mercredi 26 janvier 2022

Dr. Joel Duff on Toba Artefacts


The post is the third highest ranked on Joel Duff's Naturalis Historia:

NH : The Toba Super Eruption: A Non-Flood Catastrophe – The Artifacts Say Yes!
https://thenaturalhistorian.com/2012/05/04/toba-tuff-adam-super-volcano-flood-geology/


This massive and apparently world-altering volcanic explosion cannot be explained within a young-age chronology as an event that occurred concurrently or at the end of a global flood. Here we have an example of a volcano that must have obliterated nearly all life on Sumatra and likely deforested most of Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand. Massive deposits from air-borne ash would have killed many of the animals in this entire region.

Again, YECs can’t explain this as happening while Noah and his family were safe inside the Ark. The evidence that humans occupied sites just before this massive volcanic eruption necessitates that this volcano had to have blown its top after people had migrated from the Ark to India. In the YEC chronology this would place this catastrophic even no more than 4000 years ago!

Why only 4000 year ago? Because most creationists believe that the Flood occurred 4350 years ago and then after the Flood the descendants of Noah lived in Middle East were they then all gathered together at Babel several hundred years after the Flood. The first people to reach India would have been descendants of the people at Babel. Therefore, these stone tools could not have been dropped at this location in India until after people had dispersed there from Babel. This sets the minimum age of this catastrophe at no more than 4000 years ago in the YEC chronology. This volcano could not have destroyed Sumatra until well after the dispersal of peoples from Babel.


I disagree that India was not peopled at all until after Babel.

Himalayas were formed as mountains after the Flood, and I see one pre-Flood culture (Soanian) on lower slopes, what would have been ground in pre-Flood times, and I see a post-Babel culture carbon dated to 5000 BC (Patu, Nepal). The time between Flood and Babel, human habitations were absent from the Himalayas.

Creation vs. Evolution : Himalayas ... how fast did they rise?
https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2020/05/himalayas-how-fast-did-they-rise.html


However, the Indian plate below the Himalayas would have been accessible both before and after the Flood, and very arguably Nod East of Eden could have been as far East as India.

I would specifically expect Henoch in Nod to come to face only if Himalayas were destroyed - meaning arguably at Doomsday.

The ones finding their way to India after the Flood (in adventures roughly recalled as Ramayana before Babel) would have had a Nod nostalgia, and have preserved the memory of pre-Flood events in the Mahabharata. I think they can have found their way to the right place, so to speak.

So, no, the Toba explosion would have taken place in the early stages of the Flood, and the artefacts are there because the place was inhabited before the Flood.

I think there is more than one topic where Bill Cooper's After the Flood is blameworthy, if that is where Joel Duff has his info on what "creationists believe" though to be fair he says "most" and the pre-Flood non-inhabitation of India is one of them. Not just artefacts from Toba, but also Flores hobbit show otherwise to me./HGL

So, What Are the Possible Solutions?


Creation vs. Evolution Am I Wrong in Assuming a Stable C14 Level for Last Millennia? · So, What Are the Possible Solutions? · New blog on the kid : Assume Twice the Halflife ... · So, Doubling the Halflife and Assuming a Rising C14 Level Doesn't Fix It ...

In 1850 and also 1860, the carbon 14 level was a bit lower than 100 pmC, say 99.819 pmC, fifteen extra years. In 1950, it was down to 97.61, 200 extra years. But if we went by C12 presence in atmosphere as CO2, this dilution would by going from 285 to 320 ppm between 1860 and 1960 rather have predicted sth like 960 extra years, or a carbon 14 level in 1950 of 89 sth pmC. How do we solve this discrepancy? Here are "my five cents":

  • 1) discording measure equipment, so that the 285 ppm are really to low a value?
  • 2) total volume of the atmosphere decreased?
  • 3) much of the added carbon is fresh carbon (with nearer 100 pmC) recycled quicker through more animals and people and fireplaces, only a smaller portion was fossil?
  • 4) an upsurge of C14 production coinciding with the CO2 emissions to counterbalance it partly?
  • 5) carbon 14 is still on the rise?


Here is a short assessment of each:

1) Is not very likely. 1860 is after all the century after Lavoisier.

2) As CO2 and O2 are "communicating vessels" there could be something to this, but the O2 quantity being so much greater, this would not really decrease sufficiently to account for half of the rise 285 to 320 ppm.

3) Possible. The uncanny thing is, this could be abused to further an anti-life agenda in the name of the environment.

4) Big news for me. This would mean, the present 0.34 milliSievert per year from the cosmos is in fact not necessary for the normal, but resulting in a higher than normal production of C14.

5) Interesting. If carbon 14 is still on the rise, this and the historically calibrated dates will give the impression that the halflife is shorter than it is.

I have modelled a rise from 3 pmC at the Flood (2957 BC), but with only present C14 production rate all through. By now we would be at 45 pmC, which would be taken as 100 pmC. And the rise would be so steep that with 5730 years half life, a leather boot from El Alamein would carbon date to the year of Gettysburg battle, and that one to something like Thirty Years War ... in order to get a real view of history, one would have to assume a halflife of c. 2300 - 2800 years, longer the further you go back, not 5730.

New blog on the kid : Examinons une hypothèse qui se trouve contrefactuelle un peu de près
https://nov9blogg9.blogspot.com/2015/10/examinons-une-hypothese-qui-se-trouve.html


This means that, as with the assumption of a steady level, the 5730 years seem to work, if the level is rising, the real halflife must be longer.

And this means, the original levels of the samples must be lower. And this means, the overall rise would have required a less radical temporary rise in C14 production.

Now, if 5) were correct, my pmC levels in New Tables would be wrong, but would this mean the tables were wrong as a calibration?

Check out this little argument:

Marco Polo brought these latter ones from China. In his day magnetite was explained as:

  • element earth
  • under influence of Mars to make it iron
  • and then under influence of Venus to make it attract.


Magnets worked even so, and as said, it was in China they were first used for compasses.


