Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 11:27 am
Hey, one of my best friends is Swedish! >.> I think....XD
I think the dudes actually got a point.
Could the Dragons actually be Dinosaurs? seeing as how there were no "Dinosaurs" before 1841 when the word was invented but perhaps Dinosaurs existed and were called Dragons? Now of course who wants to live next door to a humongous animal no matter what its diet? most of these dinosaurs were hunted to extinction in the 4000 years after Noah's flood in the christian bible for their meat and for people who wanted to be a hero for generations....now of course there are probably under 50-100 "Dragons" or "Dinosaurs" left in the world but could they be the sea monsters of Loch Ness? and many other lakes?
Hey, I say a sonar picture and underwater picture of nessie.Aiolos wrote:No, but it is scientificly impossible for anything larger than a horse to survive in Loch Ness. If you believe something hard enough, you'll see it. I did a project on lake monsters for a science assignment at school, and came across this wonderful website. It convinced me that NOTHING lives in Loch Ness. Not even a dragon could survive in it. http://www.plesiosaur.com/lochness.php
I encourage you to read that. After you have, give me three logical explinations of the Loch Ness Monster.
....Ewshydragonet wrote:I mean, some stuff is completely illogical just plain wrong. Like Adam and Eve. Only having their three sons, yes three, Cain, Abel and Seth. There had to have been another girl somewhere along the line or the sons would have had to sleep with their mother. Am I right or am I right?
And how the do you know that? Historical records are notorious for being incomplete. And what about when people kept insisting that the Bible had been hand-copied so many times that it was inaccurate? The Dead Sea Scrolls had them adrift at sea without an ark, so to speak. And Tempest, no offense, but nowhere in the Bible does it state that Noah took adults on the ark. A dino or bird egg takes up maybe one cubic foot? And also Noah had almost a hundred years to create the ark. And who says he had no carpentry experience? Who says that gopher wood (which by the way is extinct) wasn't somehow the ideal ship-building material? I GET SO UPSET WHEN PEOPLE INSIST THEY KNOW WHAT THEY DON'T!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!dragonfly wrote:ok about noah
im a catholic, and this is what the bible is and is not
the Bible is NOT one book-it is a library of books by different authors with different styles
not everything in the bible is complete fact. some of it is poetry, some of it is fables with a moral to them. this is probably where noah fits in. and revelation. and the creation stories. now exodus, deutoronomy and such are probably real. and there are roman records that a Jesus did exist and was cruicified as a rebel. so some of it is fact, but not everything
Ok - so you're saying I can't believe in both hmm? Oh well, maybe I should keep mein opinions to myself.Falconer wrote:@Silv: Science and religion are not diametrically opposed. That is a myth spread by morons who wouldnt know science if it bit them in their .
Not that you're a moron; millions believe it.
And how do you know that?Also, the Bible wasn't a book at first. Somebody a looooooong time ago decided to copy down some cool stories about God into an anthology and other people kept adding stuff and someone gave it a name. Then the faiths separated and other people added different stuff, and others took out some stuff and others refused to acknowledge the existence of some stuff.
What? What little change there has been still does not explain a world wide flood. But there is evidence for large local floods. Just check for pics for modern floods you can believe people who didn't go farther than 50 miles max from their home town would think the world was covered with water.Falconer wrote: @Tempest: The geological record states that the Earth's surface use to be a lot smoother.
Falconer wrote:And also Noah had almost a hundred years to create the ark
The reason they aren't used is because their basic theology is off. They are not left off because of some male chauvonist conspiracy. The historical accuracy is up for grabs. Personnaly, I like reading Macabees. It is a great account of the Hebrew's War for Independance.vampirehunter42 wrote:Also, the number of unused books of the bible and the other versions of Christian Bibles, show things need to be taken at arms length.
My favorite unused books are the ones that have fully written the incest of Adam and Eve, and the book of the younger years of Mary mother of Jesus.
