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07-07-2007, 04:04 PM | #81 | |
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07-07-2007, 04:16 PM | #82 | |||||||||||||
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This is not "asserting what no-one debates" because afdave's claims imply the exact opposite: that the existence of antediluvians CAN be asserted on the evidence of written texts only, in the face of all the opposing physical evidence. Quote:
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[ETA - I was wrong. I hadn't grasped your point at all. Looking back on your comment here, I see that what you were actually doing was foreshadowing the appeal to the Problem of Induction which you made explicitly in your subsequent post. So see my response to that.] Quote:
You may see no point in arguing about egregiously non-factual statements when made by a person such as afdave, however some of us consider it at least as good a use of our time as watching whatever happens to be on telly at the moment. |
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07-07-2007, 04:17 PM | #83 | ||
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In this thread, that's exactly what we've done. The discussion is predicated upon afdave's claim that this part of Genesis is literally correct, which is one possible interpretation. In response, we accept his position, for the sake of argument, and follow through on the claim to see where it leads. In this case, it leads to an obviously impossible situation. So the fully qualified form of the statement would be something like: "If afdave is correct and if the author of Genesis intended these to be literal years, then the claim is obviously wrong." However, when discussing these items, it's customary to use a shorthand method to refer to them; we don't fully qualify the statement because to do so is tedious and takes longer. I'm sure you're fully aware of all this. Given that reality, it's hard to see why you tried to gain advantage by pretending that no discussion of the text could occur, without crawling inside the head of the author to determine what he/she intended. We discuss what texts (or testimony) means all the time, when we test out possible scenarios. Knowing what the authors actually intended is not relevant to determining which potential interpretations are consistent with other evidence, and which ones would be inconsistent. Quote:
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07-07-2007, 04:18 PM | #84 |
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Since I'm multi-tasking at the moment, Sauron, I'd like to say your fisking saved me a great deal of time and effort. Thanks.
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07-07-2007, 04:21 PM | #85 |
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Roger Pearse:
I'm sorry, but you are obviously battling a strawman at this point. Theissue here is not whether we should "discard historical text", as you seem to claim. Need I quote posts above, that say historical records are extremely valuable and fundamental to our knowledge of the past? Who are you arguing with here? The issue here is twofold: First, whether historical text should take precedence over empirical evidence against it- a question many have strongly raised, but your long post above does not even acknowledge- And, second (and, perhaps, even more fundamental), the issue of what makes any kind of text a historical record in the first place. So I was wondering if you might answer the same question I asked dave. What is the method, in your opinion, to distinguish between "actual historical records" and mere myths? Thanks in advance. |
07-07-2007, 04:23 PM | #86 |
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No, they did not. Just because some people two thousand years thought so does not mean they did. There is zero empirical (there's that term again) evidence that any human has ever lived as long as 150 years, let alone 1,000 years.
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07-07-2007, 04:26 PM | #87 | ||||||
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"Cannot"? Unproveable. "Never have"? Adequately demonstrated to a reasonable approximation of "never". I am puzzled that you are unaware of this. Quote:
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Being open-minded to new claims does not imply that one must continue to be open-minded towards them once they have been demonstrated to be incorrect. Quote:
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07-07-2007, 04:26 PM | #88 | |||
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Now this just stands out as another episode of "extrodinary evidence required" to me. I've been trying to parse your comments to find out where you actually stand on this issue. You have some complaints but your responses have been so obtuse up until this point. What are you saying here? This is just an argument for Last Thursdayism if I've ever saw one. Not presume physics behaved the same in the past? 5000 years? W-w-w-w-h-h-h-a-a-a-t-t-t-t? And the claiment cannot presume this? Huh?!? But you certainly redon your Cloak of Obtuseness quickly. Quote:
See, your written words can be interpreted differently by different people at different times. I'm able to come to conclusions about your intent without you actually stating such. Just by building up a body of evidence where you say or state certain things and when taken as a whole will lead to a conclusion that you don't explicitly claim. But the evidence is there to see. Come out and say you believe in the Genesis account, the Noachian Flood, and the other stories contained in the Bible. Or at least come out and state where you stand on anything. Otherwise your objections look like attempts to moderate without actually having that position. Dive in. I, personally, believe that the stories of extended life in the bible and other written texts is purely fables. Someone had mentioned that the span of years for kings in one document approached normality the closer these kings were in history to the document author. That is more of what I believe. There, that wasn't so hard now. |
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07-07-2007, 04:27 PM | #89 |
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07-07-2007, 04:29 PM | #90 | |
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2) is established by reference to the fossil record; the evidence is conclusive; 3) no magic was involved. Wrong three times in a row, in one post, Dave. Pretty good work, even by your standards. |
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