guide me, thus poisoning my interpretation of it.

That wasn't an issue because I never believed a word of it any way. It was quite revealing to get the unsanitized non-sunday school version though.
butswana is offline  
Old 08-06-2007, 01:11 PM   #268
Hex
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: www.rationalpagans.com
Posts: 445
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by GenesisNemesis View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by afdave View Post
Does it have accurate history?
If you're talking about archaeological history, perhaps.
We went through this with Larsguy some time back. It absolutely -does not- represent an accurate version of archaeological history ...

Quote:
Originally Posted by GenesisNemesis View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by afdave View Post
Does it accurately describe the human condition?
Just because something "accurately describes the human condition" it doesn't make it true. And btw, I don't believe it describes the human condition very well at all.
Right. Unless you're living in the Bronze/Iron Age Levant's tribal society ...



And, for the record, I've read it cover to cover. My great-grandparents had nightly readings (which I, the young guy with good eyes had to read), my Uncle was a Baptist preacher, and my Mom taught Sunday school. There was no escape ...

As an archaeologist, using critical logic skill and the data at hand, there is very little believable in the whole book. Logical inconsistancies, contradictions, and historical anomolies abound in the book. I can't even say it's a book of pretty poetry like the Koran.

So tell me Afdave ... What did Judges 19 do to strengthen your faith?
(And why doesn't it turn your stomach? )
Hex is offline  
Old 08-06-2007, 01:31 PM   #269
Hex
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: www.rationalpagans.com
Posts: 445
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by afdave View Post
I'm not afraid of knowledge. I'll read anything if someone gives me a good reason to read it. The problem is ... no one has yet.
Okay ... Here's a great challange for you then Afdave ...

I teach Anthropology (The Study of Mankind in all forms) and the only way to do it is in a holistic (Refers to the viewpoint that all aspects of existence are interrelated and important in understanding human variation and evolution.) manner, since cultures are systems of integrated aspects.

When I teach classes about 'religion' I can't just focus on one religion (or set of supernatural beleifs), because to do so would negate the ability to see the wide array of functions that religions can and do perform within a culture. In order to understand mankind's way of getting to their own cultural versions of 'the ultimate truth and understanding' of the world around them, you have to have a wide and varied base of knowledge to work with.

It seems that you've gone in-depth in Christianity, and that's fine. But to really put it in context, so that you can truely attempt to convince otehrs that it is the 'best' system (for example), you -have- to understand how the other systems work so that you can compare and contrast. A snippet of the Koran does Islam no justice; a single passage from the Bible, likewise, is meaningless to the message Christians want others to get from the whole of the book (Look to my 'Judges' question in a previous post for an example. Where is Christ's love in there, hmm?).

In short, if you want to convince people, you have to be able to understand where they are coming from in order to do so. To converse about religion with Muslims, you -must- understand (at some level) the Koran, for Jews the Torah (at least), for Hindus the Vedas and Upinshaads, for Buddhists the Stupas, and so on. For scientificly based atheists, you have to understand science and the scientific method.

Without this base of knowledge, all of your opinion, even if you -are- right, amounts to so much meaningless, unconvincing drivel. :huh:


So ... Did that make -any- sense? Will you please read another book - the Koran, Origin of Species, Introduction to Geology, I don't care - but please read it from cover to cover and get a basic understanding -for yourself- before you try to argue about the subject?

Thanks,

- Hex
Hex is offline  
Old 08-06-2007, 04:22 PM   #270
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Music City
Posts: 19
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Derec View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Bloe View Post
Yes, I've read it. The whole thing. And that's precisely why I know it is a Bronze Age myth, full of errors, implausible, etc.
Iron Age myth. With (probable) use of some Bronze Age source materials.

Speaking of which, I have never read the whole Bible cover to cover, but I am currently in the process. I am doing a sort of 1 on 1 bible study with a "believer". We just finished up Genesis and I've been introducing her to the Documentary Hypothesis. She is not buying it - yet.

But I must say, it is a pretty interesting read, especially with a good commentary. Well, except for the priestly genealogies.
Are you having her read Who Wrote the Bible by Friedman?
Jobber is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:47 AM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.