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 06-09-2005, 07:58 AM   #41
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 2,293
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
From praxeus: 1) What is the Septuagint error?
The Greek OT from A.D. 350 to A.D. 600 is called the "Septuagint" even though it has minimal connection to any translation done about 200 B.C. (what would be the real 'Septuagint')

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
2) Which site was given an incorrect name? Are you saying thagt the sight now known as Kadesh-barnea is not the correct site? What are your sources? And, if so, where are the latrines on the new site?
First, Diogenes had the Israelites camping 38 years at Kadesh Barnea, looks like a misinterpretation of Deut 2:14,although they did "abode in Kadesh many days" Deut 1:46 ..

Now, are you claiming that Kadesh-Barnea in Sinai has decent evidence of a long-term ancient habitation. ? I'd be happy to look at the precise evidences. Meanwhile Kadesh-Barnea is likely in Arabia :-) There are severe limitations on Arabia Bible archaelogy, as you likely know. And the name in Sinai would have been placed on later. Do you have any ancient or archaelogical corroborative material for Kadesh Barnea in Sinai ?

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
3) "The Exodus had very little to do with the Sinai peninsula. except on the way out to Nuweiba, en passant" What is your justification for this statement? What are your sources?
Well, you could simplify questions by simply reading "The Exodus Case". Why don't you see what you can find on the web, ask a couple of pertinent questions, and I will augment it with a fuller expostion from the book, as I did with the chariot wheel pictures, one good one later found by Sven online.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
If you're going to abandon Biblical literalism
Please be specific. How am I "abandoning Biblical literalism" ?

If someone says to me that

"biblical literalism demands that the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
is the tomb of Jesus," or

"the 'upper room' is such and such a house in Jerusalem,
look at the sign, it is even named the 'upper room' "

have I abandoned biblical literalism when I disagree with a very tenuous interpretation ?
Analogy to Exodus.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
and substitute difference sites, names, dates, etc., your responsibility then is to give credible alternatives, as archaeologists, modern biblical historians, etc., are doing.
Have you ever even seen "The Exodus Case", much less read or skimmed it ?

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
This could be a picture of a hubcap in someone's bathtub. Likewise, the chariot could be a birdbath encrusted with cement.
Sure, and I could be the King of Denmark.
Ultimately, when we look at evidences we have to use a smidgen of common sense.

Now, if you really have another theory for the three pics, we could probably go into issues like size, what materials will not dissolve in salt water, other accounts from folks in the area, the details of the Lennart Moller discussion of Egyptian chariot wheel sizes and shapes and materials and more. However, are you seriously contending this, or just trying to be obstinate ?

Meanwhile, tell us about the professional archaelogists who have followed up on such clear evidences, seeking to get permissions from the Egyptian authorities and the various international coral protectors to start cutting and digging. And if you have none of those, does that make the evidence we do have, the videos and pictures and accounts and studies, less significant, or, to your way of thinking, non-existent ?

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
What you are doing is posting unsubstantiated pictures, from a man with a known history of fraud,
Now you are adding to the previous tacky accusations from "lie detector Amirault" against Ron Wyatt with your own accusations against Lennart Moller ?

You folks have absolutely no integrity.

Are there any honest folks here amongst the skeptics and infidels and stands up to the nonsense we have seen on this thread ?

Simply the following would be helpful..

"Oh, I don't want to be associated with nonsensical accusations and character assasination without real evidence".

Are you all cowed and silent in the face of such scurrilous stuff ?

Integrity first.

Shalom,
Praxeas
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Messianic_Apologetic/
Steven Avery is offline  
Old 06-09-2005, 07:59 AM   #42
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: outraged about the stiffling of free speech here
Posts: 10,987
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gooch's dad
That's a brass handwheel off of a steamship, most likely. Here's a whole pile of similar handwheels from various marine equipment:

Here are a few more, and in the upper left is one that is almost identical to the Wyatt fraud picture:

So much for that nonsense.
:thumbs: :rolling:
Sven is offline  
Old 06-09-2005, 08:24 AM   #43
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 2,293
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
No need to get sarcastic. I only posted my opinion judging from a blurry image.
Point taken, and I appreciate your pulling out the better pic.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
I note that this doesn't answer my question about the dating at all.
Moller (and others) have a lot about the various Egyptian chariots.
Perhaps the follow up to Lennart's work will be someone with permission and specialized equipment to try to pull off some material for analysis. I hope you can appreciate that there is a web of interrelated financial, governmental, environmental, scholastic and equipment issues.

