Monday, June 1, 2026

NinjaMonkeyPrime Goes Off a Tangent


The video we comment on is about a very specific topic, he is now totally outside it:

sample A

NinjaMonkeyPrime
@NinjaMonkeyPrime
@hglundahl When observations of reality conflict with the mythology of scripture, an honest person would realize that the mythology wasn't intended to be taken literally. I'm not sure why that is hard to understand. Is Earth flat? Nope. Is it under a dome? Nope. Can snakes physically talk? Nope. Is there any evidence of a global flood? Nope. That's just a few examples where reality doesn't fit with a literal translation. That's why people who claim Earth is flat, or young, or the flood really happened are denying reality in favor of mythology that wasn't meant to be taken literally. That's dogma but worse because it borders on delusion. And let's not forget how it is extremely unchristian to imply that thousands of experts in various fields over centuries are incompetent or lying about science and human history.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@NinjaMonkeyPrime "an honest person would realize that the mythology wasn't intended to be taken literally."

That's not an honest person, but a dishonest person, failing to understand (in the pretended scenario, which has occurred about non-Christian religions) that the mythology was wrong.

"Is Earth flat?"

Doesn't say so.

"Is it under a dome?"

If you mean the Firmament, there are other literal interpretations than a solid dome.

"Can snakes physically talk?"

No beasts can, unless angelic beings are involved.

"Is there any evidence of a global flood?"

Plenty. Campi Flegrei eruptions, for one, that's where I get my carbon date for the Flood. Lava cooled with excess argon dating to millions of years in K-Ar, for another.

The Atlantic Ocean and the land masses pushed up around Baffin Bay look like the original rectangle of four corners was damaged Northward by some very strong force.

"That's just a few examples where reality doesn't fit with a literal translation."

Nothing, including four corners (Alaska, Cape Horn, Siberia, Tasmania) that indicates Flat Earth in a literal interpretation.

"That's dogma but worse because it borders on delusion."

Delusion is when you take yourself for sth you are not. Or someone else you are supposed to know well. When Francis Joseph visited a mental hospital, he saluted one man, presenting himself as "ich bin der Kaiser" and got the response "oh, I thought so too when I arrived" ...

What you are doing is Marxist reinterpretation of Delusion, adapted to persecuting religion.

"And let's not forget how it is extremely unchristian to imply that thousands of experts in various fields over centuries are incompetent or lying about science and human history."

Being wrong doesn't even mean being overall incompetent. Several paradigms have succeeded each other and each would say of previous (or if knowing them of succeeding) ones that it was wrong, because of a systematic blind spot.

You are very arbitrarily singling out the paradigm that right now happens to have favour ...

Now, that's extremely unchristian.

@NinjaMonkeyPrime "are incompetent or lying about science and human history."

Science, properly speaking, doesn't include "historical science".

Human history is known from record, to which the Bible at least purports to belong in a majority of its chapters, and not from science.

sample B

NinjaMonkeyPrime
@hglundahl All the evidence of human history is a problem for YEC, not just the Paleolithic. Strange how you mentioned lava during the flood as the physics required to adjust the plates would have vaporized the entire planet several times over. But this obviously ignores the evidence that there wasn't a global flood.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@NinjaMonkeyPrime Thank you, I skip this one, you want to destroy the discussion of specifics to your over general heckling of my position.

Get off my back!


This is not the first time.

Galileo proved Ptolemy wrong.


Qu. Who did Galileo prove wrong?
https://www.quora.com/Who-did-Galileo-prove-wrong/answer/Hans-Georg-Lundahl-1


Hans-Georg Lundahl
none/ apprx Masters in Latin (language) & Greek (language), Lund University
6 years ago
Galileo proved Ptolemy wrong.

So, by the way, did Tycho Brahe.

Btw, in the process involving a discussion of the evidence, under St. Robert Bellarmine, no one was defending Ptolemy. St. Robert was defending Tycho Brahe.

