On 20/05/16 02:39, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
> On 5/19/2016 5:43 PM, David Brown wrote:
>> On 19/05/16 21:37, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
>>> On 5/19/2016 12:46 PM, Mr Flibble wrote:
>>>> On 19/05/2016 14:31, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Your mind is just as closed as his is.
>>>>
>>>> Don't be a twit. Noah's Ark is in the Book Of Genesis and we know
>>>> Genesis is fictional because we know, among other things, that evolution
>>>> is a fact. If anyone has a closed mind it is you mate. Try opening
>>>> YOUR mind to SCIENTIFIC TRUTH.
>>>>
>>>> /Flibble
>>>>
>>>
>>> You claim that the Book of Genesis is fictional without any proof - and
>>> then have the nerve to claim I have a closed mind? ROFLMAO!
>>>
>>
>> It is not up to anyone to prove that a particular book is fictional -
>> the book is fictional until proved to be fact (or at the very least,
>> until there is some independent corroborating evidence for at least some
>> of the stories in the book).
>>
>
> Your claim, not mine.
Check the attributions - /I/ did not claim Genesis was fictional. (I
/do/ think it is basically fictional, but that is because it is
inconsistent with large masses of known evidence and scientific
understanding, and because there is nothing to corroborate the majority
of the stories in the book. I do /not/ claim to be able to "disprove"
the book, however.)
> There is corroborating evidence of many of the
> stories in the book. But you're too close minded to look at them.
No, I am interested. I have never come across any evidence, or reliable
references to evidence, that suggest the stories in Genesis are true. I
am happy to accept that at least some parts have some basis in truth -
it is unlikely to be pure fiction. But the "big" issues, such as
creation, the Ark, the whole Egypt expedition and miraculous escape, the
lifetimes of the patriarchs, etc., have no serious evidence of which I
am aware.
If you have links that show reasonable evidence, I would be curious to
have a look. But I am not interested in something that shows "there was
a big flood here around 4000 BC" - it would have to show "there was a
world-spanning flood with waters covering most of the world's land
masses after extremely heavy rainfall around 4000 BC".
>
>> The claims in the Book of Genesis are extraordinary, to say the least.
>> And extraordinary claims need extraordinary proof. For Genesis, there
>> is - to my knowledge - no independent proof in any written documents or
>> archaeology. I don't think there is even any evidence for significant
>> Israelite presence in ancient Egypt, as slaves or otherwise.
>>
>
> Your knowledge is sadly lacking. For instance, there is archaelogical
> evidence of the story of Sodom and Gomorrah. As well as many other stories.
No, there is archaeological evidence that there were some ancient cities
that fit reasonably well with the description of these cities in the
Bible. As I have said before, I don't think that just because something
is mentioned in Genesis means that it is definitely fictional - it seems
reasonable that the story refers to real cities. But the point of the
story in Genesis is not that there happened to be a couple of cities
near the Dead Sea - it is that the cities were full of corruption, and
that God destroyed them because of that. There is /no/ evidence for that.
>
>> Of course, a complete lack of any evidence does not prove that Genesis
>> is fictional - merely that if you want to believe it to be "true" in any
>> sense, then you do so on faith and not due to rational thought or
>> reasoning.
>>
>
> And the insistence that is fiction despite evidence to the contrary is a
> sure sign of a closed mind.
Again, show me some evidence. I will judge how much credibility I give
that evidence. And again, I do not think there is a black-and-white
choice between "all fact" and "all fiction". Just as evolution does not
"disprove" that the Israelites were slaves in Egypt, so would evidence
of significant Jewish slavery in Egypt be unrelated to the truth or
fiction of the garden of Eden.