Plus you have to deal with the ongoing mockery of the 'archaelogical establishement', a reflection of which we have seen on this forum.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
So? If they bring up this joke, their level of scholarship is at least questionable.
However, the web site folks are just reporting. Lennart Moller and Ron Wyatt never, afaik, brought up the shroud for consideration. Doubtful if even Grant Jeffrey did, either, although he is more of a popularizer and reporter as well.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
Now it's a conspiracy! :rolling: Interesting that the paper was for: "National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly" Do I sense a little bit of bias here?
You know that is a classic fallacy :-) If Joel Brind wrote a report of the scholarship, then it stands or falls on its own merits, not simply because a Catholic publication was the one willing to publish. Have you seen another study of the various studies ? And compared it to Brind ? I am as non-RCC as just about anyone, however on certain issues I will study their materials.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
OK, this looks more persuasive. But it's unfortunately already 2 years old. The articles I found at PubMed were from this period - it would be interesting how they explain them. I'll reserve judgement for now.:
That's reasonable. It is very possible that all sides have a tendency to overstate and fudge, sometimes deliberately, sometimes due to hidden bias.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
Reasonable aware? Does this mean that you read them yourself or that you only read reviews written by critics?
I read the BAR debates, I met Dever when he talked nearby, I research issues as they come up. Folks on this forum should know by now that I do not in any way limit my studies to apologetic sources :-)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
If you had read the book, you would know that there's far more evidence against the entire Exodus scenario then just the lack of evidence in Sinai.
I was just extracting one major argument, without getting into the issues of the settlements in Israel and the dating thereof, or the comparison of Canaanite and Israelite culture, or the various debates about David and Solomon. Didn't want to get too far afield, and I don't claim any great expertise therein.

Shalom,
Praxeas
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Messianic_Apologetic/
Steven Avery is offline  
Old 06-09-2005, 08:32 AM   #44
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: outraged about the stiffling of free speech here
Posts: 10,987
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by praxeus
Moller (and others) have a lot about the various Egyptian chariots.
:huh: My question was about the dating of the inscriptions.

Quote:
Plus you have to deal with the ongoing mockery of the 'archaelogical establishement', a reflection of which we have seen on this forum.
Oh, you mean the 'archaelogical establishement' just like Answers in Genesis?

Quote:
You know that is a classic fallacy :-) If Joel Brind wrote a report of the scholarship, then it stands or falls on its own merits, not simply because a Catholic publication was the one willing to publish.
Yes. But since he talks about a conspiracy and is biased and I don't have his publication at hand, this makes me more then a bit suspicious. *shrug*

Quote:
I read the BAR debates
BAR supposedly means Biblical Archaeology Review? Which debates are you talking about specifically?

Quote:
I met Dever when he talked nearby, I research issues as they come up.
Then when are you going to read the book?

Quote:
Folks on this forum should know by now that I do not in any way limit my studies to apologetic sources :-)
I just met you, so I can not tell.

Quote:
I was just extracting one major argument, without getting into the issues of the settlements in Israel and the dating thereof, or the comparison of Canaanite and Israelite culture, or the various debates about David and Solomon. Didn't want to get too far afield, and I don't claim any great expertise therein.
That's why we are recommending to read the book.
Sven is offline  
Old 06-09-2005, 08:40 AM   #45
Banned
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: NYC
Posts: 10,532
Default

From RED DAVE:
Quote:
1) What is the Septuagint error?
From praxeus:
Quote:
The Greek OT from A.D. 350 to A.D. 600 is called the "Septuagint" even though it has minimal connection to any translation done about 200 B.C. (what would be the real 'Septuagint')
I know what the Septuagint is. How does this pertain to our discussion.

From RED DAVE:
Quote:
2) Which site was given an incorrect name? Are you saying that the sight now known as Kadesh-barnea is not the correct site? What are your sources? And, if so, where are the latrines on the new site?
From praxeus:
Quote:
First, Diogenes had the Israelites camping 38 years at Kadesh Barnea, looks like a misinterpretation of Deut 2:14,although they did "abode in Kadesh many days" Deut 1:46.

Now, are you claiming that Kadesh-Barnea in Sinai has decent evidence of a long-term ancient habitation. ?
No. I'm claiming that nowhere in the entire Middle East is there any evidence of a long-term ancient encampment for some 2 million people. You are turning the tables, Dude.

From praxeus:
Quote:
I'd be happy to look at the precise evidences. Meanwhile Kadesh-Barnea is likely in Arabia :-) There are severe limitations on Arabia Bible archaelogy, as you likely know. And the name in Sinai would have been placed on later. Do you have any ancient or archaelogical corroborative material for Kadesh Barnea in Sinai ?.
What is your justification for placing Kadesh-Barnea anywhere but in the standard location?

