Thursday, March 31, 2022

Erick Ybarra on Vigilius + Some Comments


First, an excellent sum up of Pope Vigilius' case (antipapal claim being: he made two infallible statements contradicting). Unfortunately, he ends up attacking Biblical inerrancy too.

Does This One Pope Discredit the Papacy? w/ Erick Ybarra
31st March 2022 | Pints With Aquinas
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=97b-HbHK-O4


My comments:

9:42 "two Isaiah, five writers of the Pentateuch" ...

According to modern (very flawed) scholarship.

On the topic of the Pentateuch, it holds up in Biblical history. Not identic, but akin to and included in dogma.

10:04 Let's distinguish "infallibility" and "inerrancy".

The Bible is inerrant, but it could lead someone unwary astray, or rather allow someone to twist his understanding of it astray. It's basically for bishops or theologians rather than normal lay men. But the original and at least somewhere preserved version of the text cannot be factually wrong (either dogma or small fact).

The Church is infallible. It could be wrong (in much, but not all of Tradition, as in Fathers) on a fact, as long as the fact did not affect dogma.

Example : nearly all Fathers after St. Irenaeus (the exceptions being some of his contemporaries and only maybe a Gallican martyrology) identify the Beloved Disciple with one son of Zebedee, one of the twelve. As soon as he was an "apostle" in any sense, it still upholds revelation being completed before the death of the last apostle. If he was a Cohen and one of the 72, that's fine, even if most Church men since St. Irenaeus were factually wrong : because they were not doctrinally wrong.

It's like Aristotle's strongest argument for earth being round is sound as an argument even if wrong as a fact : Magellan providing what "Ganges = Gibraltar" lacked.

What matters is, a Gospel written AD 100 and a Revelation received AD 90 on Patmos were received and written with the competence of one who had known Jesus and the Blessed Virgin - and this is correct even on the thesis of Fr. Jean Colson. So, the Church is infallible, but not factually inerrant. However, if all Church fathers, including Papias and Asia Minor ones, remaining there (unlike St. Irenaeus, who left Asia Minor at 16), had said or shown agreement that the Beloved Disciple were the Son of Zebedee, then probably Church infallibility would have provided inerrancy on the case, even if the Church in principle does not have inerrancy.

But the Bible actually having inerrancy is part of Church teaching over the centuries, and "Deutero-Isaiah" and "Yahwist-Elohist +" is not. Unlike the Cohen John as one of 72, this is not compatible with the sources' claims about the authorships.

Other comments:

I

Luke DeMarco
All cards on the table, I’m a Protestant (who, by the way, also happens to be a fan of Pints with Aquinas). To me, conversations like this actually STRENGTHEN the Roman Catholic side of the conversation. I love when each side of Christendom is vulnerable with their shady parts of their history. When we compare our tradition’s strengths with the other side’s weaknesses, we get nowhere in the conversation and the Truth gets convoluted. When Catholics acknowledge the fuzzy parts of RCC history, yet still rationally hold to Catholicism with a good conscience, it shows strength and honesty on their side. It’s awesome to see men like Matt Fradd and Erick Ybarra who can hold to honesty in the midst of complexity, and I’m always grateful to learn from men like these who pull me out of my theological echo chamber. Thanks for your channel, and God bless!

II

Gerald
Matt you should check out the interesting story of Pope Stephen VI and the Cadaver Synod. It’s a WILD story

Hans-Georg Lundahl
And it proves, sedevacantism can be true at times.

I think it was Stephen VI who claimed the see of Peter had been vacant in the day of Formosus.

Whether he was right or wrong on Formosus matters less than the fact that he held it compatible with his Catholic doctrine that the previous "apparent" Pope (apparent from facts like recognition, coronation etc, not on all counts) was in fact no Pope.

Confer some Vatican II:ers who now compare Sedevacantism in all forms to heresy (I think I heard Fr Pine going on that theme).

III

PloopPloop
Count on a Catholic to discredit scriptural inerrancy while arguing for papal infallibility and supremacy. What a joke. Who do you worship? Christ or his disciples ?

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Erick Ybarra is a Vatican II:er and therefore, while hoping to be a Catholic wrong about actually being one.

Real Catholics do not discredit or attack Biblical inerrancy. They claim it both for and through Papal infallibility.

John Hunt Thinks Nimrod is a Myth, dito for Babel


John Hunt Thinks Nimrod is a Myth, dito for Babel · Three QQ from Issah Mohammed, on Babel · Twelve Questions on Genesis I to XI

When referring to him, to his position, "myth" can be taken in the now usual sense of non-factual, since he has (Q II, first answer to my first comment) confirmed this is how he takes the concept. This is, as we shall see, not the only way he misunderstands what "myth" means and what myths exist.

Q I
What is some scholarly work done on the Tower of Babel (historical, theological, etc.)?
https://www.quora.com/What-is-some-scholarly-work-done-on-the-Tower-of-Babel-historical-theological-etc/answer/John-Hunt-538


John Hunt
Author of "Bringing God Up to Date" (2021-present)
Answered 27.III.2022
The legend about the origin of languages is a common one, and based on ziggurats, which were a common feature in Mesopotamia.



This model reconstruction of the Chogha Zanbil Ziggurat. Circa 1300 BC

Hans-Georg Lundahl
30.III.2022
“The legend about the origin of languages is a common one”

Outside Amerindian and Polynesian versions, how many versions are there in the civilised parts of the Old World?

John Hunt
30.III.2022
The Tower of Babel story might well have been prompted by this much older one -

Enmerkar and the Lord of Aratta - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enmerkar_and_the_Lord_of_Aratta


I answered twice
namely a and b, and so far only b is answered.

a
Hans-Georg Lundahl
30.III.2022
As far as I know of the text, there is a statement that linguistic unity has been lost and a prayer it should be restored.

Not a story about how the linguistic unity was lost.

If I’m wrong, cite the line that shows your point …

Not answered
when I am writing this, 31.III.2022

b
Hans-Georg Lundahl
30.III.2022
As the wikipedia says, it is from 21st C BC, if this is carbon dated, it is not much older than Moses writing Genesis, perhaps 1510 or even 1550 BC.

You see, the carbon dates were getting closer to our real ones then, and some distance was still there. Such a “21st C BC” is really after 18th C BC.

John Hunt
30.III.2022
I’m not sure what you mean by carbon dating. we’re not talking about original manuscripts, in either case. But for the last century and more Genesis etc has been put at a much later date.

Book of Genesis - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Genesis


Book of Exodus - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Exodus


Hans-Georg Lundahl
30.III.2022
You can’t date a Sumerian work by “ab Ur condita” since that is not a thing.

You either date it in literary history as presented as being so and so much earlier than something else, or by carbon, or by when it touches Assyrian or Greek or Roman or Hebrew chronology.

You can also date it relative to a context to which it is contemporary.

So, by carbon dated tablets, I mean either a tablet that is in its wool cover, which can be dated, or a tablet in a house the style of which can be dated to other houses with carbon dated materials, or a tablet that has a linguistic or palaeographic style with dates to it.

In this sense, there is broadly speaking a difference between if a tablet is dated to such a carbon time or in reference to a later work (for instance, a tablet is on order of Sargon, who is dated as 200 years earlier than a later reference to him).

In the former case, I can already pin point it to the stay of the Israelites in Egypt. 1590 or birth of Moses being carbon dated later (1838 as per wooden material in the tomb of Sesostris III) and 1700 or death of Joseph’s pharao being carbon dated earlier (2800 BC in raw dates, since he was Djoser).

The dating of the modern scholarship for Genesis or Exodus is simply reconstruction - guess work.

Q II
Did the giants who existed after Noah’s flood in Canaan come from Nimrod's line of descendants?
https://www.quora.com/Did-the-giants-who-existed-after-Noah-s-flood-in-Canaan-come-from-Nimrods-line-of-descendants/answer/John-Hunt-538


John Hunt
Author of "Bringing God Up to Date" (2021-present)
Answered 30.III.2022
Scholars talk about “Canaan,” sure. The early Hebrews, if they existed, were an ethnoreligious group gradually diverging from the Canaanites after moving up into the hills. But “giants, Noah’s Flood, Nimrod” - these are entirely mythical concepts.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
30.III.2022
What exactly do you mean by “mythical” - is that “non-factual”?

John Hunt
30.III.2022
Basically, yes -

“Myth is a folklore genre consisting of narratives that play a fundamental role in a society, such as foundational tales or origin myths.”

They’re stories we used to tell ourselves around the campfire, to explain things, before we got into “science,” about 2500 years ago with the Greeks, which relied on observation and experimentation.

So, for instance, there’s a common, universal and ancient thread in religious tradition that takes us back to when “self-awareness” and corresponding “relationship” began. It says that once we were content. We didn’t worry. We lived in what is described in different traditions as the Age of Perfection, the Krita Yuga, the Garden of Eden, the Eternal Springtime, and so on, in innocence. We were at one with nature, because we were nature. We didn’t know good and evil. We couldn’t mess up. We couldn’t even think.

At some point in our history, whether 100,000 or 7 million years ago (lowest and highest estimates, depending in part on how many species of “Homo” you include), we became “self-aware.” Armadillos specialize in body armor, cheetahs in speed, this is our own specialty, it’s what we “do.” We began to watch ourselves “living.” We divided the world into “me” and “it.” We made a conscious choice to eat the apple (or not), to have sex (or not). We learnt how to manipulate things, changing them for new uses (the world’s oldest known worked wooden implement, the Clacton spear, in the Natural History Museum in London, was fashioned over 420,000 years ago, and stone points used for hunting go back more than half a million years – we’ve been killing animals or people for a heck of a long time).