From this one here:

Recipes from Home and Abroad : How to Tunnel Through a Mountain with Pre-Modern Equipment
https://recipesfromhomeandabroad.blogspot.com/2022/01/how-to-tunnel-through-mountain-with-pre.html


In other words, a wrong explanation of what is really going on will not make the use of a thing automatically wrong. Physicians took the pulse and made correct diagnoses based on it when Harvey had not yet discovered pulse was blood running through blood vessels. Conversely, an observedly correct use will not guarantee the correctness of the underlying theory : space travel does not prove heliocentrism.

In cases 1 to 4, my assumptions about carbon 14 levels could still be correct, but in case 5 they wouldn't - but this does not mean it would make the tables flawed.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
St. Polycarp of Smyrna
26.I.2022

mardi 25 janvier 2022

Am I Wrong in Assuming a Stable C14 Level for Last Millennia?


Creation vs. Evolution Am I Wrong in Assuming a Stable C14 Level for Last Millennia? · So, What Are the Possible Solutions? · New blog on the kid : Assume Twice the Halflife ... · So, Doubling the Halflife and Assuming a Rising C14 Level Doesn't Fix It ...

My tables have presumed that since not just c. Birth of Christ, not just Babylonian Captivity, but even since Fall of Troy, carbon 14 levels have been mainly stable. These measured as the carbon 14 in relation to the much vaster amounts of carbon 12, and counted in relation to the modern level or rather pre-industrial level.

Between 1750 and 1950, the carbon years go in fact between 1950 and 1750, if I may say so. This would mean we have 100 pmC in samples from 1750 (or had 100 back in 1950, by now it would be 99.157 pmC) and that we had 97.61 pmC in samples from 1950. For 1850 we both got and expected in 1950 to get 98.798 pmC - what remains after 100 years from an original 100 pmC.

I am not making this up, it's from the Cambridge calibration:

High-Precision Decadal Calibration of the Radiocarbon Time Scale, AD 1950–6000 BC
Minze Stuiver (a1) and Bernd Becker (a2)
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/radiocarbon/article/highprecision-decadal-calibration-of-the-radiocarbon-time-scale-ad-19506000-bc/F1AB60097B0184501418D3EAEAD2EA90


W a i t ... I misread a bit. 1850 samples give a bit more than 100 years in carbon age. 1900 samples still give 100 years, then from 1910 to 1950 it rises to 200 carbon years.

I at least got it right that 1950 samples carbon date to 200 years before 1950, that is to 1750.

So, on average, from 1850 to 1950, the carbon age has not sunk from 100 to 0 carbon years, as the abstract theory would lend to predict, but risen from 115 to 200 carbon years.

And obviously, we can imagine that carbon emissions have sth to do with that. I remind you, carbon 14 levels are not measured as "so and so many tons of pure carbon 14 in the atmosphere" but as carbon 14 in relation to carbon 12. If fossil fuels are not 100 % (carbon 12 and whatever there is of carbon 13), zero carbon 14, as one could expect from "millions of years" the carbon 14 level is at least way lower than 100 pmC. This means carbon 14 gets more diluted the more fossil fuels you get into the atmosphere, hence lowered.

Now, a:b = 100, a:bx = 98.798? One can restate this as 100:1 = 100, 100:x = 98.798?

100 = 98.798*x, 100:98.798 = x?

1.01216623818 - meaning, carbon 12 should be 1.2 percent higher in 1950 than in 1850.

Here is a little thing, this seems to be false. See these CO2 levels?

1860 - 285 ppm
2020 - 410 ppm

Source:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zvFTk42bPYg

But what about 1950?

1960 - 320 ppm

Source:
https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/climate-change-atmospheric-carbon-dioxide

So, 1860 - 1960 = 285 to 320 ppm.

What would 285 with an added 1.2 % be?

285 * 1.01216623818 = 288.4673778813
[288.4673778813 / 285 = 1.01216623818]

Ah, instead of 288.5 ppm we got 320 ...

320:285 = 1.12280701754

An increase of 12.3 %, not of 1.2 %!

How would this normally have affected the carbon 14 level?

100:1.12280701754 = 89.06250000031

1950 should therefore carbon date as 960, not as 200 carbon years ... so, why is it carbon dating as 200 and not 960 carbon years (back in 1950, that is)?

As I am tired, I'll leave off here, but my point is, one of the reasons could be a carbon 14 level still on the rise ... see you next time!

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
Conversion of St. Paul
25.I.2022

PS - all the science presented so far is main stream science and has not yet featured any consequences from or onto my calibration for BC years (you know, like 2957 carbon dated to 40 000 BP or 1935 to 3500), it is only about calibration as given and about pmC implications for time and about the "mathematics of dilution" and the rise of CO2 ... I have not yet started outlining the possible solutions, this is only the problem./HGL

The Bible is As Catholic As the Rosary, the Rosary As Christian As the Bible


The above seems to be a reference to Chesterton, though theoretically there is a slight chance it could be Hilaire Belloc. And I have mislaid the reference, a fairly appropriate thing when citing someone who tried to use a corkscrew as a key, even before the proper use of the corkscrew. I have tried The Catholic Church and Conversion ... ah, here it is:

To a Roman Catholic there is no particular difference between those parts of the religion which Protestants and others accept and those parts which they reject. The dogmas have, of course, their intrinsic theological proportions; but in his feeling they are all one thing. The Mass is as Christian as the Gospel. The Gospel is as Catholic as the Mass. This, I fancy, is the fact which the Protestant world has found it most difficult to understand and about which some of the most unfortunate forms of ill-feeling have appeared.

UPON THIS ROCK
by G.K. Chesterton
http://www.gkc.org.uk/gkc/books/upon-this-rock.html


Well, I recalled Rosary and Bible instead of Mass and Gospel.

Now, imagine for a moment, a Catholic Bishop in Sweden tried (say, back 100 years ago) to forbid the Rosary because Sweden is such a Lutheran country, and told a Catholic "no, you cannot pray the Rosary here, there would of course be no problem if you went to Italy or Spain, but here, we can't have the Rosary, it would be so out of place here ..."

