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09-17-2013, 07:22 PM | #11 | |
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09-18-2013, 05:39 AM | #12 | ||
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From an economic standpoint, slaves have to produce more than what is required for their subsistence. This isn't easy to do in a primitive economy. Therefore, if you wanted a generic person to do work, why not just hire one of the local yokels? The 20 shekel rate (of course this is before coins were invented, and whether the bible authors are talking about weights here is highly questionable) might have been an acceptable price back in the good old days, but then again it might not. It sort of depended on market conditions, sex of the slave, etc. The price seems high for the conditions described in the Joseph story - this was a wholesale transaction after all; were the brothers in a position to bargain? However, using the same logic, this was also the price of a slave (with the same cautions) for over a thousand years afterwards. Therefore, one has to question the effectiveness of this as any type of argument for some kind of historical accuracy in Genesis. I suspect your hero Kenneth_Kitchen was the person who started this dubious defense of biblical accuracy. |
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09-18-2013, 06:07 AM | #13 | |
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To the authors of Genesis, the waters rose and the waters lowered and the world was pretty much unchanged except for all the dead sinners (and every other living thing). As for the source of the antedeluvian river, 'magic.' Or, you know, physics were different in olden days, as demonstrated by the fact it didn't rain. So the water cycle would involve some magic or technobabble step anyway. |
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09-18-2013, 07:11 AM | #14 | |
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Interestingly, the Israelites don't take camels out of Egypt in Exodus. An important book on this subject is Abraham in History and Tradition (or via: amazon.co.uk) It is available on Questia. Seters points out that the use of tents is also probably anachronistic. I've also pointed out above that the presence of money is a little dubious, but the references are not completely clear... I don't think there is any doubt that the Sages thought the references were to actual coins. |
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09-18-2013, 08:21 AM | #15 | ||
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09-18-2013, 08:25 AM | #16 |
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Biblical chronology has Joseph at 1900 BC, no? When did coins first emerge in Egypt/the Levant?
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09-18-2013, 08:27 AM | #17 | ||||
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Hi Arnoldo,
You are the victim of junk science or perhaps a theological hoax. In ancient Mesopotamia a certain amount/weight of barley was used to judge price around 2200 B.C.E. In Egypt loaves of bread and jugs of beer were measurements of value. There would have been no standard price for a slave as what you gave for a slave would have depended on a number of factors: Age, health, profession, history and sex of a slave; buyer's need and desire for a slave, and general cost of maintaining a slave. All of these would have changed drastically from year to year and deal to deal. In the chart, there are 3 biblical passages cited: 2 Kings 15:20 does not talk about the price of slaves: Quote:
Exodus 21:32 Quote:
How much was 30 sheckels equal to? From Weights, Measures, and Coins From the Bible Through the Talmudic Period In excavations carried out in Palestine some of the weights which have been found have their weight marked on them, but most are without any notation. The shape of the weights, for the most part, is semicircular (dome-shaped). There are also some cast metal weights that are rectangular and cube-shaped, and some that are oval or in the shape of animals. Most of the weights found in Palestine are from the end of the period of the monarchy (the seventh to sixth centuries BCE). Quote:
The Third and final Biblical reference is to Genesis 39:28. This does not exist as Genesis 39 ends at 23. There is a reference at 37:28: Quote:
Warmly, Jay Raskin |
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09-18-2013, 08:32 AM | #18 | ||
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I'm with the creationists, the flood would have been an almighty kahblooie. |
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09-18-2013, 08:44 AM | #19 | |
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But anyway, the upheavel is not scriptural, it's a later addition moving backwards from the conditions of the strata, to trying to find a place in scripture that could explain it. But the biblical description of Earth is that it's dirt spread across the surface of the Waters below. It's a mud pie. There's just not that much geology to form the geologic column, much less churn like a fossil bearing blender. The upheaval of the creationist model would have torn the biblical Earth asunder like Kleenex tissues in the washing machine. |
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09-18-2013, 09:40 AM | #20 | |||
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The 1900 BCE date for Joseph looks pretty early, more like 1500 would be more conservative. Abraham is usually figured at 1800 BCE. |
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