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Old 05-09-2005, 11:17 AM   #91
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sauron

Go educate yourself about archaeology and layers, lee. I'm not spoonfeeding you all the answers.
Phew!!

While I couldn't care less whether Tyre ever existed or is now under a mile of water, your argument is exhaustive, exhausting and--I must admit--very convincing.

I didn't much believe what Lee was saying, but now I feel sorry for him.
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Old 05-09-2005, 12:22 PM   #92
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Ladies and Gentlemen of the Audience: :wave:

I've come to the conclusion that Lee's being deliberately obtuse - I think we've all had the wool pulled over our eyes, unfortunately. He is not sincere about this discussion.

He is instead engaged in a calculated attempt to merely raise objections where he does not read the responses, nor does he even care about the answer - except that it provides the springboard for the next question or hypothetical assumption.

With that clarification, let's proceed.

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Doesn't it include the mainland part today, though?
What it includes today is irrelevant. We aren't talking about today. We're talking about 586 BCE.

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I do think the consensus is that both the island and the mainland were referred to as Tyre.
No, Lee - that's what you *hope* is the case. But you have demonstrated no such consensus.

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Wrong. Part of the shallow water on the north side and south side of the causeway started accumulating sand and clay. That is what "silted up" means. This made the causeway grow thicker; so thick that it became a peninsula and was stable enough to put houses and buildings on it.

It could be that the buildings are not in the silt, but if they are, then they went underwater.
What buildings? You've shown no buildings here - as I said: the French excavation is of the silted up harbor. There were no buildings in the harbor; the harbor was filled with water.

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Presumably they are excavating there because people haven't wanted to build there!
No, they are excavating there because the harbor used to be filled with water, but now isn't.

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The silted up harbour on the south side of the peninsula has been excavated by the French Institute for Archaeology in the Near East, but most of the remains of the Phoenician period still lie beneath the present town. Pop. (1982 est.) 23,000. … Excavations of harbors for sunken ships, ancient cargo, etc. happen all the time. Some sections of the Mediterranean are absolutely littered with Roman-era amphorae.

"Most of the remains" implies similar remains, though, and sunken ships won't be below the present town.
So? The French excavation of the harbor is not connected to the remains under the present town. The French excavation is an entirely separate effort.

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The key difference is that we *know* from other historical sources that items 1 through 5 above ALL happened in Tyre's history.

Sources, please? For any of these claims, where is this item documented in history?
As soon as you provide sources for your many meandering claims, then you'll have the right to ask for sources from others. There is no question that *I*, at least, can certainly provide sources for what I post.

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McDowell's reputation is already in tatters.

Well, I checked a bit in their response to the chapter of concern here, and they are arguing with his conclusions, for the most part, not with his evidence!
No, they are arguing both.

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I saw an instance where they showed a quote from an author that said the opposite of McDowell's quote from the same author, only they didn't seem to look up McDowell's quote, so I think this is not shredding his integrity, authors do change their mind, and I don't think we have to insist that McDowell read every statement by every author he quotes, to see if this happened.
No, they were demosntrating that McDowell (or McDowell's assistants) misquoted the author's intent. Hardly surprising.

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The phrase "nation of Bablyon" does not appear anywhere in the Old Testament or the New Testament.

That's why I put "nation" in quotes, not "nation of Babylon."
Which doesn't help you. Ezekiel does not refer to it by that method. And Ezekiel is what we are talking about. Jeremiah is not a reference for what Ezekiel is thinking or intended to say.

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The phrase "king of kings" means that Nebuchadnezzar held sway over many other conquered nations. So Babylon truly was "many nations"…

Is this Biblical usage, though? This is Sauron's usage, but that does not help us understand what Ezekiel meant.
There is no such thing as "biblical usage". Each author is evaluated individually. And since Ezekiel's text "many nations" associates the exact same actions as it does Nebuchadnezzar and Bablyon, they are clearly the same.

And this is not "Sauron's usage". This is what the phrase "king of kings" meant.

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… these other three groups were vassal states to Babylon and were required to provide soldiers.

But Babylon corresponds to the Chaldeans, and how do we know that the Arameans etc. were serving Babylon at this point?
I guess it pays to know history. Clearly you don't.