From RED DAVE:
Quote:
3) "The Exodus had very little to do with the Sinai peninsula. except on the way out to Nuweiba, en passant" What is your justification for this statement? What are your sources?
From praxeus:
Quote:
Well, you could simplify questions by simply reading "The Exodus Case". Why don't you see what you can find on the web, ask a couple of pertinent questions, and I will augment it with a fuller expostion from the book, as I did with the chariot wheel pictures, one good one later found by Sven online.
The burden of evidence lies with you. Send me a copy of The Exodus CAse, and I'll read it. Otherwise, post your sources or be ignored.

From RED DAVE:
Quote:
If you're going to abandon Biblical literalism
From praxeus:
Quote:
Please be specific. How am I "abandoning Biblical literalism"
If someone says to me that

"biblical literalism demands that the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
is the tomb of Jesus," or

"the 'upper room' is such and such a house in Jerusalem,
look at the sign, it is even named the 'upper room' "

have I abandoned biblical literalism when I disagree with a very tenuous interpretation ?
The Bible quite obviously places the Exodus in Sinai. What is your justification for abandoning it?

From praxeus:
Quote:
Have you ever even seen "The Exodus Case", much less read or skimmed it ?
No. But I have read a review and seen the photographs. I have better things to do with my money.

From RED DAVE:
Quote:
This could be a picture of a hubcap in someone's bathtub. Likewise, the chariot could be a birdbath encrusted with cement.
From RED DAVE:
Quote:
Sure, and I could be the King of Denmark.
Ultimately, when we look at evidences we have to use a smidgen of common sense.
Well, Your Majesty, we sure do. And common sense tells me that an unattributed, unverified underwater photograph is proof of exactly nothing. Where's the artifact itself?

From praxeus:
Quote:
Now, if you really have another theory for the three pics, we could probably go into issues like size, what materials will not dissolve in salt water, other accounts from folks in the area, the details of the Lennart Moller discussion of Egyptian chariot wheel sizes and shapes and materials and more. However, are you seriously contending this, or just trying to be obstinate ?
Bring out the artifact, the wheel or wheels, and let's have a competent archaeologist examine them. Otherwise, no cigar.

From praxeus:
Quote:
Meanwhile, tell us about the professional archaelogists who have followed up on such clear evidences, seeking to get permissions from the Egyptian authorities and the various international coral protectors to start cutting and digging. And if you have none of those, does that make the evidence we do have, the videos and pictures and accounts and studies, less significant, or, to your way of thinking, non-existent ?
Extraordinary statements require extraordinary evidence. The burden of proof is on you and Wyatt.

From RED DAVE:
Quote:
What you are doing is posting unsubstantiated pictures, from a man with a known history of fraud
From praxeus:
Quote:
Now you are adding to the previous tacky accusations from "lie detector Amirault" against Ron Wyatt with your own accusations against Lennart Moller ?
God Blurred Ron's Photo of the Ark of the Covenant -- Right!

Talk about tacky!

From praxeus:
Quote:
You folks have absolutely no integrity.

Are there any honest folks here amongst the skeptics and infidels and stands up to the nonsense we have seen on this thread ?

Simply the following would be helpful..

"Oh, I don't want to be associated with nonsensical accusations and character assasination without real evidence".

Are you all cowed and silent in the face of such scurrilous stuff ?
No integrity at all.

From praxeus:
Quote:
Integrity first.
Indeed, Your Highness. Next stop, Tivoli Gardens.

From praxeus:
Quote:
Shalom,
Praxeas
You Jewish like me?

RED DAVE
RED DAVE is offline  
Old 06-09-2005, 08:48 AM   #46
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: outraged about the stiffling of free speech here
Posts: 10,987
Default

Do you mean this one:




BTW, there was a lot wrong with your quotes. Time for an edit!
Sven is offline  
Old 06-09-2005, 09:24 AM   #47
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 2,293
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
:huh: My question was about the dating of the inscriptions..
Ok, that is a whole nother issue, and I think there are multiple inscriptions referenced. The ones in Sinai have been claimed to be later Nabatean, on one link I gave.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
Oh, you mean the 'archaelogical establishement' just like Answers in Genesis?
Yes, consider them part of the "Biblical Archaelogy" establishment :-)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
Yes. But since he talks about a conspiracy and is biased and I don't have his publication at hand, this makes me more then a bit suspicious.
Fair enough. Perhaps I am more attuned to conspiracy theories, as in the FDA/drug-company/med-journal/med-school/media linkages. However, I accept that this can be a turn-off.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
BAR supposedly means Biblical Archaeology Review? Which debates are you talking about specifically?
About two years ago they had a major article on the Min/Max debate, Finkelstein and others, perhaps Dever (not Kitchen, and no Ron Wyatt supporters :-) were represented as I recall. And then there was all sorts of follow-ups in the letters and stuff in later issues. With all the criticisms of BAR/Shanks , many justified, it was quite a well-done section.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
Then when are you going to read the book?
Dunno. If it is at my library (ie. Barnes & Nobles, Borders) I'll give it a greater look through than I have in the past.