Like Adam in the Garden of Eden (Genesis 2:20 – the foundational myth for our current predicament) we began naming them, and talking to each other. So on the one hand we began to enjoy the fruits of self-awareness, of communication, and love; on the other hand we learned the ashes of separation, uncertainty and the fear of death. Ever since then, since the “Fall,” a metaphor for our birth of consciousness, we’ve been trying to put the two together again – the “me” and the “it,” turning “it” into “you,” figuring out how one should relate to the other, groping around the edges of our lives, looking for patterns, for explanations, wondering what’s over the horizon.

I think the myths in the Bible are great - fascinating historically, highly revealing in our psychology, and - if you understand them as myth - give us pointers on where to go.

And the same for many of the others….but to take one particular Bronze Age myth, out of the thousands available (and there are two in Genesis), of a god forming man out of dirt and woman out of one of his ribs, literally - as the “factual truth” - that’s insanity. (That’s too severe…just an abandonment of rationality in favor of one particular ancient cultic belief).

Hans-Georg Lundahl
31.III.2022
I note your explanation.

First, I note, it doesn’t (and non-factuality doesn’t) follow from the definition you cited.

“Myth is a folklore genre consisting of narratives that play a fundamental role in a society, such as foundational tales or origin myths.”

Let’s break this down.

“Myth is a folklore genre”

Folklore doesn’t mean non-factual.

“consisting of narratives that play a fundamental role in a society,”

Like actually historic narratives could never play that role (irony, if you are sarcastically challenged).

“such as foundational tales or origin myths.”

And this also does not mean non-factual.

When one and the same thing to be explained as to origin has two competing origin myths, one of these would be false, non-factual, but that is because they compete.

For instance, if man being self aware is explained in terms of “100,000 or 7 million years ago” or in terms of “to the image of God he created him:” (in Genesis 1:26) - one of these origin myths must be non-factual. Not because they are origin myths, but because they contradict (when you take Genesis 5 and 11 and the latter leading up to Abraham into account).

And what about actually believing it?

“just an abandonment of rationality in favor of one particular ancient cultic belief”

Well, I could say for your belief system, it is “just an abandonment of rationality in favor of one particular modern cultic belief” - only difference being yours is modern, mine is ancient.

So far, you have not even begun arguing for the modern against the ancient of these two beliefs.

And if thousands of beliefs are available, why pick a modern one which stands out so starkly against all the ancient ones?

Now, you did give me a slight challenge as to why this ancient belief rather than some other ones.

I’ll give a few reasons:

  • unlike other origin myths about mankind, this one provides a genealogy for a line going from the beginning of mankind to a man in a specific historic setting;
  • unlike other origin myths about mankind, this one takes seriously that we are more than just matter, we aren’t the robots of some gods;
  • unlike the other ones, this one gives measures for the ark that would actually function, if there is one “kind” for every 17 or 18 Linnaean “species” - I have checked, and 18 species in five “genuses” or “genera” is what we have for hedgehogs;
  • unlike the other ones in the civilised parts of the Old World, including the one you cited “Enmerker and the Lord of Aratta” - this one gives an explanation of why there are so diverse languages so soon after the Flood.


The idea that “Lord of Aratta” is a parallel to the Tower of Babel story comes from a former bad reading, in which Enki is asked to destroy, good reading, restore, the linguistic unity. How it was broken is not mentioned. The idea that Genesis 11:1–9 and “Lord of Aratta” are only two examples among one for each mythology is a bad guess, which close familiarity with pagan mythologies refutes.

John Hunt
31.III.2022
“And if thousands of beliefs are available, why pick a modern one which stands out so starkly against all the ancient ones?”

There are hundred, thousands of Bronze Age creation myths, sure. But they’re impossible to take literally today (it was tough enough in the third century AD, as one of the key Early Church Fathers, Origen, said -And who is so stupid as to imagine that God planted a garden in Eden eastward, and put in it a tree of life, which could be seen and felt?)

We know today there have been dozens of minor life extinctions before, and five major ones – respectively 440 million, 365 million, 250 million, 210 million and 65 million years ago. We can see the climate changes in ice cores, the fossil deposits in the mud and rocks, the impact of volcanoes and meteorites, etc. It’s inconceivable that there could have been a worldwide flood, with water covering the mountains, a sixth extinction level event, embracing virtually all life, within the last few thousand years, leaving no trace. Nobody with any credibility in geology, climatology, paleontology, anthropology, biology, taxonomy, history, archaeology and so on, would give it a moment’s thought. But then I know there are many people around who believe the earth is about 6,000 years old, flat, and immovable, with the sun circling it, and God shouts down from heaven a few hundred feet up in the air, people can get there in chariots, snakes and donkeys can talk, etc. Your prerogative, if you want to believe in fairy tales.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
31.III.2022
I’d like to have an exact reference for Origen.

If there were thousands of Bronze age myths, most are gone. There aren’t even 100 left, and if there were, you would be very hasty to say they are all impossible to “take literally” without checking each.

The idea the “earlier extinctions” are at dates incompatible with the Flood date needs proof. Dismissing the credibility of creation scientists is no more than a hand wave.

As to your description of Fundies, at least “flat earth” and God being “a few hundred feet up in the air” are clear strawmen, like donkeys and snakes talking as per own innate ability.


The quote from Origen could be from here:

Hmolpedia (archived) : Origen
https://www.eoht.info/page/Origen


Hmolpedia = Ashmole-pedia, after 17th C. Occultist Elias Ashmole.

A google search for the quote will not give a Catholic site Origen reference, but does give two references to eoht.info (above and George St. Clair) and the book by John Hunt. Where also he gives no reference more exact than "Origen".

Is Internet a Palantir - Answering Joseph Pearce


LOTR on the DANGERS of the Internet w/ Joseph Pearce
31st March 2022 | Pints With Aquinas
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HoTCPn4wuGA


2:20 As long as there is a free internet, a palantir controlled by Sauron is definitely closer to main stream media, including school education, than to the web.

I said "closer to" and I am not buying into "mainstream media are all controlled by evil forces".

An evil force in a mainstream medium is much likelier to state what you can't publish than force you to publish what you don't believe.

Chesterton left the Yellow Press over not being able to insult Jewish finance in it. There are some things to be said against Jewish finance, even if NS was not the solution.

Julius Fromm had a company that produced condoms. He's buried in England because he fled Germany in 1938, you can guess why.

William Meinhardt and some other Jews were owners of Osram, this is the still today dominant producer of light bulbs in the German speaking world. Now, what's wrong with light bulbs? Well, since the Phoebus cartel, preprogrammed obsolescence is wrong with them.

National Socialists both got Julius Fromm and William Meinhardt and other Jews out of the respective companies. B U T - they did not stop producing condoms, and they did not go back to lightbulbs that actually last. It was an action much like a politician in a country we need not name, who was fighting corrupt businessmen, because he didn't like competition. When a man from the West (a Jew, I think) had served him for some while in fighting corruption and then went out saying "wait a minute" ... that man was found dead after some not too long while.

Chesterton obviously wanted to be able to criticise Fromm and Meinhardt for selling condoms and for preprogramming obsolescence of light bulbs. And in the yellow press, he could not.

2:55 If we are to equate between the Tolkien mythos' bad "guys" and real demonology, I wouldn't equate Sauron as much with Satan (that would be Morgoth) as with Abaddon or Apollyon or Antichrist.

3:33 Wait a sec ... 1954 or 55 - was there any TV then?

"Television became available in crude experimental forms in the late 1920s, but it would still be several years before the new technology would be marketed to consumers. After World War II, an improved form of black-and-white television broadcasting became popular in the United Kingdom and United States, and television sets became commonplace in homes, businesses, and institutions. During the 1950s, television was the primary medium for influencing public opinion."

Ah ... that early? Even a bit earlier:

"Ab dem 22. März 1935 wurde in Deutschland durch den Fernsehsender Paul Nipkow das erste regelmäßige Fernsehprogramm der Welt ausgestrahlt. Ihren Höhepunkt erlebten die Sendungen, welche bis 1937 in 180 Zeilen gesendet wurden, mit den umfangreichen Übertragungen von den Olympischen Sommerspielen 1936 in sogenannte Fernsehstuben und Großbildstellen in Berlin und später Hamburg."

So, TV had been used by NS before they were used by the victors ... in both cases, state controlled.

Citing English and German wiki.

The state controlled part is obviously a very different thing from free internet, as long, as I said, as it remains free.

4:34 Joseph, my time right now is not "in cyber space" but before a keyboard in real space.

True, I'm not using a smart phone. I have never owned one. And this means, when I'm not sitting in front of a PC size computer usually (I've rarely borrowed laptops), I'm disconnected.

But as a writer, I prefer writing in front of a computer with internet and references at hand over writing in a notebook and then writing it all over again as I transfer it to the web.

I once (2018 or 2019) spent ten hours, from 8 am to 6 pm, writing more than half of a notebook full of 19th C, partly 20th C, Swedish authors of either Christian or Romantic or Patriotic appeal, in French, and sent it to a French right wing paper where a journalist had just praised the psychologic profundity of Strindberg's Miss Julie.