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But even if they were! Why doesn't the statement here just mention the Babylonians? Since that includes the other groups.
Asked an answered:

So Babylon truly was "many nations", especially since those conquered nations had to provide soldiers as part of the tribute payment to Bablyon.

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Otherwise, this is saying blah blah blah
No, it isn't.

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No, what they do is just what I am after here blah blah blah
Wrong. Dictionaries are trying to establish how a word is used in common daily life by a large group of people. What you need to do is the opposite: show what ONE particular bible writer had in mind when he used a particular turn of phrase.

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Finally, the historical record demonstrates that Babylon was comprised not of just one group of people, but was an empire of many states, as well as vassal states.

I agree! That's the empire of Babylon, but not "Babylon" per se, in Biblical usage.
Now you're destroying your own argument. You admit that Babylon had many states and vassals, yet you refuse to believe that "many nations" indicated the Babylonian army under Nebuchadnezzar. :rolling:


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Yes, it's here:
As usual, you are confusing two things. That was directed against the ethnic group of Chaldeans (or neo-Babylonians). It was not directed against a political entity called "nation". No such thing existed at that time.

Thus it can be seen that Nebuchadnezzar’s Babylon was a broad collection of different nations, languages and peoples. (Modern readers of this text are somewhat handicapped by the understanding of the word “nation�. We have grown up with the concept of a nation as a political entity with defined borders, a flag, an embassy and a national anthem, etc. But the nation (or nation-state) as a political entity is not what Ezekiel or Daniel were referring to. In ancient times, a nation referred to a distinct ethnic group, a people bonded together with a common sense of affiliation and a shared language.

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Not "The king of Babylon and his nations"…
You are confused as to what "nation" meant in those times. See blue text above.

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No, implying that the armies of the north would be led by Nebuchadnezzar who, as the ruler of the Babylonian Empire, would naturally be at the head of the Babylonian army.

I would say either interpretation is possible,
No. Only one. You are confused about what "nation" meant. See blue text above.

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but even if your interpretation is correct, it still needs to be demonstrated that "peoples" corresponds to "nations" here, sometimes it does (Gen. 10:18), and sometimes it doesn't (1 Sam 9:21).
It always corresponds to people. The modern concept of "nation" didn't exist until the 1800s.

1st Samuel 9:21 doesn't even use the word "nation:" :rolling:

21And Saul answered and said, Am not I a Benjamite, of the smallest of the tribes of Israel? and my family the least of all the families of the tribe of Benjamin? wherefore then speakest thou so to me?

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And by the way: this passage in Jeremiah is discussing not the destruction of Tyre, but the invasion of Judah by Babylon. History shows that event occurred not by a collection of individual armies "from the north", but under Nebuchadnezzar's imperial army. So either "all the peoples of the north" is the same as Babylon, or else Jeremiah gives us another example of a failed prophecy.

Doesn't 2 Kings 24:2 quoted above specify other groups than the imperial army, though?
Not as independent armies - but as battalions, or divisions, of the imperial army. They were in the service of the imperial army, as vassals and tribute soldiers. Again: it's nice to know history; but it sucks badly when you don't.

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I am bringing out evidence,
In this debate?
The same one we are having now? With me?
About Tyre?

Nonsense. All you've offered so far is a list of claims, evasions, and what-if scenarios.

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but if the opposite view is not argued for, then I shall not be convinced of the opposite conclusion!
You're confused again. The burden of proof to argue for a conclusion is on your back. You are the one with the first claim here.

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Encyclopedia Britannica: but most of the remains of the Phoenician period still lie beneath the present town. … They *do* have samples; that's how they know that the earlier levels are available for excavation.

But I expect this is their evaluation, but not their set of museum pieces, how do we know they have samples?
Aw, gee. Hey everybody: Lee "expects" something. Call the press. So Lee :what would make you "expect" that - other than a desire to duck and avoid the damaging conclusion?

Britannica is a world-reknowned and first rate source for such material. They consult with experts in each field for each article, and it is peer-reviewed by *other* experts before publication. If you think they are wrong on their statement about Phoenician ruins under the modern city, or if you think they have overstated their conclusions, then by all means - prove it.

Your ignorance of the subject matter is not a refutation of their expertise.