Walter Hehl
May 25
Galilei did not prove the heliocentric world model nor refute Ptolemy. He just looked through the telescope and observed mountains on the moon and phases of Venus. This suggested that the planets and the moon are bodies and not only points of light. The discovery of the moons of Jupiter showed that there are bodies not circling around the earth (nor the sun). But this could also mean that the epicycles are real ….

The proof that the earth circles around the sun was given 1728 by William Bradley, the direct proof that the earth rotates was made by Léon Foucault 1851.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
June 1st
“This suggested that the planets and the moon are bodies and not only points of light.”

That was known to Ptolemy.

“The discovery of the moons of Jupiter showed that there are bodies not circling around the earth (nor the sun). But this could also mean that the epicycles are real”

In Ptolemy, an epicycle is around a void epicentre, it doesn’t have a body as an epicentre.

So, on this item, he proved Ptolemy wrong.

No proofs were ever given that Earth either orbits the Sun or rotates, both 1728 and 1851 allow other interpretations.

Petroleum Based Ark Covering? That's what Joel Duff argues


First, Tim Clarey's article he comments on:

2,200-Year-Old Roman Ship Reveals True Nature of ''Pitch''
BY TIM CLAREY, PH.D. | THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2026
https://www.icr.org/article/a-2200-year-old-roman-ship-reveals-true


Then Joel Duff:

Interesting Pitch: ICR Says NO to Plain Reading of Noah's Ark
Dr. Joel Duff | 1.VI.2026 (31.V.2026?)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sUedAW-sEHo


1) It doesn't say oil.
2) One very traditional meaning of "tar" or, for that matter, the Latin word "pix, picem" from which we have "pitch" is cooked resin.
3) The Hebrew 3724. kopher is a deverbial noun from the verb 3722. kaphar, where one listed meaning is to cover (specifically with bitumen) — tar cooked from pine resin is used in exactly the same way.

4:29 Douay Rheims, Ronald Knox, and, for what it's worth, King James, all have the word "pitch" ... which in Latin etymology and I don't know how long in the loan means "tar" = cooked pine resin.

5:06 If Akkadian "kupra" means uniquely petrol based bitumen, it may be because Iraq has more petrol and less trees than Lebanon.

5:10 "same area of the world"

Wait a second ... we are nowhere told exactly where the Ark was prior to the Flood, except it was built on the highest mountain on Earth. (15 cubits reads like Ark beginning to float if the waterline was halfway up, which is a pretty usual thing).

If you want my guess, it was erased by the Flood to make the plain now called the Meseta, in Spain.

5:31 If the Israelites uniquely used bitumen of a petrol based type as opposed to pine based tar, that may be an accident of their location.

6:29 In tar [as a coating], pine sap vastly outweighs bees wax.

Now, I'm sure Hebrew has another word for bees wax than kopher, I'm not looking up, but I am really at a loss to the word pine sap, especially as cooked to tar, other than using the functional equivalent bitumen.

6:47 If you are unaware, bitumen and pine sap cooked to tar are not easy to tell apart to eye or touch.

Maybe some difference in smell.

Just noting:

"Tar is a dark brown or black viscous liquid of hydrocarbons and free carbon, obtained from a wide variety of organic materials through destructive distillation. Tar can be produced from carbon-rich materials such as coal, wood, petroleum, peat, and other organic matter."


7:23 Henna is a thing that Oriental women use to paint some kind of decorations on their skin.

It looks, not unlike "bitumen" like ... tar. Dark brown liquid.

7:36 No, I don't think they are homonyms.

Village, because houses in a village are painted in tar, together, presumably at the same occasion.

Henna is dark brown and used to tinge a surface (in this case human skin)

8:41 "in the Mesopotamian region"

That's not where the Ark was built, you can't build an ark on the highest mountain on earth by staying there, especially as it is now in post-Flood times ... the Bible 1) doesn't say the Ark was in Mesopotamia before the Flood, and 2) as to after, it was actually East or North of Mesopotamia, depending on which parts.

NinjaMonkeyPrime
@NinjaMonkeyPrime
In one of your numerous comments you said that we aren't told where it was built, but here you seem confident where it wasn't built.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@NinjaMonkeyPrime Indeed.