Now, before you rant over my reading a French right wing paper, as if that was a NS thing, Présent was founded by an admirer of Bernanos and friend of the late Dom Gérard, and it's the one daily which is consistently pro-life, you will not get any excuses for pro-abortion politicians, as apparently is the case in LaCroix. And its present chief editor attends Mass at St. Nicolas du Chardonnet. The journalist I answered is, apart from that article about Miss Julie, one of my favourite journalists. She's the one who does interviews with different Eastern Rite priests and priests with different ministries and so on.

Well, as said, my manuscript was on paper. Not one second spent on the web that day (at least before the evening). All paper written.

Some spaces were left blank, like I didn't have the reference at hand for the one actually decent play by Strindberg, A Dream Play, when it was written and similarily with some other works and obviously also life dates for authors.

All that manuscript was sent to Présent. They have not published it. They have also not sent it back. They have also not given any kind of help to get my texts in French about Swedish authors I like and think they might like (except Francis Bergeron is allergic to Norse myth, and I mentioned Fädernas Gudasaga by Rydberg with praise) onto the more or less still free internet.

That's one reason to prefer writing before a computer, as long as I have no partnership with any editor I can send handwritten paper manuscripts to.

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Elisha, 42, and a Bear or Two


(I originally wrote "a She-Bear or Two" but it seems the gender of the bears was not specified as female in the text.)

What's With the Story of Elisha and the Bears?
11th March 2022 | Testify
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J0PdSxKLFBQ


Testify posits that Elisha has authority and it is effective from God, even if God doesn't approve. The scene where the sons of Zebedee offer to make a curse like Elijah had done and Christ going to Crucifixion, not taking the twelve legions of angels, are to him suggestive that God "didn't necessarily" approve of Elisha's use of his authority.

5:36 Let's be clear, Our Lord will send two witnesses, probably Enoch and Elijah, and these will be acting much as Elisha does here - up to when they are killed in Jerusalem.

This is clear from Apocalypse 11.

So, Our Lord has another service to minister to : paying the price of our guilt to His Father. Any time He would have been killed, He could have offered that up - but even more, as God, He could perfectly control situations in a way that Elisha could not. Like the time when the Jews set out to stone Him and He just walked through.

Neither does He give all His servants that kind of control over situations, nor does He require that degree of sacrifice from everyone.

I hear now for the first time of the gloss na'ar maybe not being exclusive to a certain age, though the Latin "puer" and the French "garçon" should have alerted me, the one being how masters adressed slaves in Rome, the other meaning waiter in a restaurant. And for the first time they maybe weren't killed. I must confess I am not so tenderhearted that I squirmed at the story before these realisations. I just defended Joshua killing babies from Canaaneans because they were maybe Ba'al worshippers in the Molochist sense already (the Law contains a ban on Molochism suggesting this), and in the time of Elijah and Elisha, the Israelites were often enough bending knees to Ba'al (except for 7000), so, the 42 did not exactly have my closest sympathies.

7:22 Two key differences, that go together.

1) Christ was preparing for a world wide, not nation bound, discipleship, (starting in a Roman Empire without legally endorsed Molochism)
2) which usshered in the "age of grace".

By contrast,
1) Elisha (and Joshua) were preparing for and defending the fidelity of exactly one nation (in a very hostile and evil environment)
2) which happened in the "age of the law".

It was a harsh law that said that a virgin who voluntarily lost virginity while not yet married and living in her father's house should be stoned, but it served a specific purpose in a specific condition:
1) keeping the genealogy of Our Lord clean (four women in it have some disapproval, and one of them, Athalia, is not even mentioned)
2) in a neighbourhood where both Babylonians and Canaaneans served (among other things) false goddesses part of the service of which was making oneself a prostitute. In Babylon, temple prostitution was the legal way to lose virginity, which one needed to do before marrying.

Obviously, the sons of Zebedee, who earned a rebuke that day, were not quite sensitive to the changed circumstances.

Here is the Challoner comment:

[24] : This curse, which was followed by so visible a judgment of God, was not the effect of passion, or of a desire of revenging himself; but of zeal for religion, which was insulted by these boys, in the person of the prophet; and of a divine inspiration: God punishing in this manner the inhabitants of Bethel, (the chief seat of the calf worship,) who had trained up their children in a prejudice against the true religion and its ministers.

The Moral Argument


What ATHEISTS get WRONG most of the time about the moral argument!
24th March 2022 | Paulogia Live
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HWVjkwGhlVw


I'll go both on the ontological and the epistemological side. As usual, I'm adressing points made in the video around or just before the time signature.

4:54 I actually disagree.

Stopping me from arguing on the ontology of morality is maximising my suffering and minimising my flourishing!

And apart from some chosing apologetics as a hobby (as you do with counterapologetics) the correct answer can sometimes also save correct actual solutions. Like the day abortion gets stopped (hoping this happens in the West before Harmageddon, at least for some time), the idea that "morality ultimately comes from God" will - if so - have contributed.

ADEBAYO STEPHEN
No, morality doesn't come from a god. Religion has inflicted so much suffering on humans, all the while claiming to be inspired by a god. The unparalleled support Christians gave to slavery is a major example of this.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@ADEBAYO STEPHEN Catholic Christians have in fact given unparalleled little support for slavery.

Of all the European (and ex-colonial) states that freed slaves from Queen St. Bathilde forbidding the slave trade sometime in the 650's to the Emperor of Brazil freeing all slaves in 1888, exactly one only was done by a secularist. Schoelcher. And he was kind of a slave trader in another way, when it came to parental rights vs state rights over children.

All the rest were done by Christians. Usually Roman Catholics.

ADEBAYO STEPHEN
@Hans-Georg Lundahl I disagree with you on this. Forbidding the ownership of slaves legally did little to avail the condition of slaves in Europe as slavery persisted into the 19th century. Are you in defence of Christianity or just Catholicism?

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@ADEBAYO STEPHEN In Europe, slavery did not persist into the 19th C.

The last either European or ex-colonial state to forbid slavery on the own territory was Brazil, so, ex-colonial.

The slaves owned by Europeans were in the colonies, and the colonies tied to a European motherland had all finished it by the time of Schoelcher.

Are you aware that in the successor states of the Frankish Kingdom, only France and Netherlands came to have colonies with individually owned slaves? In Germany, Belgium, Austria, Switzerland, Northern Italy, and protectorates like Hungary and Poland, slavery was not a thing?

And in France and Netherlands, it only was so after Americas were discovered.

Are you aware that, when Jefferson visited France, he was advised to take a slave that was old and spoke no French, since a slave setting foot in France could (during the Ancien Régime) be freed simply by asking for it?

@ADEBAYO STEPHEN As to your last question, Catholicism is the original Christianity.

ADEBAYO STEPHEN
The opposition to the abolition of slavery was majorly expressed by Christians who felt they had a God-given right(enshrouded in the bible) to own slaves. Given the theocratic nature of the Catholic church and its political influence, she was unwilling to pursue and prosecute slave traders/owners but was active in the prosecution of heretics, free thinkers, and non-conformists.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@ADEBAYO STEPHEN I think you have just shown a very deep lack of historical knowledge.

The opposition to abolishing slavery in England's colonies in 1770's came from freethinkers (like Jefferson).

And Pope Gregory XVI issues an encyclical against slave trade.

And theocracy doesn't mean dogma is all one cares about, it means the things you care about should be run by dogma.

This involves the truth that the Bible passages actually do not endorse one particular type of slave ownership which leaves no room for freeing slaves, and should be weighed against others, that laud the freeing of slaves as a a good work. The fact you can hire paid workers is sufficient to allow for the former passages.

Protestants have misread certain passages, but freethinkers were before them in endorsing slavery in a racist way. Read Boswell's Life of Dr Johnson. It's the freethinker Boswell who is pro-slavery, it's the High Church Christian who is against slavery. In the form it had in the colonies, not in the sense of having paid workers or tenants on your fields.

ADEBAYO STEPHEN
@Hans-Georg Lundahl I guess that is in the defence of your denomination. However, Catholicism played a minor role in the abolition of slavery in major parts of Europe.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@ADEBAYO STEPHEN Not the least.

In Europe itself, slavery was abolished sooner or later before the end of the Middle Ages. Before there were any Protestants.


6:06 You can make other choices than your maker made for you?

Sure. God gave us free will.

And some of those other choices (like healthy Aryan flourishing, Jewish suffering, handicapped quick "release from a painful existence" - for some handicaps - whether or not this was actually what certain men chose in Germany, though it seems at least some did, 1933 to 1945), some of those other choices, you will agree that they are bad. Am I wrong? Are you so open to "moral choice" and closed to "moral objectivity" that the stereotypal (whether historically accurate or not) National Socialist choice is "just another choice" to you?

I can say this for Catholic moarlity apart from the credibility of its objective reason, it has some show of being the objective choice, in so far as it reads a bit like a wiki for the other ones, either agreeing where all agree (except on the generous provision of slavery in all non-Catholic cultures, including the modern one, but under different names) or standing in the middle where extremes disagree.

Look at who sterilised Indians, Esquimaux, sometimes I think even Gypsies and French Canadians, measured by who was running the hospital facilities - Anglicans, yes, United Church of Canada, yes, Presbyterians, yes, Methodists, yes, I think it is yes for all of these. But ... Catholics, no. And this was not due to Canadian law, on the contrary, all the Protestants were fine with obeying Canadian law, it's because Catholics said "there is an objective morality, and, as Pope Pius XI just defined in Casti connubii, this Canadian law cannot be applied, because it is against objective morality".