Shalom,
Praxeas
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Messianic_Apologetic/
Steven Avery is offline  
Old 06-09-2005, 09:27 AM   #48
Banned
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: NYC
Posts: 10,532
Default

Ron Wyatt - Munchausen Syndrome

RED DAVE
RED DAVE is offline  
Old 06-09-2005, 09:29 AM   #49
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Madison WI USA
Posts: 3,508
Default

Praxeus, are you simply going to ignore these pictures of other brass handwheels? Are you still claiming that Wyatt fraud picture is actually NOT a brass handwheel?

Here's another, which is almost identical to the one in that Wyatt picture. It has 6 spokes rather than 4, but is otherwise almost identical:



Your response?
Gooch's dad is offline  
Old 06-09-2005, 10:02 AM   #50
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 2,293
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
I know what the Septuagint is. How does this pertain to our discussion.
The name "Septuagint" is given to manuscripts that don't fit the description.. an anachronism. Then the name "Septuagint" itself is used as evidence of the late manuscripts antiquity or accuracy.

Similarly if Kadesh-Barnea in Sinai was given the name say in A.D. 300, that is not much evidence for the sites antiquity, or as supporting it as a location matching the Bible description. The real Kadesh-Barnea could be elsewhere, we cannot judge much just from knowing a location was given the name at some time, just as we cannot assume much about a manuscript called the 'Septuagint'.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
No. I'm claiming that nowhere in the entire Middle East is there any evidence of a long-term ancient encampment for some 2 million people.
There are large areas of the Middle East where Biblical archaelogy is very restricted, so your statement is beyond our knowledge.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
What is your justification for placing Kadesh-Barnea anywhere but in the standard location?
I think we are going in circles, much like the Exodus travels themselves !. Start with the Aqaba crossing, and Mount Sinai in Arabia. That would make Kadesh-Barnea likely in Arabia, unless the Israelites doubled back to Sinai, despite the Egyptian outposts. Unlikely. We really cannot atomize Kadesh-Barnea away from the complete Exodus account.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
The burden of evidence lies with you. Send me a copy of The Exodus CAse, and I'll read it. Otherwise, post your sources or be ignored.
That's fine. The posters who simply repeat unsubstantiated accusations of fraud, such as based on two or three parties removed lie detector claims, and never even retract them when challenged, would do well to switch to "ignore" mode. I did however offer to answer specific questions from the Lennart Moller book, when they arise.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
The Bible quite obviously places the Exodus in Sinai.
Not at all. Finding the Red Sea in Sinai was always a major bewilderment, leading to the infamous Sea of Reeds theories. Multiple ancient historical accounts placed the Exodus in Arabia. Even Paul specifically stated that Mount Sinai as in Arabia (and the attempts to stretch that to Sinai were weak). The real mystery is why, before Ron, most (not all) modern searchers were barking up the wrong mountains.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
What is your justification for abandoning it?
Because it is not in the Bible, combined with common sense, and an appreciation for those who went out in the field, like Ron, to really find the locales.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
No. But I have read a review.
Seriously, have you ever seen a weaker review than that one ? Does it really act as a balm on your disinterest that there was a skeptical reviewer far lazier and far less informed than the accusers on this forum ?

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
and seen the photographs.
Yes, you saw a couple of photograghs. You are now expert on the 300 page book ! :-)

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
I have better things to do with my money.
That is more reasonable. Maybe Barnes & Nobles will put it on the shelf and you can read it there.. or the library will get it in.. :-) Tis worthwhile.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
And common sense tells me that an unattributed, unverified underwater photograph is proof of exactly nothing. Where's the artifact itself?
Waiting for some folks from the professional establishement to actually do something worthwhile on the Exodus issues. The folks with the money, equipment, political/scholastic/governmental muscle to stop mocking and do some real work. However, don't forget to exhale and re-inhale while waiting for that crew.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
Bring out the artifact, the wheel or wheels, and let's have a competent archaeologist examine them.
And if I do that, will you go "illegal, throw them in jail" etc. It is hilarious when folks take boths sides against the middle because they want to close their eyes and ears.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RED DAVE
Extraordinary statements require extraordinary evidence. The burden of proof is on you and Wyatt.
Ron Wyatt passed away in 1999. WorldNetDaily did a very fine "deathbed interview" with him about a week before his death. Yes, I am a Jewish believer, raised Conservative (social) Judaism, Bar Mitzvah, etc.
Steven Avery is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:37 AM.

Top

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