salm wrote:I find it strange that overgrazing would be somebodies... erm.. apple of discord with the bible when there are so many things in it that are orders of maginitude dumber.
You need to read more Chris Parr threads.
Chris Parr wrote:So I started reading my Bible thinking "I'm really going to try to believe this, 'cause I don't want to go to Hell" but immediately I ran into a little snag—Genesis 1:29-30.
29: And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat
30:And to every beast of the earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to everything tat creepeth upon the earth, wherein there is life, I have given every green herb for meat: and it was so.
Chris Parr wrote:It was the first thing I ran across that made my brain hurt.
If you're reading the Bible with that mindset, I'm surprised you got that far.
I mean, Genesis 1:2 has the universe being full of water before anything has been created. And yet this water somehow has a 'face,' implying a surface.
Genesis 1:7 has "Heaven" dividing the waters of the Earth from, presumably, water in the sky.
Genesis 1:14-16 make it
very clear that plants were living and thriving on the third day of Creation, prior to the existence of the sun. More impressively, there were clearly delineated periods of light and darkness (Genesis 1:4-5) before the creation of the sun and the stars.
By comparison, I'm honestly not even sure that Genesis 1:29-30 is so much as a speed bump, being as how I'm not sure it's correct to interpret the passage as saying "there were no carnivores at this time in the Genesis creation story."
There is basically no point in trying to subject Genesis to a coherent logical analysis based on what we now know about science and ethics.
An evil atheist? No? So then where will my morality come from, if not the Bible? Comic books? The morality there seems to beat Biblical "morality" so I would have to say "yes", I am going with comic book morality.
Mm. I'd suggest picking up a few introductory/basic college philosophy textbooks. About, oh... two, three, maybe four.
Also, buy a Super Soaker.
Then find a trusted friend or loved one, and give them the following directions. "I am going to read these books over the next couple of months. If you hear me saying anything that violates the principles of basic common sense, or basic decency, shoot me with this Super Soaker and go "NO! BAD SOPHOMORE PHILOSOPHY STUDENT! BAD!" "
This combination will probably result in you having a reasonably healthy system of moral philosophy.
A lot of actual philosophy students screw this process up, of course. Usually by forgetting the Super Soaker, without which they have no way of knowing when they've made a serious mistake.