6:50 And as you are a former resident of Alberta, you would very likely be familiar with this Canadian law, since it was state law in Alberta and British Columbia, not all over Canada (unlike residential schools).

However, as long as "cowboy flourishing" doesn't mean "Indian suffering" - I'm for "cowboy flourishing" as one species of human flourishing.

11:23 In fact, all the bad laws that NS did go with and Alberta and BC too, they were derived from the Darwinian paradigm.

The idea "maximise flourishing, minimise pain" leaves out not just "for whom" but also "for whom in a case of conflict" and a lot of technicalities.

So, while it would normally not be an epistemological problem, in practise, some people do seem to get epistemologically challenged - including "Mr. Paulogia" (forgot your real last name) on abortion, I just heard.

Frank Turek may be a bit challenged on this example, because, whether or not he belongs to a Church that didn't even exist in Canada between 20's and 70's or one which did, he doesn't belong to one which both did so and fought against sterilising First Nations.

12:42 ok ... does this mean, you endorse the idea that while forceful sterilising was in law in Alberta and British Columbia, in Alabama and South Carolina, in the four Nordic countries, and, for a fortunately shorter while, in Germany (or "Germany +") - it was "objectively OK to sterilise certain people"?

Because, there was in a very real and legal sense an agreement on those evil rules.

In the contemporaries of Joshua outside his people but inside where they were settling, there was agreement on rules that would arguably shock even more (I think child sacrifice was already en vogue among them). A real and legal "agreement" (which Israel did not participate in).

On the other side of Joshua's conflict there was also a real and legal agreement to actually go on and kill some Canaaneans who were not just doing such things, but doing such things in a land promised to Abraham. Does this make this OK for you?

Or, do you make your "when we agree" more meta than that? Frankly, I think you do. (Turek pun only half intended).

13:45 There is a common purpose to playing a game with certain rules : exercising mind and body in a fun way.

The hypercompetitive person, the carreer man, and a few more, could not exist within the game they have chosen unless they thought that game (whether chess or lacrosse, yeah, I read Hal Foster) was, to them, fun. Those who are mandated to the game against their will are not likely to play it well.

Now, exercising mind and body in a fun way does fall within "human flourishing" - and mandating someone to a game he can't stand does fall within "human suffering" - yet, there has been legal agreement in lots of countries that gym teachers can mandate people to play whatever they are most playing in that country, even on pupils who can't stand the games.

Is school compulsion and mandatory PE OK to you, because it was agreed on?

Even when some pupils are (de facto, even if the school pretends otherwise) in places where their only social value is on performing the game of sport, can't stand it, and are driven to suicide? C. S. Lewis named one of the chapters in his autobiography Surprised by Joy "Belsen" - the chapter ends on the note that when he told his pa, he would use his revolver to end the misery, pa took him out of there and gave him a private tutor. Like, that day was to him, what 1945 was to some people held in the camp I named.

14:26 C. S. Lewis (Problem of Pain, I think, Mere Christianity, one chapter of Miracles, and Abolition of Man) doesn't argue "we can't know morality for sure unless we see the real purpose" - he argues "all people actually, in any given quarrel, spontaneously treat morality as an objective given, that some people and societies can't just walk out on" (obviously you could be one of the few who never get into quarrels, and you may have never ever taken a quarrel with Joshua or Elisha's bear story) "which suggests it is so - but finite minds evolving from matter could not make that so, therefore, something made all the cosmos so, and attuned, at least on a rough level, our minds to that fact".

This is where one man actually - unlike Turek - will actually take up the ontological question in a way that is not an epistemological one.

Sunday, March 27, 2022

It's Not Over Yet


Stories are evidence of the past, and "mythological" is a label with very little precise meaning. · Continuing with Ernest Crunkleton · It's Not Over Yet

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

Nope, I'm not making any claims as of yet.

You claimed there was more evidence for Genesis than for early Egypt.

This whole thread is related to that.

After this reaches a conclusion, if you wish to ask me about my beliefs, and my reasoning behind them, I'll be more than happy to continue.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ernest Crunkleton "Nope, I'm not making any claims as of yet."

You could have fooled me ...

"You claimed there was more evidence for Genesis than for early Egypt."

No, while I think there is overall, my claim was about both more specific. And it's not about quantity but quality of the evidence. And it's limited to historic evidence, as the archaerological is beside the point. Here is my actual claim : there is better evidence - and it's a historic one - for the genealogies in chapters 5 and 11 than for the succession of pharaohs.

"This whole thread is related to that."

But came into a few side issues.

"After this reaches a conclusion, if you wish to ask me about my beliefs, and my reasoning behind them, I'll be more than happy to continue."

Yeah, how about concluding by your admission that the archaeological evidence in the Karnak King lists is not directly for Sneferu, but for a story about Sneferu? And that proving Old Kingdom Egypt existed doesn't prove every pharaoh in Karnak King lists existed?

Because my initial claim was, the King Lists can't prove a chronology that excludes the Flood from being universal by the supposed conflict between time when the Flood occurred and time when pharaoh's ruled?

Btw, a new issue of our debate is out on the blog that has "assortedretorts" as most directive part of the URL ... the post is called "Continuing with Ernest Crunkleton".

Ferretic
@Hans-Georg Lundahl so, by your logic, since the first audience of the War Of The Worlds broadcast largely accepted it as real, it was real ... Even though there is no actual physical proof that the invasion ever happened.

Ferretic
@Hans-Georg Lundahl so, I am curious: where in the New Testament does Jesus (or anybody speaking with divine authority) name-drop the Catholic Church as God's chosen people? If you're going to claim that they are, please prove it.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ferretic That first audience included people who thought it real, and most of them quickly changed their minds. In other words, Mr. A doesn't qualify as "first audience" only while believing that, but equally as soon as realising it was fiction.

Plus, the qualification I give is not "real" but "historic" - some historic things are, what that evening WotW incidentally became a short while - hoaxes.

Obviously, a first audience would be right about a claim being a historic claim, even if they were wrong in it being a correct one.

Plus, at that point, the status would not even have been "history" but "fresh news" - a category which doesn't allow as much retrospect as history.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ferretic The Catholic Church is not named with that name until a few decades after the last NT books were written, St. Ignatius of Antioch being one of the first to call it so. You might know they were not even known as Christians prior to getting to Antioch.

The NT very clearly "namedrops" things like a Church Jesus founded on a rock mentioned in connexion with renaming Simon "Rock" or at worst "Rocky" and one over which the authority was given to the same "Rocky" - in Greek "Petros" in the simile or very trite metaphor of "keys".

It very clearly "name-drops" Jesus dividing disciples into categories like:

  • general crowd vs 72
  • 72 vs 12
  • 12 vs Peter among the twelve.


To Catholics (and Orthodox, except for last item) this corresponds to:

  • believers vs clergy
  • priests vs bishops
  • Pope over the rest of the bishops.


AND unlike Protestants, we don't invoke a lost continuity restored by 16th C. learning, but a continuity kept and never lost.

Ernest Crunkleton
[I had missed this one]
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

As an aside, and to show how dishonest you are, my parents were Christian.
I grew up in the church.

So go ahead and put that with the rest of the dishonest assumptions you are making.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

How could the evidence we have of continuous rule of Pharonic Egypt not disprove the flood myth?

Ie according to your claim how do you account for the continuity we find in historical and archaeological evidence for the last 6000+ years?

Why didn't the global flood eliminate or replace humans living at that time?

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

"We you could have fooled me..."

I'm sorry that you don't understand how honest conversations between adults should proceed.

1. A claim gets made
2. A second party rebutts that claim.
3. The first party offers its evidence in support of original claim.
4. Continue ect...

What you could state is that I have not offered sufficient evidence in my rebuttle to convince you.

I could, if you like forward/ email scores of historical and archaeological papers, links to digs, webpages of museums displaying physical evidence, however in my opnion you are not open to that.

I will continue to engage, because more engagment helps drive traffic to this page, and that's my only real goal here.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ernest Crunkleton "As an aside, and to show how dishonest you are, my parents were Christian."

Excuse me, are you an adult? I was assuming you lived with your parents.

"I grew up in the church."

OK, that kind of chronology of your life sounds something different from what your presentation on youtube was allowing me to assume. // Just a Midwestern boy enjoying lifes many pleasures. // + portrait of a teen or even preteen.

"So go ahead and put that with the rest of the dishonest assumptions you are making."

Nope, going to change it as soon as you give specifics on which it is ... not with the rest of the ones you call "dishonest assumptions".

"How could the evidence we have of continuous rule of Pharonic Egypt not disprove the flood myth?"

We do not have good historic evidence of Narmer being from 3000 BC.

"Ie according to your claim how do you account for the continuity we find in historical and archaeological evidence for the last 6000+ years?"

For the historic side, Egyptians inflated their chronology. That's why it's important the Karnak King List is not good historic evidence for the generally accepted chronology of Egypt.

For the archaeological side, the Carbon 14 level in the atmosphere was still rising. This means, when Amorrhaeans evacuted "Asason-Tamar" = En Geddi in the time of Genesis 14, i e 1935 BC, the reed mats they use for putting the temple treasures outside the reach of Mesopotamian invaders are now carbon dated to "3500 BC".

"Why didn't the global flood eliminate or replace humans living at that time?"

Carbon dated 4000 BC = actual 2015 BC (birth of Abraham). The Flood happened in 2957 BC, carbon dated to 40 000 BP (as per carbon dated Neanderthals and Denisovans, these being pre-Flood races).

"What you could state is that I have not offered sufficient evidence in my rebuttle to convince you."