Wouldn't happen. And in fact didn't happen (by the way, in 1922 Sweden was still an Apostolic Vicariate, Albert Bitter resigned and was replaced by Johannes Erik Müller, both born in Germany).

Or, imagine a Catholic Bishop in Texas were saying "Texas is a very macho state ... you can pray the Rosary in California or in Mééééhico, and you can pray the Rosary if you are a woman, but if you are a man, you can't pray the Rosary in Texas!" - You can try the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston or any other one ... it doesn't happen.

Obviously, therefore, it doesn't happen either that the (supposed) Archbishop of Paris says "in Paris you can't be a Young Earth Creationist," ... well, at least officially, when making a pronouncement to the whole see and its suffragan sees that anyone can read if he knows how to look it up.

But I sometimes get a queezy feeling that this is being said like behind closed doors or in private conversations.

In 1920 a Jesuit, Father Émile Mangenot, gave his reasons against the three previous views of the Six-Day-Work, the chronologically Biblical (literal six normal length days or perhaps still also one moment), the gap theory and the day age theory. In stead, he proposed what is basically identic to the framework view. He did so on a reference work, Dictionnaire de Théologie Catholique in the article Hexaméron. Now, this DThC did get an imprimatur, but this does not mean all and any Catholics in Paris are obliged to use Mangenot's version of the Framework Theory, even in Paris, where this work got its imprimatur. In 1968, Paris gave imprimatur or imprimi potest to Rev. Jean Colson's work on the beloved disciple, this does not mean all Catholics in Paris are obliged to take the Gospeller as not identic to the Son of Zebedee or the Beloved Disciple as a Cohen who was not one of the twelve, but had a house in Jerusalem (according to Colson, he was the probable host for the Last Supper - and carrying out the dishes when the twelve shared Christ's first Eucharist). Catholics here are free to believe the Gospeller was one of the twelve, the beloved disciple a fisherman, and similarily, Catholics here are at least free to be Young Earth Creationists. Officially.

That's why it is curious and a bit queezy that I have seen Catholic people, a few years back even hosted by a priest in a Catholic breakfast room for the homeless, who treat Young Earth Creationism as something a Catholic can't do in France or specifically the Archdiocese of Paris at least.

Obviously, they could point out a kind of Catechism by a kind of Pope in 1992 ... and I could respond that Wojtyla for that particular reason was not Catholic and neither was his "cardinal" Ratzinger, and neither of them were or became Popes, but if so, it would be illogic to insinuate to me I could try the thing in Sweden instead ...

And, if so, they would be showing they don't even believe the Council of Trent anymore (Session V said Adam was individual, a kind of Assumptionist priest openly wrote "Adam and Eve didn't exist as you and I do") which would encourage Catholics still believing Catholicism to leave the diocese.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
Conversion of St. Paul
25.I.2022

Conversio sancti Pauli Apostoli, quae fuit anno secundo ab Ascensione Domini.

lundi 24 janvier 2022

Homo erectus soloensis


Two reasons to believe these guys were pre-Flood.

1) All dates are K-Ar dates and K-Ar gets inflated with flood waters cooling lava and trapping argon (not exclusive to Flood, though)
2) Slightly simian traits in the outer parts of the ear.

When We First Talked
11th Feb. 2021 | PBS Eons
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eCW0zyDGuXc


I commented with a note it at 9:18

// 9:18 Homo erectus from Ngandong and even more so Heidelbergian from Sima de los Huesos, Neanderthals, have human like hearing abilities. //

In other words, Homo erectus had some ear traits that were slightly to the simian direction, though overall human. I obviously don't buy the narrative that we evolved from apes via Homo erectus and his likes. But this leaves the question why ... I think it could be explained this way:

Monkeying around with human embryos?
by Dr Robert Carter, Published: 25 January 2022 (GMT+10)
Originally published in a CMI newsletter, July 2021
https://creation.com/monkeying-around-with-human-embryos


I hold that from Nodian times we have:

1) Genesis 4 with Genesis 6:5,11 and Mahabharata (the correct but very slimmed down version, the ample, but very added to and distorted version, at least as to some aspects of theology)
2) men who lived outside or at least appear dead outside Nodian city scapes
3) and some results of the wickedness, though not the labs.

Matthew 24:37 tell us, the end times are going to be a repeat of some such wickedness./HGL

mercredi 19 janvier 2022

Craig and Swamidass


CMI has the same issues with these, as I have with Old Earth Catholics. I'll start linking to both of the CMI reviews ...

Seeking the First Man, Adam
Review of In Quest of the Historical Adam by William Lane Craig,
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, Grand Rapids, MI, 2021
reviewed by Ben Kissling | Published: 20 January 2022 (GMT+10)
https://creation.com/historical-adam-craig


A ‘genealogical’ Adam and Eve?
A review of The Genealogical Adam and Eve: The surprising science of universal ancestry by S. Joshua Swamidass,
Intervarsity Press, Downers Grove, IL
Published: 25 February 2020 (GMT+10) | Reviewed by Robert Carter and John Sanford
https://creation.com/review-swamidass-the-genealogical-adam-and-eve


The very idea that such a genre as “mytho-history” even exists can also be called into question. The only other example of literature included in this unique genre is the text called the Eridu Genesis. The scholar Craig depends upon, Thorkild Jacobsen, cobbled this text together from three separate ancient fragments from different times in history (p. 152). In other words, Jacobsen modified what little survives of these ancient texts to reconstruct what he guesses was a cohesive ancient myth and then makes up a new genre to put it in. Craig then weakly claims that ancient Greek myths like Odyssey and Iliad count as mytho-history too.