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Near the market you will see a busy fisherman's port, in Phoenician times referred to as the "Sidonian" port because it faced north towards Sidon'

Well, that is evidence, now I wonder what the basis for this claim might be?

That is the record from written evidence in that time, Lee.

We need to be a bit more specific here, though.
No we don't. The tourism website you are ignoring is spot-on target: this is basic Tyrian history; anyone remotely acquainted with Tyre knows this. You just need to educate yourself on the topic, instead of insisting that we spoon-feed you each little tidbit one at a time.

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Maps of the island exist from ancient times, Lee.

References, please?
As soon as you provide references for you many wandering claims, then you'll have the right to ask others for the same.

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Nor does this person know much about navigation, either; the reefs he mentions did not obstruct ships - neither in Herod's time, nor in the time of the Arabs. In 1185 Ibn Djobeir, a Spanish-Arab born at Valencia, had this to say about Tyre's ports:

[i]The port of Tyre is most famous and beautiful. 'Akka has a port like it, but which does not afford anchorage to such large ships, and the port of Tyre is far the larger.
[/]

This is evidence that the island sank, though, if the port of Tyre in Djobeir's day was on the causeway, not the island,
1. It is not evidence that the island sank;
2. Djobeir mentions nothing about the port being on the causeway; why ar you trying to edit his comments?
3. There is no evidence that *any* port was ever built on the causeway

Your move.

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No, the references to "they" refer to Nebuchadnezzar's armies, soldiers, chariots, and horses.

My interpretation is not impossible, though, it's plausible, if "many nations" means more than just Neb, which we are discussing.
1. Your interpretation is impossible.
2. You misunderstand "nations". See blue text above.

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Well, again, does family mean a nation here?
No, it means people.

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However, showing me that Jeremiah used a particular turn of phrase doesn't prove your claim that Ezekiel intended that same usage. Especially when Ezekiel *never* used that turn of phrase himself.

And to repeat in reply! That's the way scholars use secondary literature.
No, it isn't. Scholars do not search the writings of Mussolini to find out what Hitler meant in his diary.

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Incorrect. Josephus was writing a history. Therefore if such a destruction *had* ever occurred, it certainly would have been worthy of being included.

Really, this is quite plain, the section quoted is listing a line of succession.
Wrong.

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But both the mainland and the island had walls and towers!

You've presented no evidence for that.

How did the mainland city withstand a siege, then?
Huh? It did not withstand. It fell.

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Certainly the island had walls.
Not "certain" at all. You've presented no evidence for that. Are you planning on doing so, anytime soon?

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Could we spend a little more time on these responses, please? These objections are kind of like underbrush to clear.
Oh, please. What a hypocrite. I've given you far more in the way of responses, than you have given us.

And since your claims are the ones needing substantiation, it is you who ought to be spending time on fleshing out your responses. Burden of proof is (and always has been) yours, not ours.

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Even if they both had towers, that doesn't help your argument; it only helps mine.

I was arguing that they both had towers and walls, though, so towers and walls being broken down by "them" and by "Neb" doesn't mean Neb had to do it all, so I think this actually helps my argument here.
No, it hurts your argument. Think about it.


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Except that the prophecy indicates that both the island and the mainland would be wiped out. That did not happen.

Can you prove this, though?

1. The prophecy indicated BOTH would be wiped out.
2. However, BOTH were not wiped out.


But this is a restatement of your statement, how is this a proof?
Ah, nice try. But since you are the one claiming the validity of biblical prophecy, the burden of proof is on YOU to show a total destruction of Tyre.

It is a historical fact that the island was not wiped out. Which destroys the claim of fulfilled prophecy.

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We know the Romans cleared away these rocks? We know an ancient port fell out of use? This is documented and proven?

Yep.

Nope.
BZZZT. Wrong. The Romans did this. As I said: it's great when ya knows history, but it sucks when ya don't.

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This is not the way to advance the discussion, though.
Which is the least of your concerns, from watching your behavior. After all, if you cared about "advancing the discussion," you would:

1. educate yourself on the basics of this topic and not insist that other people run and fetch information for you;
2. provide sources for some of your rather amazing claims;
3. pay attention to answers to your questions and not skip over them and repeat the question;
4. ignore refutations to your claims, and then repeat the claim as if it hadn't been refuted just moments ago;

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Ever seen the stack of leftover lumber, bricks, insulation, shingles, siding, etc.? What do you think that a military commander might do with those materials, in the heat of battle, with arrows and flaming missiles being shot at him?