Actually not. I am stating your rebuttal involved new claims.

"I could, if you like forward/ email ..."

I am open to a debate per email as well. Kevin R. Henke preferred that over youtube comments.
hgl@dr.com

"I will continue to engage, because more engagment helps drive traffic to this page, and that's my only real goal here."

I'm giving it even more, alas, when I make my own comments directly under the video and assemble these in one post. Because in that case, I give the link to the video I'm commenting under. I'm not into gatekeeping.

Ferretic
@Hans-Georg Lundahl So you admit it's NOT talking about the Catholic Church and that the Catholic Church arranged itself to look like it fit the categorization. Sounds like the Catholic Church took a donkey, put a lion's skin on it, and called it a lion.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ferretic I'm talking of the Catholic Church.

If you pretend it "arranged itself to look like it fit the categorisation" how did it arrange itself to look in perfect continuity over the centuries, including the first ones?

Ferretic
@Hans-Georg Lundahl I am also referring to the Catholic Church. You have agreed with me that there is no reference in the bible to the Catholic Church being God's chosen people (maybe because Catholicism wasn't a thing when the books were written ...).

And I was referring to how the Catholic Church interprets the categorization of disciples, which you implied the Catholic Church mirrored in it's structure.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ferretic "I am also referring to the Catholic Church."

With gross misrepresentations, yes.

"You have agreed with me that there is no reference in the bible to the Catholic Church being God's chosen people"

No, I haven't. I have agreed with you it was not called "the Catholic Church" in the Bible. It was however called "the Church". Precisely as the Christian believers didn't become known as "Christians" in the time of the Gospels, but only in Antioch, in the time of Acts, so also "the Church" became known as "the Catholic Church" right after NT times, also first reference in Antioch.

"(maybe because Catholicism wasn't a thing when the books were written ...)."

It was.

"And I was referring to how the Catholic Church interprets the categorization of disciples, which you implied the Catholic Church mirrored in it's structure."

I have never said, never admitted and never implied that the Catholic Church started with some committee deciding to "mirror" the categorisation of disciples found in the Gospels. I am saying and insisting, it continues - without one day's break - this same categorisation. One more category came along after the Gospels, see Acts 6, we continue having deacons too, up to this very day.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

"Allowing me to assume."

This is the problem with your entire line of argument.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

I will provide my list of sources for Egyptian archaeological data. However, it's conditional.

You need to either provide solid archaeological evidence for the existence of about 200 of the individuals mentioned in Genesis lineages. (To match the number of physical tombs we have found for Individual Pharoahs, thus providing physical evidence for their existence. )

Or admit that you misspoke about the amount of comparative evidence we have between those cultures.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ernest Crunkleton "This is the problem with your entire line of argument."

Because you posed a trap and I fell into it?

"(To match the number of physical tombs we have found for Individual Pharoahs, thus providing physical evidence for their existence. )"

I highly doubt you can provide 200 individual pharaonic tombs. But even if you can, it would still not prove the chronology that is supposed to contradict our Flood date.

In the genealogies of Genesis 5 and 11, there are in total sth like 22 persons. As my claim was not about "amount" of evidence, but "quality" (like non-contradiction between different versions) your type of condition actually makes me wonder whether you aren't precisely what your profile on youtube claims. And also, it's not about "between those cultures" it is between two text types - a) genealogies of Genesis 5 and 11, b) King Lists.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

The continuity of occupation of Egypt throughout the supposed time of the flood (along with all the other evidence that a global flood never took place) has already disproved the flood my person.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl
' I highly doubt... 200 pharonic tombs"

Over 200.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

It's already been established that Genesis was not written until 500-600 BCE.
There are only 2 sources. J and A.

And they do in fact contradict in many aspects.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ernest Crunkleton "The continuity of occupation of Egypt throughout the supposed time of the flood"

Cannot be established by king lists, and the carbon dates are no different from other carbon dates I can tweak.

"Over 200." [pharaonic tombs]

Funny the Karnak List has only 61 places. And Abydos 76. Turin list might get close to that number, but is very badly damaged, cfr this "Bebnum is only attested by an isolated fragment of the Turin canon, a king list redacted in the Ramesside period and which serves as the primary historical source for kings of the second intermediate period. The fact that the fragment on which Bebnum figures is not attached to the rest of the document made its chronological position difficult to ascertain."

"It's already been established that Genesis was not written until 500-600 BCE."

The words "it has been established" is gobbledigook for "learned men agree on this guess". This date is well after the division between Jewish and Samarian religions.

"There are only 2 sources. J and A."

The supposed two sources are also modern guesswork.

"And they do in fact contradict in many aspects."

But only according to the modern guesswork.

The three versions of each relevant chapter (together from creation to times of presumably early dynastic Egypt) do contradict, but far less than the Egyptian sources for king series.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

"Only modern guesswork"

Thats disingenuous at best.

First of all the number of sources is not "guesswork"

They are the only two that have been found.

How are you determining the validity of your claims if you think all the evidence for Genesis is just "guesswork"

You're literally owning yourself dude.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

The unbroken line of occupation and governace by the same polical system over that time period certainly does establish a continuity of occupation that puts any proposed flood in dispute.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

When have you tweaked carbon dates?

Where have you ever analyzed evidence in a lab?

Your just exposing how big a lie you are willing to tell.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ernest Crunkleton "Thats disingenuous at best. / First of all the number of sources is not "guesswork" / They are the only two that have been found."

They haven't been found, they have been reconstructed.

"How are you determining the validity of your claims if you think all the evidence for Genesis is just "guesswork" / You're literally owning yourself dude."

A modern reconstruction is not "all" the evidence for Genesis, it is not even any of it.

"The unbroken line of occupation and governace by the same polical system over that time period certainly does establish a continuity of occupation that puts any proposed flood in dispute."

Except that you cannot establish the "over that time period" part. We have already dealt with King lists, so now comes the next item:

"When have you tweaked carbon dates?"

Since I came across the problem.

"Where have you ever analyzed evidence in a lab?"

Irrelevant, since I take full account of what goes on when analysing evidence in a lab. You find out the remainder of C14 ratio, you assume 100 pmC is what it started out as and calculate "carbon years" from that, and since you know 100 pmC is not always what it started out as, you present the discrepancy as % adjustments of the carbon years for any given period, or tables with carbon years in the column and real years in the rows or whatever.

"Your just exposing how big a lie you are willing to tell."

Why would it be a "big lie" to conclude (based on Biblical or other historic evidence) that the original content was at times so much lower than 100 pmC that it pays to make a table for the pmC rise?

I did the first of those tables in 2015, the first one I found moderately satisfying being called "Avec un peu d'aide de Fibonacci ... j'ai une table, presque correcte" on a blog with the distinctive url part "nov9blogg9" and my latest update is, if you want the English version, on my blog "creavsevolu" and the post title is "New Tables" - from August 2020. For the "presque correcte" I was over optimistic, but soon got better. Same carbon years typically now come about 300 years later in the Biblical chronology than back that first try.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

"Irrelevant, since I take full account of what goes on when analysing evidence in a lab."

That's not how it works.

you don't get to say "they're not doing it right these are the real numbers" without actually running the tests and showing the data you are using to come to your conclusions.

How would you even know the numbers are wrong if you cant perform the tests to establish that in the first place?

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ernest Crunkleton "How would you even know the numbers are wrong if you cant perform the tests to establish that in the first place?"

The one numbers that actually are tested are the ones I'm not contesting.

It's the original 100 pmC (or thereabout) which, for the time between Flood and Fall of Troy I am disputing.

And for a very obvious reason, the original pmC can't be lab tested. The sample doesn't arrive to the lab with original pmC, but after decay.

When a lab says "we find 25 pmC remaining" I believe that (except with the Shroud, which was dated too late to pretend it was a fraud, the computers were hacked, I've read). But like 25 % (two halflives) of 100 pmC = 25 pmC, so also 50 % of 50 pmC will equal = 25 pmC.

But I very strictly believe the lab on the 25 pmC! And that's what they actually are directly testing.

Ernest Crunkleton
@Hans-Georg Lundahl

"It's the original 100 pmC (or thereabout) which, for the time between Flood and Fall of Troy I am disputing."

This claim doesn't even make sense,

First no global flood has been established, much less a date to be compared to anything.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Ernest Crunkleton Flood, 2957 BC. Fall of Troy, 1179 or 1185 BC.

Flood by Biblical chronology, Fall of Troy by Eratosthenes' Greek chronology (reaching up close to his times).

At the Fall of Troy, if it is Troy VIa or whatever, perhaps Troy VII, the carbon date matches the historic date, i e 100 pmC.

At the Flood, the carbon date would have been 40 000 BP, since that's the date for the latest carbon dated Neanderthal and Denisovan skeleta, purebred, and I count these as pre-Flood races, this gives an extra 35 000 years immediate age or 1.4 pmC back then.

The real age is 1/8 of the carbon age, and the original pmC 1/64 of the present one, so the errors match up.

The interesting thing is, I have been able to make a consistently rising table of carbon 14 levels, of pmCs, and thus I make sense of both Göbekli Tepe (as Babel) and Exodus (just before second intermediate period).

More Questions on Genesis, Early Chapters, on Quora


Collected on March 24, 2022.

Q I
Where in the Bible does it talk about the Tower of Babel?
https://www.quora.com/Where-in-the-Bible-does-it-talk-about-the-Tower-of-Babel/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
Tania Klavdienko

Hans-Georg Lundahl
none/ apprx Masters Latin & Greek, Lund University
Answered just now
It does so in Genesis, chapter elevent, first nine verses.

