J. Arthur Hastur
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2006
- Messages
- 495
They were carried by swallows?
What? African swallow, or european?
They were carried by swallows?
They walked. Haven't you seen Day of the Triffids?
That question is only relevant to an unladen swallow. If the swallow is carrying orchids, it is clearly laden, and thus its air-speed velocity must be measured accordingly.What? African swallow, or european?
33! I was being a smart ass. I know when I visited my brother there it was always raining. That's a lot of water, I wonder why we weren't all drowned?
Noah was amazing in his faith and construction abilities.
http://www.geocities.com/davidjayjordan/NoahsArkandtheWorldwideFlood.html
Took him seventy years though.... if I recall
And it is because of this, that over 200 different cultures have recorded the Flood in their histories, to document in similar but different ways this worldwide geological event.
The idea that we're smarter than those old-time guys is easy to sell, especially to the young. Math, not so much.
Well then. You would have to dehydrate them (freeze drying maybe?). After all there was lots of water around still to rehydrate them after the flood. I'll leave the calculations as to the time it would take to dehydrate and rehydrate, as an exercise for the reader.![]()
Noah's Ark is a weak-point in literalist defences, but math isn't the tool to use against it. The story actually describes the tiny horizons of the people that made it up, who could name a few dozen animals and birds and picture them all on a tremendous boat that was, like, two blocks long, dude! A practical story, where the only magic was in a god's message. No need to account for microbes or invertebrates
Who wants to be associated with tiny horizons these days? The idea that we're smarter than those old-time guys is easy to sell, especially to the young. Math, not so much.
The Noah story is taken directly from the Epic of Gilgamesh. Once one realizes that - then it is a moot point to talk about the size of the boat and the food needed. It's just a fartin'-around-the-campfire story. Of course it never happened. Anyone who believes it did is an idiot.
People are broken, I'm not going to fix them, so I'm going to kill them all. Oh, except you 10 there.

That would be the fallacy of the deluded middle.ETA: In fact, in Canada, I've run into ID as a sort-of trendy "philosophical" position. It seems to be considered the logical marriage of science and religion, both being extremes which must be wrong...![]()
Noah's Ark is a weak-point in literalist defences, but math isn't the tool to use against it. The story actually describes the tiny horizons of the people that made it up, who could name a few dozen animals and birds and picture them all on a tremendous boat that was, like, two blocks long, dude! A practical story, where the only magic was in a god's message. No need to account for microbes or invertebrates
Who wants to be associated with tiny horizons these days? The idea that we're smarter than those old-time guys is easy to sell, especially to the young. Math, not so much.
Originally Posted by jesus_freak
Really...people who's argument is I am right and everyone else is stupid is in fact stupid themselves in my book...making you one of the stupidest people that I have ever had the misfortune of conversating with.
Or, to translate into human:
Go away, you pathetic little boy.Originally Posted by A Religious Fanatic
I am right because the bible says so. I am a weak excuse for a human who cannot live without the crutch of a sky-daddy who looks after me when the going gets tough. I am a self-deluded feeb.

The tiny horizons are what strikes me when reading myths to my kids. "Wow, a boat that can travel as fast as the wind..."