He would stop minding the arrows, and throw some rocks into the sea?
He wouldn't worry too much if some of the raw materials fell into the water while he was hurriedly trying to build the causeway. Nor would he worry too much about how he disposed of the leftover raw materials.

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Herod's port went up in smoke?

A port is positioned over the water, lee. You asked for an example of a port that fell out of use and was allowed to just drop back into the sea.

A dock is positioned over the water, a port, however, is not!
1. Herod's port is irrelevant. Herod's port was in Caesaria, not in Tyre.

2. A port isn't positioned over hte water? Are you sure? Based upon what - your expertise as an architect again? :rolling: In point of fact, the Phoenician port at Carthage was actually over the water. Carthage and Tyre were sister-cities. Just another reason why knowing history is great, and sucks if you don't.

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Who said it was house? The city had a large metropolitan area.

We have a map of the city streets?
We have descriptions of the city.

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Soundings are done with various technologies, including sound, radio, blast imaging, etc.

For geological formations.
Wrong. I provided you with a link that showed soundings being used for archaeology. Go read it.

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The technology used to find the extent of the ruins can also be used to verify whether ruins might exist in a new location, or not.

They weren't saying they were doing sounding to find the extent of the ruins, though, as I recall. They were trying to locate them.
That isn't what it says. Try again:

http://tyros.leb.net/tyre/
The Roman levels of Tyre are of such importance that every effort has been made to preserve them. To determine the exact location of eariler Phoenician and Canaanite levels soundings are being made throughout the excavated areas.

The fact that they said "To determine the EXACT location..." is significant. It indicates that this technology is being used not to search for something in general (which is your insincere claim), but instead to pin down the location precisely, because the researchers have to work around something else - either the ongoing Roman excavations, or the modern city.

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The history explicitly states that the Sidonians transported 15,000 to safety. So the entire town was NOT "massacred or sold into slavery."

Then no inhabitants were left!
1. Your original claim is that they were all either executed or sold into slavery. I just gave you 15,000 reasons why that claim is wrong. Game, set, match.

2. Seeing that your old claim doesn't have a leg to stand on, your *new* claim is that "no inhabitants were left." But you have presented no evidence that no inhabitants were left. There might have been inhabitants which were neither killed, sold, or rescued by Sidon. If you think that the city of Tyre was totally emptied of people after this, then fine - present proof. But so far you haven't done that.

3. All of which ignores the fact that a person doesn't stop being Tyrian just because they were rescued by a sister city. Moreover, the Tyrians returned, rebuilt the city, and it blossomed again in less than two decades.

You were talking about wanting to "advance the discussion" earlier. In the face of such gross intellectual dishonesty as you just demonstrated above, you are lucky if anyone stops long enough to even give you the time of day. No wonder bible literalist christians have zero credibility.

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All around all those ins and outs? There aren't just two projections, it's very convoluted.

I see no reason why this couldn't be done - and you've certainly presented no evidence from architecture or archaeology why it's not possible.

Certainly it would be possible, but not probable.
1. You've presented zero evidence that it wouldn't be probable, and you've presented zero evidence that it posed any kind of engineering or architectural challenge to do so. So you have no basis upon which to make a claim that one is more, or less, probable than the other.

2. You've also ignored "probable" conclusions throughout your entire set of responses to me. So it's a little ironic to see you trying to appeal to "probable" now.

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What's more, the source you quoted (Curtius) is describing the state of the walls in the time of Alexander - 200 years after the siege by Nebuchadnezzar.

Again, this is not proof, but it does make it more probable that they were built that way in the first place.
No it doesn't.

1. You've presented zero evidence that it wouldn't be probable, and you've presented zero evidence that it posed any kind of engineering or architectural challenge to do so.

2. We know from history that Tyre made several upgrades to its defenses *after* Nebuchadnezzar, but *before* Alexander. So the state of the walls in Alexander's time tells us nothing about their state in Nebuchadnezzar's time.