Some indications there give another coordinate adress than Classical Babylon, notably “and they removed from the east” (the correct translations have “from” here). Göbekli Tepe is West of Mountains of Armenia and Babylon is South, even some smallish bent Eastward, from most candidates for the landing place.

Nagorno Karabakh would be an exception.

Q II
Is it possible that the Tower of Babel could have existed in ancient Babylonian history but under a different name and history?
https://www.quora.com/Is-it-possible-that-the-Tower-of-Babel-could-have-existed-in-ancient-Babylonian-history-but-under-a-different-name-and-history/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
Stef Lynn

Hans-Georg Lundahl
none/ apprx Masters Latin & Greek, Lund University
Answered Mar 16
It doesn’t as far as I know.

If you thought of “the Lord of Aratta” - it includes a complaint of lost linguistic or liturgic or both unity, but only to ask a healing thereof, not including any account of how the division came to be.

It would be very probable that the episode was painful to people who held Nimrod in higher regard, and that therefore they tried to actively forget it.

Q III
Did Noah possibly build the ark in the land which would eventually become Babylon post flood?
https://www.quora.com/Did-Noah-possibly-build-the-ark-in-the-land-which-would-eventually-become-Babylon-post-flood/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
Stef Lynn

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Catholic convert, reading many Catechisms
Answered Mar 16
Let’s get two things straight:

  • early post-Flood Babel is not Classic Babylon, though probably named in reference to it, the Babel of Genesis 11 first verses is arguably at Göbekli Tepe;
  • both Göbekli Tepe and Classic Babylon are in the land between the two rivers (Euphrates and Tigris, riverbeds probably parts of pre-Flood riverbeds but other language Frat and Hiddekel) and so in a valley.


By contrast, Noah would have known what the waterline of the Ark was, namely 14 or 15 cubits high, of the 30 cubits, and would know the water was 15 cubits above the ground when the Ark started moving around in the water, which means that the Ark was arguably built on top of one of the pre-Flood highest mountains.

My favourite idea on which one that could be, for theological fitness, the one where in post-Flood times Golgotha and Mount of Olives is situated. In other words, pre-Flood mountains were very far from the Himalayas in height.

Q IV
How come Noah and his son lived longer than many of their descendants? Is it because they lived in the pre-flood world?
https://www.quora.com/How-come-Noah-and-his-son-lived-longer-than-many-of-their-descendants-Is-it-because-they-lived-in-the-pre-flood-world/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
Stef Lynn

Hans-Georg Lundahl
none/ apprx Masters Latin & Greek, Lund University
Answered Mar 15
Noah lived to 950, Shem to 600. Not only did they live longer than their descendants, Noah lived longer than Shem, and of the descendants, Arphaxad, Sale, Heber live longer than Phalec, Reu and down on the line.

It is “because they lived in the pre-Flood world” (up to the Flood) but also because they were not born in the early post-Flood world, since at that time, the cosmic radiation would have been such as to produce carbon 14 ten times as quickly as now.

This incidentally led to a rise of C14 in the atmosphere, but was arguably done to get the lifespans get shorter, gradually, like God had said He would, looking at Raphael Blumberg’s answer, in Genesis 6 verses 3 to 5.

Q V
Were most of the Nephilim the first kings before the great flood of Noah covered the Earth?
https://www.quora.com/Were-most-of-the-Nephilim-the-first-kings-before-the-great-flood-of-Noah-covered-the-Earth/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Hans-Georg Lundahl
none/ apprx Masters Latin & Greek, Lund University
Answered Mar 6
More like Cainites were the first kings before some became nephelim.

Q VI
Is it possible that the mountains didn’t exist before Noah’s flood?
https://www.quora.com/Is-it-possible-that-the-mountains-didn-t-exist-before-Noah-s-flood/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
Stef Lynn

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Catholic convert, reading many Catechisms
Answered Jan 19
It is very possible and even very probable that mountains as high as we see them today didn’t exist before Noah’s Flood.

How did Noah know when the very high mountains (pre-Flood meaning of mountains!) were covered with 15 cubits of water? Probably bc 15 cubits high, or 14 or 14 and a half was the water line of the Ark, and when the Ark ceased to rest where it had been built and began floating in the water.

But this means it had been resting on and arguably had been built on one of the very high mountains, arguably the highest. And this means, the highest mountains in the pre-Flood world had tops more like Moriah than like Mount Everest.

Q VII
What was life like before Noah? Considering Canaan is histroically Noahs grandson
https://www.quora.com/What-was-life-like-before-Noah-Considering-Canaan-is-histroically-Noahs-grandson/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
Answers201

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Catholic convert, reading many Catechisms
Answered 47m ago
Your question has two parts.

"What was life like before Noah?"

I would especially like to stress “before”.

Noah was born Anno Mundi 1658. I don't know we have remains of human skeleta, teeth or settlements reaching that far back.

From the time of the Flood, we seem to lack city dwellers, but we have some Neanderthals and Denisovans who seem to have lived in that time about like Indians lived before the West was Conquered.

Probably these helped Noah's family (which had on the Ark some mixed race with these peoples) to go from metal to stone during Noah's remaining life after the Flood, which is the non-Neanderthal part of Upper Palaeolithic. When Noah dies, we find Babel starts getting built, and it is left unfinished in 401 after the Flood, if I am right, we have found it, and it's now named Göbekli Tepe.

"Considering Canaan is historically Noahs grandson"

Yes, but what is that relevant for? Canaan himself was not worshipping Dagon or Baal, as his descendants were going to do a bit after the time of Abraham, when Canaan was already dead. Possibly, Jericho could have been Canaan's city in what is carbon dated to just after Natufian, starting (carbon dated) 9500 BC, exactly as Göbekli Tepe or Babel was Nimrod's project at that time.

Life conditions changed faster than some would have us believe, when one systematic error they make is taking the carbon years as straight off absolute chronology instead of reckoning with a rise of C14 in the atmosphere.

Nev Anderson
24.III.2022
All of the founding characters in the bible are completely fictional. Created as the background of a fabricated Origin Story, for the Israelites, who wished to obscure the Fact that they were Canaanites. They fled into the sisJordan region to escape persistent Persian coastal raids.

Their culture, language, gods were all Canaanite.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
25.III.2022
Annunciation
Where is your ancient documentation for this background story to the Bible?

I’d not be surprised if you had none, and this is a reconstruction.

Nev Anderson
26.III.2022
It is spread across countless archaeological discoveries, research by historians, linguists, and lettered experts in relevant fields.

Where is YOUR evidence that anything you assert actually happened?

Hans-Georg Lundahl
26.III.2022
“spread across” is not a specific reference
“countless” is not a specific list, does not mention even one
“archaeological discoveries” can be misdated
“research” can be flawed whether by “historians, linguists,” or “lettered experts in relevant fields.”

Why don’t you pick one of them, and we’ll see how it fares?

My evidence is, as shareable with a non-believer is,

  • a) a story exists for which the FIRST known audience believed it to be historic.
  • b) And other stories of other cultures with similar non-fiction status affirm the same event in other details.
  • c) And comparing them all, the Genesis account reads like a wiki for the others, has a more precise bearing in genealogies to later known events chronologically, and a description of an Ark of a more viable type of which the dimensions just so happen to match the cargo in animal kinds and their food, if the kinds correspond to in medium 17 species (which is for instance the case of the hedgehog kind).


Nev Anderson
Laetare Sunday
27.III.2022
The assertion that a book of bronze age superstition, lies and fallacies is correct and the entirety of scientists are Wrong is made laughable when one looks at the content of this book.

Such gems as this:

the Earth is flat,
motionless,
set on pillars,
orbited by the sun,
under a star speckled dome,
that keeps out the waters of space,
whilst letting some in through windows,
as rain

Bronze age ignorance encapsulated in a belief in an imaginary bronze age phantasm.

Byeeee.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Laetare Sunday
27.III.2022
Again, more than one "frog blurting out your mouth" ...

"The assertion that a book of bronze age"

So, what is wrong with the Bronze Age, again?

"superstition,"

The Bible doesn't endorse mediums, quite the contrary!

"lies and fallacies"

Detect one liar who is likely to have made even one lie that was believed by the readership or oral audience of Bible texts ..... or a fallacy in promotion of a doctrine.

"is correct and the entirety of scientists are Wrong"

And again, the "entirety of scientists" is not the actual adversity against the Bible. Even if they were, the argument would be a fallacy on your part.

Now for your list of "gems" ...

"the Earth is flat,"

Not there. A globe has as much a circular circumference as a disc. Continents have four corners even if they are posed on a globe.

"motionless,"

OK ... tell me more on who disproved that?

"set on pillars,"

The bases of continental plates would seem to confirm that.

"orbited by the sun,"

Again, who disproved that? Not meaning as in orbital mechanics, but as in actually making a daily circle (presumably performed by an angelic mover).

"under a star speckled dome,"

Reference?

"that keeps out the waters of space,"

More like keeps them up - and they are very high up, starlight is filtered through molecules giving spectral lines for H2 and for H2O.

"whilst letting some in through windows, as rain"

Doesn't actually say that either.

"Byeeee."

I'm fairly free to allow you to go, just so you know it, you are on record, and so is this debate: More Questions on Genesis, Early Chapters, on Quora (go to Q VII)

As a bonus: Bronze Age, the New Slur

I note you gave no answer on my points on historic evidentiality.