If it had been built in the plain of South Mesopotamia or even the mountains around North Mesopotamia, as they are now, the Ark would not have been built on the highest mountain, and Noah would not have known if the highest mountain was covered, let alone if it was 15 cubits high.

But with an overall height of 30 cubits, 15 cubits is a probable water line.

So, a water line of 15 cubits + building it on the highest mountain, means = you exactly know when the water covers it (and all other less high mountains) at least 15 cubits = when the Ark begins to move.

If the Ark had been built anywhere lower, it would have been dashed to pieces during the earlier 40 days of the Flood.


10:08 I have no problem with the Exodus tevah being petroleum based in the kopher covering.

Egypt is still a petrol exporting country and, unlike Lebanon, poor in trees.

So, if the Genesis one was tree based, that doesn't strike me as a radical difference, the substances are used in exactly the same way.

10:08 [bis] It would seem that the more specific words in Exodus are 2564. chemar and 2203. zepheth.

In Genesis, 3724. kopher seems to be a more general term.

If you don't actually have a word for wood based tar, why not use the more general term?

11:23 "to create a greater meaning"

Sure.

If I recall correctly, both the Flood and the crossing of the Red Sea are read in the Easter Vigil and this as types of Baptism.

And Moses was, as a babe singled out for leading Israelites through the Red Sea.

But is it any difference to this greater meaning that one vessel uses pine based tar and the other petroleum based asphalt? We know there is a difference in size, which is far more obvious.

NinjaMonkeyPrime
There should be some obvious meaning behind someone who seeks to bend modern day evidence and observation to accommodate a story from an old collection of books that wasn't intended to be taken literally.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@NinjaMonkeyPrime Where do you get "that wasn't intended to be taken literally" from?

It wasn't meant to be taken only literally, but that doesn't mean it was meant not to be taken literally.

The literal meaning is the basis, like St. Thomas Aquinas argues in Summa Theologiae, Prima Pars, Quaestio I, Article 10. Whether in Holy Scripture a word may have several senses?

The answer
is outside the scope of this discussion, and merits a post of its own.


12:19 As I skim through Exodus 2 in the interlinear, I actually don't see that this certainly petroleum based thing is being ever described as "kopher" ...

But I did note that the verb kaphar is named for the action, which is exactly the same in pine based pitching as in petroleum based one.

15:04 "dating back 4500 years BC"

Here is the sentence and its follow up:

In the Middle East, where there are ample oil seeps. Conventional scientists have found evidence of the use of bitumen as a boat sealant as far back as 4500 to 3700 BC. Creation scientists realize these radiometric dates are not accurate.


Count me in. But I'm more specific:

2097 BC
74.949 pmC, dated as 4481 BC

1982 BC
80.546 pmC, dated as 3770 BC
1965 BC
Serug died
1959 BC
81.656 pmC, dated as 3634 BC


Petroleum based boat sealant ... 2097 to 1959 ... did it fall out of use after "3700 BC" alias 1959? No, actually not. 4500 to 3700 is only the Ubaid period, and the cited work Adhesive coatings in naval archaeology: molecular and palynological investigations on materials from the Roman Republican wreck Ilovik–Paržine 1 (Croatia) is not specific of when in it.

Anyway, that's about 900 + years after the Flood, just before Abraham.

NinjaMonkeyPrime
Bitumen as Hafting Material on Middle Paleolithic Artifacts from the El Kowm Basin, Syria January 2002

[Link found]

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@NinjaMonkeyPrime Now, Middle Palaeolithic just might be a problem, if it had been dated by superposed lava (from the Flood).

I would say, the 36000 BP date is post-Flood and the Mousterian and Levallois styles, despite being pre-Flood, were either iimitated or reused (tools taken along on the ark) after the Flood.

I didn't read any indication that people found there had been identified as pure Neanderthal or Homo erectus, which would also have been pre-Flood.

The answer
is outside the scope of this discussion, and merits a post of its own.


15:36 "than what the Romans are doing, far, far away"

As said, the Bible nowhere specifies that the pre-Flood coordinates where the Ark was built match post- or pre-Flood spaces between Hiddekel and Frat. Nowhere.

