I think that one, though an interesting candidate for the origin of the biblical flood, is no longer considered to be so. There is a better match. A river flood in what is currently Iraq, with floodwaters, probably from Mt Ararat, flooding the river's flood plain unexpectedly during a freak rain storm. (unexpected for that time of year).Originally posted by Theodore Kurita
Then again...
There is evidence that there was a massive flood in the middle east at about 6000 BCE in the Black Sea.
More and more people are believing that this flood in of itself is where the Noah myth developed in the first place.
Remember, the Sumarians were the first to put it down, the Jews just copied it and put it in the Torah.
Here is a link for more info:
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/blacksea/ax/frame.html
Can we spell Cydonia?iain said:According to the BBC a US/Turkish expedition is heading off to Turkey to climb Mount Arrarat and investigate an Ark-sized something that has been spotted by satelites.
Segnosaur said:My favorite debating point:
Who on Noah's ark had AIDS?
Many diseases require a living host to survive. If you believe the biblical account (and you discount evolution), then somone on the ark must have carried things like HIV, Ebola, Herpes, etc.
There must have been some very sick people on that ark.
bewareofdogmas said:
Isn't AIDS a thought to be new to humans? Started in the 40's or 50's? the others look right though. Oh and the animals would have to be the host to the parasites and diseases unique to them.
SGT said:About the morality of the flood. God found that the only rightful person on Earth was Noah. This model of righteousness gets drunk, dances naked in the fields and curses his son for seeing his nakedness.
If this is a virtuous person, how wicked was the rest of the Earth's population?
No, no no, you're not playing fair! If you excuse those people for not knowing then what we know now, then you'll decide that almost everything in the Bible is based on ignorance and isn't true. No, the way we play is to assume that everything in the Bible is true because it was written by God and his divinely-inspired co-authors, and what we think we know now is just an illusion.As far as people knew a few thousand years ago...
Hmm, do you really consider the myth of Noah to be true? There is nothing that says that there has ever been any Noah people. It's probably like it almost always is, a myth, maybe a myth supposed to teach people something or to scare them. Floods happens all the time and any one of them might be the origin of the myth.exarch said:I think that one, though an interesting candidate for the origin of the biblical flood, is no longer considered to be so. There is a better match. A river flood in what is currently Iraq, with floodwaters, probably from Mt Ararat, flooding the river's flood plain unexpectedly during a freak rain storm. (unexpected for that time of year).
Poor Noah and his family were carried off into the Gulf without any means to steer or move, and most likely ended up somewhere on the coast of Saudi Arabia or some other place along the coastline of the Gulf.
I bet from their point of view, they really didn't see any land for a while, although probably no longer than a couple of weeks.
bewareofdogmas said:Ok, I need to know ALL the problems with The Flood story.
I think it *IS* based on a true story, although heavily exagerrated, as most of the stuff in the bible is.Originally posted by Anders
Hmm, do you really consider the myth of Noah to be true? There is nothing that says that there has ever been any Noah people. It's probably like it almost always is, a myth, maybe a myth supposed to teach people something or to scare them. Floods happens all the time and any one of them might be the origin of the myth.
Well, the bible is based on Babylonian, Assyrian, Egyptian legends and myths, which doesn't necessary has to be true. For example, the legend about Jesus and Mary can very well be based on the legend about the Egyptian god Horus and his mother Isis, but as it is a myth about a god it has nothing to do with reality.exarch said:I think it *IS* based on a true story, although heavily exagerrated, as most of the stuff in the bible is.
Or maybe the bible is just a collection of ancient urban legends?
CFLarsen said:
Segnosaur said:My favorite debating point:
Who on Noah's ark had AIDS?
Many diseases require a living host to survive. If you believe the biblical account (and you discount evolution), then somone on the ark must have carried things like HIV, Ebola, Herpes, etc.
There must have been some very sick people on that ark.
Patricio Elicer said:How did Noah manage to save the kangaroos from the global flood?