Nev Anderson
Laetare Sunday
27.III.2022
You make up a lot of nonsense that was never mentioned
and assert the same tired excuses as every other christian.

Seriously this behaviour damages the religion more than anything. Adherents are leaving in record numbers to distance themselves from the lies, discrimination and bigotry.

So, please keep up the good work.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
28.III.2022
Some people are kind of welcome to leave.

Nev Anderson
29.III.2022
They welcome the opportunity to leave
religion

'Christianity as default is gone': the rise of a non-Christian Europe

3500 People Leave the Church Every Day

Christian Post: 3500 People Leave the Church Every Day

In U.S., Decline of Christianity Continues at Rapid Pace

Pew Forum: In U.S., Decline of Christianity Continues at Rapid Pace

Religion Declining, Secularism Surging

U.S. Church Membership Falls Below Majority for First Time

Landmark Study Shows Remarkable Growth of Non-Religious Americans

Religion Declining, Secularism Surging

Youth

Young adults around the world are less religious

Hans-Georg Lundahl
30.III.2022
Unfortunately people like Gretta Vosper or the late John Shelby Spong, and the equally late Antony Palmer or Tony Palmer and that person’s not so late friend Jorge Mario Bergoglio are not openly leaving.

It’s especially drastic with Bergoglio, since he’s kind of traumatising the Catholic Church with his modernist heresies. Some call him “Pope Francis”.

If you ask me, more than people of my persuasion, it is:

  • people like Spong or Bergoglio
  • and an Evolution biassed dominance in class rooms
  • plus a situation where getting married (and applying “no sex before marriage” in a comfortable way) is more and more difficult for the young.


Nev Anderson
31.III.2022
Having noted your position, there is no purpose in asking you, the answer is predictable and unrelated to reality.

Your response is a case in point, it says nothing.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
31.III.2022
You have not been around people like Spong much, I gather … I’m an ex from the Swedish State Church, has its share of them or a bit more.

CSL predicted such people would elicit two responses : if you agree with them, you become atheist, openly, and if you disagree with them, you become a Catholic, as Catholic clergy back then was relatively free from them. I became a Catholic and that remark by CSL had some part in my decision.

Nev Anderson
1.IV.2022
More irrelevant nonsense to misdirect discussion.

I am done here.

Q VIII
Is it possible that Noah’s ark would have become part of Mount Ararat for the last five thousand years or so?
https://www.quora.com/Is-it-possible-that-Noah-s-ark-would-have-become-part-of-Mount-Ararat-for-the-last-five-thousand-years-or-so/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
Stef Lynn

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Catholic convert, reading many Catechisms
Answered 17m ago
It’s possible for the correct landing place in the Mountains of Ararat, also known as the Mountains of Armenia.

I don’t think the presently so called either Greater or Lesser Ararat are the best candidates, like Durupinar and Mount Judi both seem better alternatives, and I especially favour Mount Judi, since it involves 300 km nearly straight Westward removal to Babel, if Göbekli Tepe is it.

Q IX
What's the significance in the book of Genesis of some people living for hundreds of years?
https://www.quora.com/Whats-the-significance-in-the-book-of-Genesis-of-some-people-living-for-hundreds-of-years/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
John Mulligan

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Catholic convert, reading many Catechisms
Answered 43m ago
The fact that they did so.

The lifetimes are not allegoric. In the Genesis 5 genealogy, only two lifespans could be considered as having a kind of symbolic meaning, and the other eight are actually mostly even longer, and one cannot consider these as obviously symbolic as some would like to do with 365 years for Henoch or 777 for Lamech.

So, given there is not even any clue to an allegoric interpretation to ages like …

nine hundred and thirty
nine hundred and twelve
nine hundred and five
nine hundred and ten
eight hundred and ninety-five
nine hundred and sixty-two
nine hundred and sixty-nine
or later on nine hundred and fifty for Noah

… how about accepting it is only interesting to anyone as literal fact?

Q X
How do fossils fit with the Bible? Did most ancient fossils come from the worldwide flood?
https://www.quora.com/How-do-fossils-fit-with-the-Bible-Did-most-ancient-fossils-come-from-the-worldwide-flood/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
Marc Bloemers

Hans-Georg Lundahl
none/ apprx Masters Latin & Greek, Lund University
Answered Sun (20.III)
I have two theories that concern fossils which, when carbon dated by creationists, show dates like 32 000 or 22 000 BP. You see, I believe Denisovans and Neanderthals are key to the real carbon date of the Flood. 40 000 BP.

One of the theories is, some animals were trapped in land slides up to 100 years after the Flood, when what’s now mountains was still partly mud, so they were mud slides. Another is, part of the carbon 14 exceeding the (to me) expected 0.7 pmC would come from contamination.

Given that the Morrisson formation contains Uranium, the latter idea has gained in credibility with me.

So, most fossils, even those dating younger than 40 000 when creation scientists carbon date them, arguably did live when the World Wide Flood struck.

Q XI
Do Africans take their origin from Noah also?
https://www.quora.com/Do-Africans-take-their-origin-from-Noah-also/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
Sule Philips Onyilo

Hans-Georg Lundahl
amateur linguist
Answered just now
Yes, through his son Ham and arguably through Ham’s son Kush.

I presumed you meant Black Africans, for North Africans, Egypt hails both from Ham’s son Mitsraim and from Arabic origins, while Maghreb comes from another grandson of Noah plus Arabic and Egyptian origins.

Added
26.III.2022 the debate under some of above continues, and below I have some new questions:

Q XII
Was the Tower of Babel humanity’s attempt to force its way back into the divine council?
https://www.quora.com/Was-the-Tower-of-Babel-humanity-s-attempt-to-force-its-way-back-into-the-divine-council/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Answer requested by
Marc Bloemers

Hans-Georg Lundahl
none/ apprx Masters Latin & Greek, Lund University
Answered just now
No, it was not.

  • 1. Humanity has never been “in the divine council”;
  • 2. Humanity wasn’t all united doing it, the perpetrators are an unspecified “they” (11:2) which need not refer back to These are the families of Noe, according to their peoples and nations. By these were the nations divided on the earth after the flood. (10:32); the perpetrators of this bad project were an élite, people leaving their homes to go to work in Babel;
  • 3. According to Josephus, the ones who took the initiative were worried about next Flood and since God in Heaven had not perished in the Flood concluded Heaven was safe from Floods. If I am correct about the dates, this worry would have occurred in the Younger Dryas, when Doggarlands and some other now offshore regions went down in the waves. So, the tower was kind of “Ark II” but with no initiative from God and with distrust in what God had promised.


Q XIII
Where is the location of the Tower of Babel?
https://www.quora.com/Where-is-the-location-of-the-Tower-of-Babel


A I
by myself:

Hans-Georg Lundahl
none/ apprx Masters Latin & Greek, Lund University
Answered Aug 2, 2021
Originally Answered:
What are the present-day towers of the Babel location?
I’d say for the present day functional versions of it, Cape Canaveral and Bajkonur to name two.

For the present day location of the project as per back in Genesis 11 - Göbekli Tepe.

A II
by Jay Altieri, applause please! He will introduce next question too, with his answer.

Jay Altieri
Commercial General Contractor and Bible Student
Answered Nov 12, 2019
I’m coming from a conservative bible believing point of view. I think the Tower of Babel was an historic event in deep history. The traditional answer has always been that the tower of babel was in Babylon.

In Hebrew babel is BBL (Hebrew has no vowels- it is consonants only). Babylon also is spelled BBL. Same spelling. But does this indicate that it is the same place, or could it be a homograph? A Homograph is 2 different words with same spelling but different meanings. Like seal and seal. An aquatic animal and a rubber stamp impression. Just because they are spelled alike doesn’t prove that they are the same thing.

There are several big problems with Babylon as the location…

1) Pesky archaeology and historic records indicate that the city of Babylon wasn't founded until much later. Maybe around 2500bc. Babylon is either unsettled or so unimportant that it is not mentioned in any Sumerian records. It shows up as a smallish city in the Akkadian or maybe Gutian period. It becomes important with Hammurabi, maybe about 2000bc. This is entirely too late for an historic tower of Babel. We need something Neolithic or Chalcolithic.

2) The ziggurat at Babylon, frequently cited as having been built on the foundations of the tower, has already been thoroughly remotely graphed. Basically with airplanes and satellites they can take subsurface IR images which gives an indication of what is down there. Babylon ziggurat is clay brick filled. The bible says that the Tower was kilned brick (burnt in a fire, not just sunbaked). This shows up differently and much more distinctly on imaging. The professionals don’t think it is there.

3) According to the Bible, after the flood all mankind was of one big family of cousins. It says in Gen 11:1 they journeyed East (presumably from the ark). It is unclear if they went to the East (Iran-ward), or from the East (Syria-ward), but either way Babylon is way down South in Iraq.

4) There is an escarpment just north of Baghdad (which is itself just North of Babylon site). Geologists says this was the ancient ocean shoreline at some point. In Babylon's founding history, the shoreline had already receded, but it is possible that in the remote pre-history of tower of babel that most of southern Mesopotamia was still under water.

5) Gen 11:3 says that they used asphalt for mortar. Oil is plentiful in the Middle East, but there are specific areas that it tends to be located. Suburban Baghdad is not one of them. Oil fields in Iraq are mostly in the N (Erbil) and in the S (Basrah), not so much in the middle (Baghdad/Babylon). For Babel to be located at Babylon, they would need to import the asphalt from far away.