Croatia is closer to the Meseta than what Mesopotamia is, and the Meseta is my candidate for the highest pre-Flood mountain peak. Either there or the Ural, somewhere.

Post-Flood humanity has admixture of pre-Flood races Neanderthal and Denisovan, and those are found in both Spain and the Ural region. As far as I know, nothing in pre-Flood Mesopotamia shows its pre-Flood humanity.

Accordingly, nine paleoecological maps for the Southern Mesopotamia are made to represent the age intervals between 22000 B.P. to 1000 B.P.


22 000 BP = c. 20 000 BC = between:

2738 BC
11.069 pmC, dated as 20,933 BC

[and] 2725 BC
14.329 pmC, dated as 18,786 BC

NinjaMonkeyPrime
What are you trying to say with these "pmc" numbers? You started by saying that 20,000 BP is 20,000 BC, but that's already wrong. It would be 18,051 BCE or BC. Everything after that is just gibberish.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@NinjaMonkeyPrime I said 22 000 BP is roughly 20 000 BC. Just 50 years off. "Present" is uniformly 1950 in this context.

pmC is the level of carbon 14 back then and accounts for the extra years. 11.069 pmC "means" 18200 years old (when it was recent) and 14.329 pmC "means" 16050 old (when it was recent).

If you add c. 17 000 years to c. 3000 BC, you get 20 000 BC or 22 000 BP.

Well actually
I can be more precise.

11.069 pmC means 5730 * log(0.11069) / log(0.5) = 18 195 extra years
14.329 pmC means 5730 * log(0.14329) / log(0.5) = 16 061 extra years

From 2738 BC I'd need 17 262 extra years, between the two.
From 2725 BC I'd need 17 275 extra years, between the two.

From a year between these I'd need a number of extra years between the two.


16:18 "rewrite the Hebrew dictionary"

Let's see what modern Hebrew uses for "tar" ... surprisingly, modern Hebrew uses for Norwegian pine resin that's been cooked the word "zephet" ... like for Moses' basket. Even if we are sure that Moses' mother used petroleum based pitch.

But dictionaries are fluid, like you showed yourself, about English, when you basically deny that pine sap cooked in tar kilns qualifies as tar.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

I'm Glad I Left the North


3 Unwritten Rules of Scandinavia ...
Meg DuPer | 26 May 2026
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XGZrLPD1Rnk


One more reason why I'm not likely to return to Scandinavia and not all too happy with having too many Scandinavians close by even in Paris.

I'm Swedish and part Norwegian (1/4, basically). But I was raised in Germany and Austria and more specifically big cities.

It's not the American culture. It's not halfway to it. But it's perhaps a third or quarter to it.

On top of that, I became a Christian believer in the US. Lots of media I consume have US or other Anglo-Saxon origin. If you know Kent Hovind (whose surname and origins are Norwegian) you will hardly find him a very Scandinavian personality. A cultural comparison in Sweden would be Billy Butt ... who's an immigrant.

Now, what would a Scandinavian observer do as sabotage in Paris?

A) As I have a minoritarian religion, today, Roman Catholic NOT in Communion with Prevost AND holding to traditional doctrines like Geocentrism and Young Earth Creationism, I need to be performative for it. As I have the goal of getting someone to start a publishing house, seeing even small Catholic oppositional ones are letting me down, I need to catch attention for that.

As a result, the Scandinavian observer, who values not taking up social space, is not my best friend.

B) As I maintain my writing without an income, pending the change I seek, I sit in the street with a cardboard to my blog URL, offering online reading and accepting money.

A Scandinavian will typically see this as being high maintenance, again, not my best friend.

C) This may strike some as a Scandinavian weakness in me, but I have a need of not being surrounded by too multiple social "deep" interactions, among which inquiries about how I am.

A human weakness is being more irritable after sleep privation.

A typically Scandinavian will note some irritability.

Thanks for showing again why Scandinavia is not the place for me!

