Physicist
Member
mondar said:Physicist, I know you cannot respond to every Christian on this board, but I want you to notice who you choose to responded to. You chose to respond to someone that believes the flood happened in 2347BC. Only an extremely small percentage of Christians believe that. Is this not "picking the low hanging fruit," so to speak? It might make you look good in making fun of the really bad posts, but if you really want to make Christians think, you will have to respond to the better arguments. Of course that will take more work. I am suggesting you pursue you conversation with Izzy and ignore the really bad posts. Truth is not found in "picking the low hanging fruit" but in taking on the best arguments.Physicist said:Ottawan61350 said:The Flood Year was Noahs 600th year about 2347BC
Don't listen to the naysayers and false science. It happened.
God Bless, Ron
The Universal Flood only happened as a mythological tale. Such tales were common in ancient times and enrich our understanding of earlier civilizations. However, there was no real Hercules, Noah, or Beowolf. These are just tall tales told around the campfire, like more recent stories of Pecos Bill or Paul Bunyan. IMO it is unwise to live in a fantasy world of demons, dragons, and mythical heroes. The real world is much more interesting.
Pardon me for sometimes sounding too dismissive. This is not the only forum where I have to explain why the Flood tale is mythological and I sometimes commit the mistake I used to do occasionally when teaching the same science course. I would give short answers in the second lecture because I had already patiently explained the solution in the first lecture and failed to remember that I had a different audience who had not heard the first explanation.
Izzy is, in my opinion, committing the logical flaw of inventing 'just so' explanations to try to avoid accepting the (by far) most probable answer that the story is fiction. He wishes to assume that there was some kind of canopy that filtered out light of certain frequencies so that rainbows were rare. However, the frequencies that cause rainbows are the visible spectrum so Noah would have been working in the dark unless he could see in the infrared or ultraviolet.
Science puts quite severe restrictions on 'just so' explanations. For example, the consequences of the hypothetical canopy of high concentrations of water vapor could be a giant greenhouse affect making today's concerns about climate change seem trivial.