As an alternate location for the tower of babel, some scholars (and I think I agree) have suggested the Khabur river triangle of North Eastern Syria. This is next to the Turkish border. There are a few reasons to prefer this location…

1) it is from the East if Noah's ark landed at Mt Cudi, per ancient tradition (Mt Cudi is a lesser mountain in E Turkey, long associated with Noah).

2) The area of N Syria and SE Turkey are ripe full of Chalcolithic and Neolithic sites. This is the period that interests us for locating Babel. Southern Mesopotamia's bronze age is too late.

3) Curiously, Göbekli Tepe a famous pre-pottery Neolithic site in Turkey is rather close to this region. Less than 200miles. There is nothing Neolithic, this early in Southern Iraq.

4) Sargon of Akkad, a famous ancient king who overthrew the Sumerians came from the North. Akkad has still never been located, but this is generally the right area. Sargon is later about 2500bc in the early bronze age. But his home town Akkad is significant because Akkad is mentioned along with Babel as a city ruled by Nimrod in Gen 10:10.

5) Oil fields in Syria are located in the East, as I'm suggesting for Babel's site. Before drilling, it would ooze up like the La Brea tar pits. It would be easily and readily available.

We don’t know where Babel was located, but somewhere in NE Syria, along the Khabur tributary of the Euphrates seems to fit the model best.

Tell Brak has a lot of potential. Also within the general region Tell Aqab, Tell Baydar, Tell Fakhariya and several others warrant further archaeological exploration, with an eye towards Neolithic/Chalcolithic Babel. Unfortunately, this was the ISIL stronghold until just recently, when now in late 2019 it is a Kurdish/Turkish invasion site. Syria is still in civil war after 10years of violence. It seems unlikely that scholarly and archaeological work can be performed any time soon.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
26.III.2022
Intro : "But does this indicate that it is the same place, or could it be a homograph?"

Or could it be a Boston / Boston case? The city at 32°32′N 44°25′E could be named for an older, less known, Babel. My take is 37°13′23″N 38°55′21″E

Your reasons against Classic Babylon:

1) "Babylon wasn't founded until much later. Maybe around 2500bc."

Actually, in the Biblical chronology, Babel would have been between 350 and 401 after the Flood, between death of Noah and birth of Peleg. This means, between 2607 and 2556 BC.

Archaeological date for Babylon as in Hammurabi's and Nebuchadnezzar's city must correspond to a later thing, and 2286 BC (as per Ctesias) would be correct for Ninive, not Babylon.

2) "The bible says that the Tower was kilned brick (burnt in a fire, not just sunbaked)."

I am not sure verse 3 refers to exactly the same material as kilned brick, and it does not say this was applied to the actual tower.

3) "It is unclear if they went to the East (Iran-ward), or from the East (Syria-ward),"

Miqqedem means "from the East" and all old translations translate it so.

Babylon would be mainly to the South and on top of that slightly to the East.

4) "it is possible that in the remote pre-history of tower of babel that most of southern Mesopotamia was still under water."

I'd need to check ...

Your reasons to the alternative:

1) "it is from the East if Noah's ark landed at Mt Cudi"

Çudi or Judi, but I agree.

2 - 3) "Neolithic" & "Göbekli Tepe"

I think Göbekli Tepe was the city of Babel, and the "tower" may have been a rocket project (put on hold for 4500 years) rather than a building.

5) "Oil fields in Syria are located in the East,"

I have not taken this into account.

Q XIV
Was the historical Abraham a citizen of the Akkadian Empire?
https://www.quora.com/Was-the-historical-Abraham-a-citizen-of-the-Akkadian-Empire


Jay Altieri
Commercial General Contractor and Bible Student
Answered Aug 9, 2021
Abram, later known as Abraham, was born and grew up in Ur. He likely was a young adult in Ur and had been socialized to culture and society within the Mesopotamian world.

However, the Akkadian empire is a little early. Most scholars date the fall of Akkad to circa 2200bc-ish. Whereas, the Bible seems to date Abram's life to 1950bc-ish. These are of course a little bit tentative dates, nobody can be too certain on the precise time. But it is pretty well accepted that Abraham was during the 3rd Dynasty of Ur. (Except for the scoffing secularists, who claim the whole thing is fairy tale.)

Also, you ask if he had been a citizen of that country. Citizenship, at least within a legal definition, is an anachronism within the Mesopotamian world. Citizenship entails a legal status as a member of a particular country with associated rights and protection from that sovereign. Citizenship was invented by the Greeks centuries later. In the 3rd Dynasty of Ur and all of the other ancient Mesopotamian societies, there existed nobility and peasants. Ethnically "us" and foreigner "them." True citizenship had not yet developed.

But the gist of your thought I agree is basically correct. I think Abram/Abraham was an historic person and Genesis relates accurate history.

He had been a denizen of Ur in the Third Dynasty. He left his home and traveled far to Canaan, where he heard God's calling and obeyed.

אביעד גיל
August 12, 2021
Thank you for your answer. The dates given for the birth of Abraham coincide with the fall of the Akkadian empire (due to gutian invasion as well as the 4.2kiloyear event) and rise of the gutian dynasty that originally came from the zagros mountains and were of a different genetic stock to the akkadians. My question is, was the real reason why nimrod demanded the killing of all newborns was due to the fact that he wanted to wipe out the remains of indigenous people of Mesopotamia and alter the demography for his own peoples’(gutian) advantage?

*I’m just a history enthusiast nothing more and bare with me if I’m getting things wrong here

Hans-Georg Lundahl
26.III.2022
“However, the Akkadian empire is a little early. Most scholars date the fall of Akkad to circa 2200bc-ish.”

Carbon dates or written records of things past?

“Whereas, the Bible seems to date Abram's life to 1950bc-ish.”

In the Roman martyrology for Christmas day, he was born 2015 years BC. This puts Genesis 14 in 1935 (1940 - 1929) BC. The reed mats from En-Geddi are carbon dated to 3500 BC, which matches the event as being before written records, since before fully literate Sumer.

“These are of course a little bit tentative dates, nobody can be too certain on the precise time. But it is pretty well accepted that Abraham was during the 3rd Dynasty of Ur. (Except for the scoffing secularists, who claim the whole thing is fairy tale.)”

Before I accepted that, I’d like to know the III dynasty hasn’t that timespan of c. 2112 BC – c. 2004 BC (wiki) from carbon dates. These dates in carbon chronology would be from when C14 was still rising, from the stay of Israel in Egypt.

Q XIV, again
I had missed I had made an own answer, not yet on this blog.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
none/ apprx Masters Latin & Greek, Lund University
Answered Aug 10, 2021
I don’t think so.

Abraham had left Ur Kasdim (either Sumerian Ur or Assyrian Urfa, now in Turkey) and then he had fought for Sodom against Mesopotamian rulers when between 75 and 86, see Genesis 14.

But Genesis 14 includes a detail that ties this to Chalcolithic of Engeddi, and the reed mats with evacuated temple treasures are carbon dated to “3500 BC”.

This was, as far as I can see, before the Akkadian Empire, supposing it has been correctly identified with belonging archaeological material.

Jay Altieri:

// Most scholars date the fall of Akkad to circa 2200bc-ish. //

If “2200 BC” has anything to do with a carbon date, it is after Abraham’s times and belongs to the time when Israel was in Egypt.
Added
last of March

Q XV
How old was Noah in the Ark?
https://www.quora.com/How-old-was-Noah-in-the-Ark


William Uchtman
Writer and Author (1986-present)
Answered Wed 30.III.2022
It depends on the version you read.

The Bible claims 900, but those numbers came from an antiquated numbering system the Hebrews in the First Century didn’t understand. In recent years, a scholar named Robert Best researching the old Septuginet-Masoretic numbering system of the Sumerian Empire deduced that any historical Noah existed would have been 48 during the 2900 BC food incident.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
31.III.2022
It seems you are somewhat off.

  • 1. Noah was 600 in the Ark, but lived to 950 by living 350 years afterwards.
  • 2. There is no such thing as “the old Septuaginet-Masoretic numbering system”. There is a Septuagint text and a Masoretic text, and they differ on details between chapters 5 and 11 in Genesis.
  • 3. As they don’t have a specific numbering system, it is not of the Sumerians, let alone of any Sumerian Empire (there was no such thing).


Given this, I am not very sure of the scholar Robert Best either.

The idea that the years were months has been suggested (early on!) and is solidly refuted for the Masoretic text at least, but arguably for the septuagint text too.

William Uchtman
1.IV.2022
He was 600 in the Bible because the Hebrews writing the story down mistranslated the older numbering system. The correctly deciphered version places Noah around 48. Find the book; it’s an incredible analysis of the myth.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
1.IV.2022
There is more probably a mistranslation of the numbering system when pre-Flood patriarch life spans, excluding Adam and Noah, rounded to nearest five years, are multiplied by sixty to give the regnal years of Sumerian King List.

The antediluvian patriarchs and the Sumerian King List

Has it occurred to you, that certain genetic changes could doom populations to dying at 30? One that comes to mind would be untreated diabetes type I.

So, compared to the present normal lifespan, lifespans could theoretically get shortened.

How do you prove the present normal lifespan is not shortened in relation to a previously normal one?

If you look at ages in Genesis 11, the lifespans are already decreasing. Creationists have argued - in a statistically realistic way.

Decreased lifespans: Have we been looking in the right place?

Temporal changes in the ageing of biblical patriarchs