On top of that, so C 2, loads of Scandinavians have internalised that "Science" is about reason, but "Religion" about emotions, and from that prejudice will take me as excessively emotional even when I'm simply stating the dogma of my Church or some basic apologetics argument for it.

Sweden is among top 5 countries with most Atheists.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Chesterton


A Sentence in Tolkien (or Two, or More) · Chesterton

Top 10 Prophetic Quotes From GK Chesterton
The Babylon Bee | 19 Dec. 2020
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=te1-gDhq3DU


5:39 In much of Europe, that's the huge contributor to Muslims replacing us.

["the one consoling thought is, that will only last one generation"]

8:03 In Chesterton's day, governments were sterilising people.

That's not "more fresh" ...*

12:34 Chesterton also said, Capitalism and Communism are so similar.**

Right now people in Anaheim are evacuated because a factory had the Capitalistic freedom to produce for such a large amount of customers and the Capitalistic corner cutting to not ensure proper safety for such large a factory.




* "Take out God, the government becomes the God" and they argued "when governments were more fresh"
** "Whether the share will be delivered in motorcar or balloon" and they argued "people say Capitalism won't work, but Communism will" ... Chesterton had attacked Communism, not specifically defended Capitalism




Lewis and Tolkien: G.K. Chesterton, Myth, and the Imagination
Ryan M Reeves | 2 Sept. 2014
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=McnaNqj_vA4


17:43 You can* observe angels by their actions when they do Tychonian orbits or "annual aberration and parallax" ...

If a rationalist claims that this is just because Earth moves, the problem is, his only proof for Earth moving is, lack of God and angels.

God doing, as per Romans 1, the daily movement of the whole shebang.

The rationalist pretends God and angels not existing is the default and is worth denying Geocentrism, despite universal observation of it by 8 billion people.

I say, believing your eyes (especially if backed up by so many other ones) is the default and is worth God and angels getting a proof via physics. As in, the universe couldn't turn around Earth by just inertia and gravitation, nor Venus do that pentagram like figure within that (i e in relation to a zodiac that moves daily, not to earth that doesn't move).

20:34 I happen to have a formula for saying that carbon dates can square with Biblical chronology.

Clearly not the same thing, but I have it, and I have also made tables with details. Right now, some Christians like very much to link Abraham (1900's or 1800's BC in Biblical chronology, depending on dating of Exodus and a few more) to carbon dated and archaeological 1900's and 1800's. So, they put my tables in a limbo, because I link Genesis 14 to carbon dated 3500 BC. But in carbon dates, Asason Tamar / En Geddi has no population in 1900's or 1800's BC. Therefore the Biblical dates need a reduction of carbon dates. I show this is possible.**

23:59 You certainly did have a right to feel wrath against the mean boy, I hope you didn't kill him. There are people I don't know how to deal with except by killing one, but it doesn't sit with my habits.

Note, they have gone out of their way to make normal reactions self defeating.

However, as an argument, I think Dawkins would argue sth about "the selfish gene" ...***

25:46 In Catholicism, you pray twice around a meal.

Before, you ask a blessing. After, you thank for the blessing.




* In response to:

if someone comes up to you and they say well you know what I I I've just used my mind and Science and I come up with these these conclusions um how can you believe in a world with Heaven and Hell and Angels and Demons you can't say well good let's let's go to the to the science lab and I'll I'll I'll show you the angel the angel particle or the demon particle you can't actually observe these things


** My latest completed version from Flood to fall of Troy: Newer Tables: Preliminaries · Flood to Joseph in Egypt · Joseph in Egypt to Fall of Troy.

*** I think I have a somewhat better argument about speech. An Ambiguous Term, "Language Development" · Is Gradualism Really That Impossible? · Was Jean Aitchison Calling Bird-Song Doubly Articulated? AND Human Language Revisited · Elves and Adam · Back to Picq · Off the Bat

Capitalism, Specifically Industrial ... and Psychiatry


Citation:

The company's Garden Grove facility has undergone four inspections by OSHA since 2018, which resulted in 10 violations, public records show. Now, more on these violations wasn't available, but in 2019, this is one of the examples, uh the California Department of Industrial Relations uh a request in Orange County Superior Court that a judge ordered the company to pay about $3,000 in civil penalties.