According to Craig’s own presentation of the subject, the category of “myth” does not need the extra designation “history,” since the societies that believed and maintained ancient myths always believed they were true and had some historical roots. Craig later identifies the very same Greek myths he just claimed were “mytho-history” as “paradigm examples of myth.” (p. 39) His readers might rightly wonder what exactly is the distinction between the genres of “myth” and “mytho-history” in the first place.


Not only did the society Homer lived in (Homeric society could mean something else, the one he described) believe the Iliad and Odyssey were mainly historic (I would put them at more docu-fiction than strict documentary, as person Hektor could have been made up to give a "reg'lar bloke's" view of the war and as what happened to Ulysses when no one was watching who survived later, except himself, could involve Homer's fictions as much as Ulysses' own), but the society about 800 years later, in 1st C. AD believed that too, and also for the Aeneid (some may have been aware Dido's placing as contemporary to Aeneas was anachronistic) ... and Christians believed this too.

What is St. Augustine's first line of argument against Romans saying one should go back to the old gods? In The City of God he says, first, Alaric sparing the ones who took refuge in churches is a novelty and then .... "look how Athena forsook Troy, despite all of their veneration" ... book 1, chapter 3.

History is not usually inspired, and all sorts of error can creep into all sorts of historians. One being error of explanation ... apart from Athena's aid to Ulysses, there is very little in the Iliad or Odyssey which is attributed to gods and which cannot be reduced easily to either natural explanations or the true God, or (especially Apollo of Iliad I) a devil. Athena helped Ulysses to work deceit, not consistent with the true God or His angels, and "she" helped him find his home and get back to his wife, not inconsistent with the true God. But not totally out of the question for a devil either, if he was expecting a damned soul in return for his favours. On the other hand, Hercules and Theseus are more like the human misery we would expect from a contract with the devil. Any other agency attributed to the gods in Homer's two epics is so easy to classify that it doesn't interfere with a Christian taking this as history. This, meaning the parts observable on earth. Obviously, the "conference on Olympus" is part of Homer's false explanations. And if one thing isn't classified as easily as the rest, this doesn't necessarily make it unreal.

I have already mentioned, some seem to have attacked literal belief in Genesis from the idea that the essence of Paganism is in believing things like Iliad and Odyssey basically true - when it isn't.

So much for Thorkild Jacobsen. And CMI would have been wiser not to call the Homeric epics "ancient Greek myths like Odyssey and Iliad" ... they are history, with some derogations to entertainment, and as viewed by a believing pagan. It is very possible that Hercules viewed himself as the son of Zeus, it is very possible his contemporaries viewed him so, but that doesn't make him so, and it doesn't make him a myth just because his supposed father Zeus overthrowing Kronos and making him spew out the swallowed siblings is one.

There could be non-Christians who viewed parts of the Bible as real history, only as mistold through "wrongly" assuming the Biblical theology. I think there are occultists who take this view of Moses and of Jesus ... well, they are doing to our history what we have been doing to the Pagan histories. Herodotus considered the Trojan War as the first event in properly recorded history and Eratosthenes made a chronology reaching up to Alexander with items like "fall of Troy" and "return of the Heraclids" (to Sparta). We have believed the dates and the names, but not the divinities involved. I am obviously not recommending anyone being a non-Christian or occultist or taking this kind of liberties with Moses and Jesus, I mentioned them for the sake of illustration. I do however recommend believing the Iliad, in its history, but not its theology.

Now, let's get to more urgent matters. Do we all descend from Adam?

  • 5) The second half of the book discusses archaeological and paleontological data showing that Neanderthals, Denisovans, H. Heidelbergensis (and possibly some specimens of Homo erectus) were in fact quite similar to modern humans in every respect except minor differences in physical appearance.
  • 7) Craig accepts that Adam and Eve existed in real history and (unlike Joshua Swamidass) he affirms that they were the ancestors of all humans.


Now, what does this mean? Is Adam only ancestral to all humans who live now, or is he also ancestral to Neanderthals and Denisovans?

If we consider that all humans who live now descend from Adam but also from Neanderthals and Denisovans, and also from pre-Adamite Homo sapiens, Adam is not really the first man.

If we consider all men who live now as well as Neanderthals and Denisovans* descend from Adam, yes, then he is the first man.

But if Adam is the first man and the first man who sinned and got condemned to death, and he lived before the dates (obtained by carbon dating) given for Neanderthals and Denisovans or even before the dates obtained by K-Ar, how can the transmission between the events in Genesis 3 be a historic one?

On the other side, if Adam lived 6000 or 7000 years ago, and the transmission is historic, but there were (according to the dates) lots of men before him, how is he ancestral to all men? Including Pre-Columbians in Americas, supposedly arriving 13 000 years before that, or Aborigines of Australia, arriving there 33 000 years before that?

It is not surprising that Old Earth creationism is the view of some Racist organisations, like the KKK. They doubt that Adam could be ancestral to the Blacks ...

So, to have Adam being both ancestral to all men and an autobiographic historian faithfully transmitted to Moses, we basically need to have Neanderthals and Denisovans within 6000 or at least 7000 years as well - which we can if we explain the carbon dates as due to a lower (and very much lower) initial content** of C14 in the atmosphere. This is what Craig wants to avoid, but really can't, if he admits that Genesis 3 is history and that Adam is ancestral to all men. Which by the way, as Catholics we have to admit, however much some of us might lean to old earth. William Lane Craig therefore equals the typical Catholic Old Earther, except he has been thinking it through sufficiently long to begin to see there is a conundrum.

In fact, Swamidass is proposing the scenario I have seen with some US Old Earth Catholics - like TheOFloinn. I will not take the part where I found out, I'll take his latest repeat offense:

Dr. Coyne's primary error seems to be a quantifier shift. He and his fundamentalist bedfellows appear to hold that the statement:

A: "There is one man from whom all humans are descended"
is equivalent to the statement:
B: "All humans are descended from [only] one man."

