Cephas wrote:(is anxious to hear what Technomancer has to say about this)
Bobtheduck wrote:Rational thought requires starting on some assumption. The assumption, say, that what we see is real. What information we gather is accurate. Then, rational thought is possible after that point. There are still things people can never know, because our brains can't wrap around certain things... Not even when we all "work together" at it. Trusting just their senses and reasoning puts them in a place of faith that us trusting in God and what we believe him to have said have.
Now, Epic of Gilgamesh v. Biblical Flood-- did one copy from the other, or are they separate accounts of the same event?
If I remember correctly, just about every single culture has a version of the flood myth to them; some more diluted then others
Add in the fact that floods are a fairly common sort of disaster, and the prevalance of flood stories is readily explainable.
I'll recomend to take a look at the study of Kent Hovind. His homepage is http://www.drdino.com, but to find out more I suggest you to buy the video seminars.
That Dude wrote:You guys should check out Bob Cornuke. He has some pretty good stuff on the resting place of the arc. He is a very smart man who has traveled the globe looking for Biblical artifacts and he uses the bible as a guide for all his searching.
uc pseudonym wrote:I've intentionally neglected to enter this thread up until this point, as I knew it would likely be long and require significant thought. There were probably better things I could have done with this seminar, but I doubt any of them merit any more before God than this does.
Mainly, I am not going to enter the issue, as I'm unqualified to speak on the topic. I do have one thing to say, though: I have a soiled napkin from Denny's.
One question, however (and one I would like to be answered by either someone who has read a Hebrew Bible or been through a respectable seminary): What does the Bible actually say about the flood? It certainly doesn't use the word global, and I wonder about the connotations involved with whatever word was used.
(though I haven't found any links or listings in Journals for you yet, Tech)
Technomancer wrote:The problem with simply saying "God did it" is that one can explain everything in this fashion, without gaining any meaningful insight into the natural world. It becomes a convenient cop-out for anything that we don't care to understand, and for questions that make us uncomfortable.
Try the feb 2004 edition of Signal Processing. I'll also be published in the Proceedings of the International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (where I will be presenting).
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