(not used so a woman would not be given such a large part in the bible.)
Geologists calculated that if the Earth was smoother, levelling the continents and raising the sea beds, the oceans would cover the Earth. They already cover someting like 70% anyway.vampirehunter wrote:What little change there has been still does not explain a world wide flood.
So in the time of Noah the world was smooth? I may be Lutheran but the copy of the bible I read said there were mountions around. Or was there only one? And all of the sea floors at the time were smooth as well?Geologists calculated that if the Earth was smoother, levelling the continents and raising the sea beds, the oceans would cover the Earth. They already cover someting like 70% anyway.
Taking aim at a single point in my long post and ignoring the rest, is like denting the gate of a castle and claimimg to have taken it down. The problem isn't the size of individual animal (of course, this play in the equation), it the shear amount of species. You want us to believe that Noah was able to cram +5000 mammal species, +8000 reptile species and +9000 bird species (make those numbers double to have a male and a female of each) in a single ship that should care and feed roughly 45000 animals for 40 days. Maybe you don't appreciate the collective size those animals would take no matter their age (note that animals aren't stackable). Which get back to my original point that even when using the largest ship available in the Renaissance (that benefited from a lot more technology and expertise than what Noah had access), this is simply impossible.Falconer wrote:And Tempest, no offense, but nowhere in the Bible does it state that Noah took adults on the ark.
No he didn't have a hundred years.Falconer wrote:And also Noah had almost a hundred years to create the ark. And who says he had no carpentry experience? Who says that gopher wood (which by the way is extinct) wasn't somehow the ideal ship-building material?
The only thing right in this statement is that this isn't the place for such... "debate".Falconer wrote:I'm sorry i yelled, but when people insist that the Bible is a mix of truth and lie, it ticks me off. It's either a complete lie or the absolute truth; this is neither the place nor the time to debate that.
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Moral or no moral, there is no biblical story that isn't acclaimed elsewhere as true. The Apostle Paul said that Adam was a real person; Jesus said the same of David. This brings us to the lead confrontation of the Bible being either a complete lie, or the complete truth, and that is something left to each person to decide which they believe.
You seem to confuse the terms "evidence" and "purely theoretical situation". Geological records show no such thing as a "smoother Earth". Since you haven't brought the slightest evidence to back up this claim, I will just assume you made that up because geological evidence proves without a shadow of doubt that most mountain formations today are millions years old.Falconer wrote:The geological record states that the Earth's surface use to be a lot smoother.
Geologists calculated that if the Earth was smoother, levelling the continents and raising the sea beds, the oceans would cover the Earth. They already cover someting like 70% anyway.
Do you know what sciences is about? Sciences are an independent methodology: it is not supposed to support a particular religion, a particular political system or a particular ideology.Falconer wrote:Science and religion are not diametrically opposed. That is a myth spread by morons who wouldnt know science if it bit them in their *swearing*
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No, what I meant was that science and religion are supposed to support each other.
So now we have "true science" and "false science". It is "false science" when it debunk your religion and pointing out that there is no evidence of the existence of gods, goddess, or any supernatural being. Sorry, but at this point you should understand that sciences doesn't take side; it simply tell the facts (if you like them or not, it is no concern of serious scientists). As for god being a fantasy, the burden of the proof lie entirely on the shoulders of the believers. It is up to them to prove His existance and it is not to non-believers to prove that god doesn't exist, nor it is to the listener to prove that there is no such thing as psychic power or invisible pink unicorn when someone claims the existence of such things. But so far, honest people of science understand that if no one ever detected, seen, heard, touched, smelled or even tasted this almighty being, then logically he doesn't exist. And, it doesn't mean that because there is no invisible being in the sky that we have to worship ourselves, or our ability to think or the nearest rock.Falconer wrote:True science does. It's the false science that accuses religion as being fantasy, when it itself is becoming a religion - the worship of self, of one's own ability to think and reason.