But this logical fallacy hinges on an equivocation of "one," failing to distinguish "one [out of many]" from "[only] one." Traditional doctrine requires only A, not B: That all humans share a common ancestor, not that they have no other ancestors. For example, all Americans inheriting the name Hammontree are descended from a single couple in colonial Tidewater Virginia [Jonathon (ca 1693-1758)nand Mary (1697-1726)]. But of course, this does not preclude additional lines of descent. Jonathan and Mary were not all alone in Virginia. Iis easy to see how a group of people may have a common ancestor without having only one ancestor.


Now, here is where this breaks down and where The OFloinn is defining traditional doctrine inadequately, citing the CMI paper on Swamidass:

Under the TGAE model, we have three classes of people to consider. First, we have Adam and Eve and their unmixed descendants. Second, we have the people outside the Garden (POGs) who have not yet mixed with those from the Garden. And third, we have a mixture of the two groups. According to Joshua, each of these groups has a special status (table 1). The POGs are genetically, culturally, and developmentally human. Thus, when Adam and Eve were expelled from Eden and began to mix with the POGs, there were no real barriers to gene flow. The TGAE model imagines that Adam and Eve’s genes freely blended into the much larger POG population, diluting their DNA to the point of disappearance, yet allowing Adam and Eve to eventually become the genealogical ancestors of everyone on earth. Thus, the special quality of Adam and Eve eventually permeated into all humans worldwide, at least by the time of Jesus. This is required, as it allows New Testament authors to assert that Adam and Eve were the father and mother of us all (at least all still alive at that time). At that point, every human being on the planet had become ‘infected’ with the special humanness, and so were subject to the condemnation of sin and were eligible to enter heaven. It is not clear if POGs had souls or if they could go to heaven. [Omitting the table 1] The unmixed POGs would have been in the world for a long time before and a long time after Adam and Eve, and very reasonably could still exist. What was the spiritual status of an evolved POG who had no genealogical connection to the Garden? This is not an idle question. Joshua requires that all people, from the rainforests of Brazil to the jungles of Sumatra to the isolated Sentinel islands, had to have a genealogical link to Adam and Eve by the time of Christ. Yet, even if some traveller made it to North Sentinel in the remote past, and was not killed like the missionary John Chau was recently,4 there is no guarantee that they left children, and no guarantee that the genealogy of those children took over the population. Thus, for most of human history, and possibly still today, there would have been human beings on this earth who were more fully “human” than others. We are very troubled by this proposition.


It is also very problematic to believe any kind of human could have acquired human characteristics by evolution. And it is fairly "wise" of Swamidass to avoid the issue of whether they have souls.

Scholastically speaking, it is impossible for someone to have language and thought without having a soul. The alternative "[unmixed] People Outside the Garden" have souls would therefore mean Adam was not the first man.

But suppose they didn't have souls, this would definitely mean that they weren't human and could not behave like humans. The fact that evolution believing and atheist biologists imagine we can behave like humans without (any of us) having souls is not a thing to imitate and even less to imitate partially, making souls and the option of paradise an added extra not really part of human nature. If someone from the garden interbred with a soulless "POG" this would involve not just religious bad affiliation, but also the rape part, if not the infertility part, when it comes to bestiality. Without souls, one isn't people and can't consent. Even supposing the people from the garden bestowed a soul on spouses they took, this would really have involved raping "POGs" to make them human.

Given that we both know Neanderthals and Denisovans have left genetic markers in us and that we know they were human, we can safely say, this means Neanderthals and Denisovans would also descend from Adam - or he would not have been the first man. BUT this means taking them into the timeline of Biblical chronology and therefore to break with the "certitudes" of modern dating methods. On pain, obviously, of otherwise making Genesis 3 a very distant and uncertain retelling of what happened, or a prophecy, which, unlike the six days, no one is claiming for Genesis 3.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
Sts Marius and Martha***
19.I.2022

PS - I took on mainly the version in which non-Adamites were only anatomically human, but soulless. However, the idea that mankind had 10 000 ancestors in Adam's time of whom Adam and Eve were only two has its definite problems too. Not in the narrative as a pure narrative, but in relation to the theological perspectives opened by NT comment, like St. Paul. "People from outside the garden" dying is problematic through "through one man, sin entered the world and through sin death" - but suppose we got around this by assuming he meant only "penal death" while physical human death could have existed nevertheless (as said, problematic, and I am not buying it), we still have the question why rational humans who were not tainted by Adam's sin would be so attracted to his kin that by intermarriage they forsook their own freedom from original sin. As obviously what it means to call Adam the first man, rather than one of the first men, and why mankind should be cursed for the sake of only one ancestor out of 10 000 rather than, as in ordinary theology, for the sake of the sin of the soul male ancestor in his generation and that the first./HGL

* I do not think Denisovans and Heidelbergians are two different populations. From Denisovans, we have a genome, from Heidelbergians a morphology and from Antecessor men in Atapuerca we have a population matching fairly well both Denisovan genome and Heidelbergian morphology.

** This would partly mean simply lower in percentages. If overall CO2 content was 15 times higher before the Flood, I'm not saying it was, this would automatically have made the C14 content 100 pmC/15, supposing the original content in absolute quantity was similar. The 6.667 pmC would give 22400 extra years for our carbon daters. I think the pre-Flood content was lower than that, and not necessarily for the sake of possibly 15 times higher overall CO2. This is one of my reasons to place Neanderthals and Denisovans, with most recent carbon dates for actual body parts at 40 000 BP, before the Flood. After the Flood, C14 content was rising, very rapidly.

*** Romae, via Cornelia, sanctorum Martyrum Marii et Marthae conjugum, et filiorum Audifacis et Abachum, nobilium Persarum; qui Romam, temporibus Claudii Principis, ad orationem venerant. Ex eis vero, post toleratos fustes, equuleum, ignes, ungues ferreos manuumque praecisionem, Martha in Nympha necata est; ceteri sunt decollati, et corpora eorum incensa.

mardi 18 janvier 2022

Dear Dr. Sarfati, what does Scripture and Tradition Actually Mean?


