• nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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    9 months ago

    Isn’t that about 10,000 years before that?

    The Red Sea flood makes way more sense (ha). Especially when you consider what peoples’ sense of “the whole world” was at the time.

    Though some thinkers did already know the circumference of the earth, which make Judaism and Christianity sound even more ass backwards when you consider it all.

    • evranch@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      If you look into flood myths, there are also hypotheses involving comet or asteroid impact flooding, which could have happened at many other times.

      By the time the Greeks determined the circumference of the earth, this flood would already have been a legend and a fading cultural memory. It almost definitely would be oral history and not recorded in any physical form. What proof could anyone have that it didn’t cover the whole world?

      Not knowing about glaciation or interplanetary objects it would be extremely hard for the people of the era not to have decided that some spiteful god had tried to wipe out the entire earth.

    • Flax@feddit.uk
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      9 months ago

      The last ice age ended 10,000 years ago, so 8,000 BC, which kind of makes sense considering the Biblical timeline.

      How is the earth’s circumference relevant to Christianity?

        • Flax@feddit.uk
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          9 months ago

          The thing is, even if accounts of the flood was written before the Torah was written, it just further shows that it did happen. The earth’s circumference was measured in 240bc by the greeks. Which is long after the flood no matter who you ask.

            • Flax@feddit.uk
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              9 months ago

              Yeah. Another thing is that the word used “erets” doesn’t always necessarily mean the whole world. If you consider where Eden was likely located (underneath the persian gulf) it would have definitely looked like a global flood of some kind to Noah. I think to say “Bible disproven because I take the flood account fully literally” is a bit silly.