EMERGENCY: White House Shooting & 40,000 Evacuated in California Chemical Emergency!
Lisa Haven | 24 May 2026
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N18OVWjZw6g


I'm glad people from Anaheim are safe.

8:43 In the case of this attempt, let's face it, the man has been in psychiatry and therefore has faced some kind of torture.

I wonder if his wish to get arrested involved an attempt to clear up the story he had claimed to be Jesus.

(See also:
Garden Grove chemical crisis: Live evacuation maps, closures and updates
By Los Angeles Times staff
https://www.latimes.com/california/live/garden-grove-gas-leak-live-evacuation-maps-closures-and-updates
)

A Sentence in Tolkien (or Two, or More)


A Sentence in Tolkien (or Two, or More) · Chesterton

I finally understand why I love the sentences of JRR Tolkien so much
First Timers | 23 May 2026
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zOrgYaP2VDg


6:12 Let's take the sentence.

The wind was howling | and the thun der still growling.


When the siege and the assault | had ceased at Troy ... this line has two beats plus two beats, but many lines in Sir Gawaine and the Green Knight (which I read in Tolkien's translation) actually have two beats plus three beats, like above.

And they had a business getting themselves | and their ponies along.


Two beats and two beats, like the first line from Sir Gawaine. In his explanation to Beowulf, Tolkien noted that only full beats, stressed long syllables, or two short ones the first of which is stressed, count as beats. You don't count a syllable as a beat just because it's surrounded by two weak ones in Anglo-Saxon poetry.

Hence "and they had a" contains no beat and "business" is one beat, not a beat plus a weak syllable.

The one difference is, first "line" has an internal end rhyme instead of alliteration, and second "line" has no type of rhyme ... or it actually has a kind of allitteration, "b" in "business" allitterating with "p" in "ponies" ...

Not sure if Tolkien did this fully on purpose or if his daily contact with Old and Middle English allitterating poetry simply rubbed off.

7:01 Once again, it's Anglo-Saxon metre with some liberties.

It was a hard path and a dangerous path | and a crooked and a long.


In this, the first half line is involving "path" as a secondary beat, but in AS poetry, this would not have been repeated in the next descriptor.

Crooked is obviously just one beat, because the first syllable is short and needs a second one to fill out a beat.

If he had said instead:

It was a hard path and at risk | and crooked and long.


THAT would have been totally in the Beowulf metre. He came very close. The Roman rhetors had a knack of getting close to Hexameter but just avoiding it, sometimes by ending sentences like a first halfline of hexameter, and beginning them as a second halfline.

Oh, my version obviously lacks the allitteration.

Wait, I curtailed the second part. I think one could analyse it as two lines, but somewhat shorter halflines than Beowulf admits, at times, and no secondary beat:

It was a hard path | and a dangerous path
and a crooked way | and a lonely and a long.


Allitterating between the two beats of a second halfline is obviously not done in Beowulf.

7:11 Here we could pose five halflines:

and the silence seemed | to dislike being broken
except by the noise of water | and the wail of wind
and the crack of stone. ...


Pretty good Anglo-Saxon poetry. Again, two words allitteraring in the second half, not done in Beowulf, but it is done at times in Sir Gawaine.

7:38 Here, the mood is less Anglo-Saxon and more Sir Topaz meets ballad meter.

Far, far away in the West (4)
where things were blue and faint (3)
Bilbo knew there lay (3)
his own country of safe and comfortable things (5)
and his little Hobbit hole. (3)


8:25 Beowulf for one line, then looser.

Boulders too | at times came galloping
down the moun tain sides | let loose by mid-day sun upon the snow


The second line has a second half with four full beats, one more than the Gawaine metre allows ...

9:52 As on a daily basis he was teaching old poetry, from Old and Middle English (before and West of Chaucer), and sometimes translating poetry or writing poems of his own, this is a thing he actually couldn't help ... but which helped him a lot.