French Catholics Usually NOT Young Earth Creationist - Why? · Are Normal French People Allowed to Look? · To French Fans of San Antonio · Are Some Catholics Being Taught That Young Earth Creationism Involves the Heresy "Sola Scriptura" [?] · Dear Dr. Sarfati, what does Scripture and Tradition Actually Mean?

First, I am glad you denounce the fraudulent claim that literal belief in Genesis 1 to 11 began with Ellen Gould White. I am now perusing her lies against the Catholic Church, and as Satan is a liar and accuser, I can safely say that she may have not at all been possessed, she was just a very biassed reader of people like Wylie and d'Aubigne, whose Luther romance, from childhood to Wartburg (it's interrupted after Wartburg to peep at Zwingli) is really magnificent as a romance, a bit like Washington Irving for Columbus, but fairly evasive about what Catholics were arguing.

The History of Interpretation of Genesis 1–11
Refuting Compromise, Chapter 3 (plus part of Chapter 8), 3rd Edn
by Jonathan Sarfati | Published: 18 January 2022 (GMT+10)
https://creation.com/history-interpretation-genesis-refuting-compromise-3


Now, let's get down to a claim you make, not the least as crude as d'Aubigne or Wylie. Which I appreciate.

“Traditional” churches such as Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches hold that the combined testimony of the church fathers is on a par with Scripture itself. A common argument is that they were closer to the Apostles than we, so they know better.

However, this doesn’t necessarily follow. Paul’s letters were written largely to correct error in churches founded by the Apostles themselves. Furthermore, as the church became primarily Gentile, knowledge of Hebrew diminished, so that even some of the leading church fathers knew no Hebrew at all, including the highly influential Augustine (see below for more on Augustine). Still, many of the fathers had tremendous wisdom, which showed in the battles against anti-Trinitarian heresies.


What it means is not that each Church Father is a hagiographer, it means the Church Fathers taken together in what they agree on is a safe rule for the Christian faith.

Example : if all patristic writers had agreed the Tower of Babel were a kind of skyscraper, I would have had to scrap my idea Nimrod was aiming at a space rocket and God allowed that project to be fulfilled from Cape Canaveral and Bojkonur with a 4500 year delay, as He also allowed other individual projects (mentioned in the Bible and in Hebrew tradition) to be fulfilled (some wanted to get to heaven safe from any floods or disasters, well, Christ opened the pearly gates, and some wanted to kill God, they did so on Calvary). I drew a sigh of relief when I realised that some had taken the line it was a skyline of a towered wall. Because Church Fathers' unanimous is not an authority I'd like to brave.

Now, the parallel to the Bible books is in fact rather clear, namely that nothing that all apostolic churches agreed on can be wrong. And it is from these that we have the canon of most books in the NT (and some were disputed to the councils of Carthage and Rome, between Nicaea I and Constantinople I).

Then again, St. Paul wrote in response to appeals from Church leaders. Some of their diocesan laymen had gone wrong (notably often in Corinth!) and so he gives them admonitions to hand on. But as we claim, the Church Fathers never went wrong all of them together (you cite the majority view - recognised by St. Thomas as such - that creation days and rest happened within 168 hours, which we both take to be correct), so you too would allow that no fault happened across all of the apostolic churches in the time of the apostles.

Apart from that, I'd like to say simply "good work" but I stand somewhat questioning about your stating Julius Africanus had Christ born Anno Mundi 5500. You see, I have done some research, with the help of my friend Dean Stephan Borgehammar (Theol. fac. Lund) into the sources of the Roman martyrology for Christmas day, which says He was born after the flesh in Anno Mundi 5199. The late medieval version of Usuard got this addition from Historia scholastica, which in turn got the version of St. Jerome, who, in his turn made a good summing up of different details, but from Creation to Abraham followed Julius Africanus who had 2262 years Creation to Flood, 942 Flood to Abraham. In other words, he used a LXX without the second Cainan for Genesis 11.

Then again, there are parts where those who lived closest should be taken as knowing best : that's how I'd argue for not just Bible canon, but also Sacrifice of the Mass, also details of Apostolic Succession.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
Chair of St. Peter in Rome
18.I.2022

Or obviously, for St. Peter not just leaving Jerusalem for Antioch, but also later Antioch for Rome./HGL

dimanche 16 janvier 2022

More Thorough Answer to Rev. Nicanor Austriaco? OP


The Fittingness of Evolutionary Creation
Rev. Nicanor Austriaco, OP
https://cpb-us-e1.wpmucdn.com/sites.providence.edu/dist/4/182/files/2020/05/Thomistic-Evolution-22.pdf


Now, it is a greater perfection for a thing to be good in itself and also the cause of goodness in others, than only to be good in itself. Therefore God so governs things, that He makes some of them to be causes of others in government, like a master, who not only imparts knowledge to his pupils, but gives also the faculty of teaching others

(Summa theologiæ, I.103.6).

Yes, let's take the example of Apostles. God as Man chose them. He also chose to instruct for instance Sts. Barnabas or Mark through them. And this in turn means, there is a hierarchy.

God did not chose St. Mark to instruct St. Peter, though. There is a hierarchy in the not just being faithful, but also producing faith, and that hierarchy is not reversed.

However, the problem with Evolution is, it involves a reversal of what is the hierarchy of creation. God chose man to convey life or death to earthly creation below man. According to Evolution, God instead chose subhuman creation, as well as death (that's what "natural selection" means!) to produce man.

In the hierarchy as seen by a Creationist, man's sin produces mutations that lead Yersinia pestis to become mortal. In the hierarchy as seen by Evolutionists, mutations in bacteria lead up to Eucaryotes and from one-celled Eucaryotes to man. I think I have made my case and refuted the main point of Rev. Nicanor./HGL

jeudi 13 janvier 2022

Are Some Catholics Being Taught That Young Earth Creationism Involves the Heresy "Sola Scriptura"


French Catholics Usually NOT Young Earth Creationist - Why? · Are Normal French People Allowed to Look? · To French Fans of San Antonio · Are Some Catholics Being Taught That Young Earth Creationism Involves the Heresy "Sola Scriptura" [?] · Dear Dr. Sarfati, what does Scripture and Tradition Actually Mean?