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But I can still make my point either way! We know that Neb did not attack the island,
What crap. We know he *did* attack the island. He simply failed to take it after sieging it for 13 years. Like I said: it's great ta know history, but it sucks when ya don't.

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and anyone reading of an attack to come on Tyre using horses and chariots would think of the mainland,
Only if they were unfamiliar with the history of ancient military warfare - as you are.

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and thus the prophecy would be thought to indicate two attacks.
Except that only one attacker is identified, and except that the horses and chariots could be applied to the island city as well.

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"ancient" can mean the time of Greece and Rome as well - especially Rome, in the case of Tyre, since there are so many well preserved Roman ruins on the island.

Yes, it could, the question is which interpretation is most probable here.

Either one is probable.

Well, they can't both be probable, possible, yes, but not probable.
You misunderstand. Either explanation works here, and you have not shown either one to be more probable than the other. Until you do, the explanations have equal probability, and equal possibility.

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Well, Arrian was a bit of an apologist for Alexander, so we can't trust all he says!
Says who? You?
What is your evidence for this?

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A chariot would actually be a singularly unwieldy way to attack soldiers in a city, though.
Apparently the ancient military commanders disagreed, since they used chariots in that fashion.


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You can't move nimbly, the horse is announcing your arrival at every point, etc.
Ya know what? I kinda think that the 13 years of siege had pretty much ruined the element of surprise for Nebuchadnezzar. Not much concern that the horse would "announce the arrival."

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Alex didn't have to be the one to make it a bare rock, though, and in a one or two-paragraph summary, you won't get a complete set of details, and if Tyre became a bare rock, then a rock plateau sinking would not be noticed very readily by the neighbors, and thus not noticed by the historians, if it took an extended time.
Wrong on all counts. Tyre was a major trading facility. If it sank, people would have not only noticed, they would have panicked. It would be the same thing as Los Angeles suddenly dropping off into the ocean and nobody noticing.

And since Tyre was continually inhabited, I suspect the Tyrians would have noticed, too, if they found themselves underwater. Either that, or evolved gill slits.....
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Old 05-09-2005, 01:36 PM   #93
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Quote:
Originally Posted by John A. Broussard
Phew!!

While I couldn't care less whether Tyre ever existed or is now under a mile of water, your argument is exhaustive, exhausting and--I must admit--very convincing.
Well, thanks.

That's probably the only thing I have to thank Josh McDowell for - making me spend the time and effort to research his claims. Not only did it give me a good examination of what a total shyster McDowell is, but I got a pretty decent exposure to ancient history, to boot. If you think his claims about Tyre were exaggerated nonsense, you should see the Babylon claims. :rolling:

Quote:
I didn't much believe what Lee was saying, but now I feel sorry for him.
Don't feel sorry for him. He's laughing his ass off at us. I suspect that -- in reality -- he's a college kid who needs to write a paper. Lacking the time to research it, he's trying to do it on the cheap: toss out patently absurd ideas on an internet forum, and get people to scurry around and do the research. That way he can get his paper finished, without lifting a finger to do any actual work.
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Old 05-09-2005, 05:02 PM   #94
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Sauron:

I've come to the conclusion that Lee's being deliberately obtuse - I think we've all had the wool pulled over our eyes, unfortunately. He is not sincere about this discussion.

He is instead engaged in a calculated attempt to merely raise objections where he does not read the responses, nor does he even care about the answer - except that it provides the springboard for the next question or hypothetical assumption.



Couldn't agree with you more Sauron. I've had my suspicions about Lee for the last week or so.
It's clear he just wants to sit here and gainsay us, all the while passing himself off as a serious participant in this exchange.
He neither has the wherewithall to respond or object to any of our arguments
in an educated or constructive manner nor does he feel he has to do his part in this by consulting and citing the necessary sources required for honest debate.
He's been gaming us all along.
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Old 05-09-2005, 05:13 PM   #95
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Quote:
Originally Posted by noah
Sauron:

I've come to the conclusion that Lee's being deliberately obtuse - I think we've all had the wool pulled over our eyes, unfortunately. He is not sincere about this discussion.

He is instead engaged in a calculated attempt to merely raise objections where he does not read the responses, nor does he even care about the answer - except that it provides the springboard for the next question or hypothetical assumption.