As a Catholic, and as a former Lutheran, prior to that as a child independent and unbaptised believer in Christianity, I am no fan of the five solas.

And obviously, some Protestant organisations of Creation apologetics have tacked the question on to the first of the five solas, the sola Scriptura.

But this does not mean, Protestant "sola Scriptura" involved in Creationism adequately equals the Protestant Heresy "sola Scriptura" as condemned by the Council of Trent.

The thing is, when a Protestant affirms "sola Scriptura" only parts of what he affirms is what the Council of Trent condemned.

The Protestant affirms:

  • The Bible is God's word. It cannot involve any error, at least not in the original autographs, arguably not even in all the now remaining text versions.*
  • The Bible is usually clear.


We agree.

They also add:

  • Nothing BUT the Bible text remains of Christ's teaching ... unless it can be confirmed fairly directly from the Bible.
  • Therefore no line of tradition, and no lineage of magisterial authority can have any similar authority as the Bible, anything that purports to this needs to be carefully tested by the Bible and rejected if it doesn't fits.
  • Where the Bible is not immediately clear it usually - as it would need as per previous - involves clues for those really learned people who pursue the question, and when not, we are not meant to understand, and no tradition or magisterium can foist an understanding on us, they cannot oblige as the Bible can oblige.


This is the part that we condemn. Instead we affirm:

  • The Bible tells us, Christ founded a Church with a well organised hierarchy and magisterium. It is also through this Church we have access to the Bible.
  • He promised to remain with His Church to Doomsday, specifically as She fulfils the Great Commission.
  • The things said over the centuries, repeated again and again, by the Church, constitute a Tradition from the Apostles to which we are bound.
  • This remains binding even when the Bible text as such would be unclear or open to two or three different interpretations.
  • It also remains binding for the very few things that are not directly found in the Bible - like Sunday worship, sign of the Cross, words of absolution, images being licit in the New Covenant, Christ and Mary providing first examples (Shroud of Turin, Icon by St. Luke)


This is how I understand the condemnation, now let's check if the wording of the council of Trent matches my understanding.

The most pertinent part of Second Decree of Session IV is:

Furthermore, in order to restrain petulant spirits, It decrees, that no one, relying on his own skill, shall,--in matters of faith, and of morals pertaining to the edification of Christian doctrine, --wresting the sacred Scripture to his own senses, presume to interpret the said sacred Scripture contrary to that sense which holy mother Church,--whose it is to judge of the true sense and interpretation of the holy Scriptures,--hath held and doth hold; or even contrary to the unanimous consent of the Fathers; even though such interpretations were never (intended) to be at any time published. Contraveners shall be made known by their Ordinaries, and be punished with the penalties by law established.


Session IV, CONCERNING THE EDITION AND USE OF THE SACRED BOOKS, SECOND DECREE
Celebrated on the eighth day of the month of April, in the year 1546.
http://www.thecounciloftrent.com/ch4.htm


Is there anywhere that says that it is wrong to say "the Bible is usually clear"?

Not even "relying on his own skill" or "to his own senses" since an added condition for condemning the action is, when the interpretation conflicts with that of the Church. And the action is qualified as "wresting" ... not the same thing as a natural reading. There are indeed Protestant traditions of men, notably denial of the Holy Mass, where "wresting" is the right verb, and the natural sense of the Scripture does not warrant the interpretation of any Protestant where it conflicts with this or other Catholic dogmas.

But nevertheless, some seem to have concluded that saying "Genesis 5 and 11 are no-brainers, the first man was created 2000 to 3000 years prior to the birth of Abraham, depending on text" falls under the heading "relying on his own skill" since II Peter 3:15, f. reads:

And account the longsuffering of our Lord, salvation; as also our most dear brother Paul, according to the wisdom given him, hath written to you: As also in all his epistles, speaking in them of these things; in which are certain things hard to be understood, which the unlearned and unstable wrest, as they do also the other scriptures, to their own destruction.

So, if St. Paul was somewhat hard to understand in Romans 3 and Tyndale wrested it to his own destruction** (unless he repented in the earthly flames, before arriving to eternal ones), does that mean Genesis 5 and Genesis 11 have to be unclear as well? No, of course not. Biblical history may contain a few snags, but not as many as that.

After all, a manual of Biblical history, the Historia Scholastica, was translated into popular languages, both French and Flemish, and was diffused among the people. By the Catholic Church. The tradition from back then, the magisterium from back then clearly thought that Biblical history was an edification and not a trap for the unlearned.

Cardinal St. Robert Bellarmine not only thought the miracle in Joshua 10 happened, but also that the Biblical description of it was a valid key to cosmology. Dr. Robert Sungenis has gone over those aspects of the process of Galileo, so St. Robert having or at least claiming to have Biblical support is not doubtful. It is also not doubtful that Galileo at times had expressed the theory that the Bible is only inerrant where it touches on salvation, not where it touches on science - a theory not exactly that of Fundies, and part of what he was suspected of, though neither process seems to have taken up his correspondence with Christine, Duchess of Lorraine, where he expressed that.

So, no, being a Fundie about Biblical history is simply not what the Council of Trent intended to condemn or worded the condemnation as extending to.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
Octave of Epiphany
13.I.2022

* There are two views on Emmaus that are possible : it really was sixty furlongs or stades (12 km) but was rebuilt around the tombs of Cleophas and the other disciple at a distance of hundred sixty furlongs (32 km), or, the correct text of Luke 24:13 is in fact "hundred sixty furlongs" or "stades" as one extant Syriac manuscript has. Amwaz is 32 km from Jerusalem. As you walk, you walk c. 5 km / h, and this means 12 km would take a bit more than two hours and 32 km a bit more than 6 hours at that pace.