Couldn't agree with you more Sauron. I've had my suspicions about Lee for the last week or so.
It's clear he just wants to sit here and gainsay us, all the while passing himself off as a serious participant in this exchange.
He neither has the wherewithall to respond or object to any of our arguments
in an educated or constructive manner nor does he feel he has to do his part in this by consulting and citing the necessary sources required for honest debate.
He's been gaming us all along.
Perhaps he has, but the rest of us appreciate the effort taken, as well as the information presented.
:thumbs:
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Old 05-09-2005, 07:22 PM   #96
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Here is the link for the use of chariots in sieges:

During sieges, chariots served two purposes. They were important for blockading the city. Because of their speed, they could quickly get to spots where enemy activity was happening, thereby being able to stop the escape of royalty (such as the capture of King Zedekiah by chariots/cavalry when he attempted to escape Babylon's siege of Jerusalem), and in the same manner, of stopping messengers, thereby stopping communications with allies. The other purpose they had was as a light artillery force. Again, because of their speed, they could dart within archery range, fire their arrows, then retreat back outside of range. The problem archers had on the walls is that the arrows took enough time in flight to reach where you aimed them, that a target with the speed of cavalry or chariots may or may not still be there. The archers on the chariots didn't have that problem. Because the besieged forces can prepare sorties unobserved by the besiegers, whereas those in the city can frequently see where the opposing forces are weakest, sorties can provide the defenders a means of suddenly matching their strongest against the attackers' weakest forces.


http://www.ancientworlds.net/aw/Post/238455
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Old 05-09-2005, 07:51 PM   #97
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I must say I am disappointed by the level of the discussion at this point, by and large.

Regards,
Lee
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Old 05-09-2005, 08:07 PM   #98
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I must applaud the exhaustive and comprehensive deconstruction of the Tyre as fulfilled prophesy clap-trap. I could never hang in there in response to the "just so" stories and excuses of how prophesy could have been fulfilled.

And Lee, I am disappointed at the level of rebuttal posted by you, by and large.
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Old 05-09-2005, 08:10 PM   #99
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So are we Lee, So are we.
[COLOR=DarkRed]

You have exhausted our patience and made a mockery of the intent and spirit of this forum.
It's clear now that you have not been discussing this subject in good faith.

We're tired of this neverending ferris wheel ride, Lee.

One hint,try a little honest research, Avoid books by McDowel,l Lewis, Strobel, Archer and Morison. Try to keep in mind the progression of the debate as well as the points your opponents make.

If you can't post honestly, don't post at all.
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Old 05-09-2005, 08:46 PM   #100
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Quote:
Originally Posted by noah
Here is the link for the use of chariots in sieges:

During sieges, chariots served two purposes. They were important for blockading the city. Because of their speed, they could quickly get to spots where enemy activity was happening, thereby being able to stop the escape of royalty (such as the capture of King Zedekiah by chariots/cavalry when he attempted to escape Babylon's siege of Jerusalem), and in the same manner, of stopping messengers, thereby stopping communications with allies. The other purpose they had was as a light artillery force. Again, because of their speed, they could dart within archery range, fire their arrows, then retreat back outside of range. The problem archers had on the walls is that the arrows took enough time in flight to reach where you aimed them, that a target with the speed of cavalry or chariots may or may not still be there. The archers on the chariots didn't have that problem. Because the besieged forces can prepare sorties unobserved by the besiegers, whereas those in the city can frequently see where the opposing forces are weakest, sorties can provide the defenders a means of suddenly matching their strongest against the attackers' weakest forces.


http://www.ancientworlds.net/aw/Post/238455
"I'm sure they were just assuming that."

"How do you know the walls around Jerusalem were made of the same material as the walls of Tyre?"

"But they built the walls of Jerusalem right out to the edge of the cliff. All those horses pulling chariots - how did they do it? Did the horses learn how to climb walls with their cute little hooves?"

"I once heard that Jerusalem sank in the mud. Chariot wheels would get stuck in the mud, so obviously they weren't used."

"There were two Jerusalems - on in the mountains and one in the valley. Nebuchadnezzar's chariots only invaded the one in the valley."
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