** Latomus did not just sentence Tyndale to the stake, he also debated him fairly thoroughly previous to that:

Jacob Latomus His Three Books of Confutations Against William Tyndale
|On Web archive, page taken down by Tyndale Society, which still exists|
https://web.archive.org/web/20080517104730/http://www.tyndale.org/Reformation/1/latomus1.html

mercredi 12 janvier 2022

Corded Ware and Battle Axe? Predecessors?


Age of Mustatils · Corded Ware and Battle Axe? Predecessors?

I'm making a table similar to previous, based on same two tables from earlier:

Creation vs. Evolution : New Tables
https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2020/08/new-tables.html


Creation vs. Evolution : LXX without II Cainan
https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2019/12/lxx-without-ii-cainan.html


III - IV,
End of Babel to Genesis XIV (only end of)

Reu
died 2087 BC
Terah
born 2085 BC

2064 BC
75.4934 pmC, so dated as 4364 BC

Funnelbeaker culture
begins "4300 BC"

2041 BC
76.6964 pmC, so dated as 4241 BC
2019 BC
77.8962 pmC, so dated as 4069 BC

Abraham
born 2015 BC

1996 BC
79.0927 pmC, so dated as 3946 BC
1974 BC
80.2859 pmC, so dated as 3774 BC

Serug
died 1964 BC
Nahor
died 1956 BC

1952 BC
81.476 pmC, so dated as 3652 BC
1929 BC
82.6619 pmC, so dated as 3479 BC

IV - V,
Genesis 14 to Joseph in Egypt

1935 BC
82.73 pmC, so dated as 3485 BC
Pitted Ware culture
begins "3500 BC"

Isaac
born 1915 BC
1913 BC
83.1967 pmC, so dated as 3413 BC

Globular Amphora culture
begins "3400 BC"

1890 BC
83.6622 pmC, so dated as 3390 BC

Terah
died 1880 BC

1868 BC
84.1262 pmC, so dated as 3318 BC

Jacob
born 1855 BC

1845 BC
84.5892 pmC, so dated as 3245 BC

Abraham
died 1840 BC

1823 BC
85.0509 pmC, so dated as 3173 BC
1801 BC
85.5174 pmC, so dated as 3101 BC
1778 BC
85.9766 pmC, so dated as 3028 BC
1756 BC
86.4346 pmC, so dated as 2956 BC

Corded Ware culture
begins "2900 BC"

Isaac
died 1735 BC
1734 BC
86.8913 pmC, so dated as 2884 BC

Jacob
enters Egypt 1725 BC

1711 BC
87.3468 pmC, so dated as 2811 BC

Jacob
died 1708 BC

V - VI,
Joseph to birth of Moses (beginning and middle of)

1700 BC
87.575 pmC, so dated as 2800 BC
Battle Axe culture
begins "2800 BC"
Funnelbeaker culture
Globular Amphora culture
both end "2800 BC"

1678 BC
89.4653 pmC, so dated as 2598 BC
1655 BC
91.4498 pmC, so dated as 2395 BC

Corded Ware culture
ends "2350 BC"

Pitted Ware culture
Battle Axe culture
both end "2300 BC"

1633 BC
93.3283 pmC, so dated as 2203 BC


Honours to a video by the family of Nick Barksdale, which brought up the two cultures mentioned and predecessors:

The Battle Axe culture and Indo European Migrations
9th of Jan. 2022 | Study of Antiquity and the Middle Ages
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1uZh7J0M3k


Here is to help him, if you like:

https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-nick-barksdale-his-family?utm_campaign=p_cp+share-sheet&utm_medium=copy_link_all&utm_source=customer

mardi 11 janvier 2022

Age of Mustatils


Age of Mustatils · Corded Ware and Battle Axe? Predecessors?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mustatil

The mustatils first came to the attention of researchers in the 1970s. Excavation of the platform of one mustatil revealed a chamber at the center containing pieces of cattle skulls, which are believed to be the first evidence of a cattle cult in the Arabian Peninsula. Radiocarbon dating of the skulls revealed that the mustatil, and maybe the others, was built between 5300 and 5000 BCE, during the Holocene Humid Phase, a time when the area was a grassland that went through frequent droughts. This would make the mustatils one of the oldest-known large-scale ritual landscapes in the world.[1][3][4] The research was funded by the Royal Commission for Al-'Ula.[4]


Let's find out when this really was ...

Creation vs. Evolution : New Tables
https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2020/08/new-tables.html


Creation vs. Evolution : LXX without II Cainan
https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2019/12/lxx-without-ii-cainan.html


2220 BC
68.0023 pmC, so dated as 5420 BC

Peleg
died 2217 BC

2198 BC
69.2256 pmC, so dated as 5248 BC

Eber
died 2186 BC

2175 BC
69.4483 pmC, so dated as 5175 BC

Nahor
born 2164 BC

2153 BC
70.6677 pmC, so dated as 5003 BC

Reu & Serug
alive all this time.


So, between the real dates 2220 and 2153 BC, in the lifetimes of Reu and Serug, in the partial lifetimes of Peleg, Eber, Nahor (the one who was grandfather to Abraham).

Let's recall : idolatry was invented in the time of Serug.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
Pope St. Hyginus
11.I.2022

jeudi 6 janvier 2022

670 Actual Years = 32 000 or 4000 Carbon Years? Both.


My C14 Calibration, Has it Any Stability? · 670 Actual Years = 32 000 or 4000 Carbon Years? Both.

I went over the article:

Φιλολoγικά/Philologica : Le premier or, chronologie des pages 42-43 récalibré
https://filolohika.blogspot.com/2017/02/le-premier-or-chronologie-des-pages-42.html


and came up with:

Φιλολoγικά/Philologica : Le premier or revisité
https://filolohika.blogspot.com/2022/01/le-premier-or-revisite.html


The time span between 2957 BC (Flood) and 1610 BC (c. 20 years before death of Sesostris III, whom I assume to be the childkilling pharao, and before birth of Moses) can be divided into nearly equal halves around 2287 BC. 670 from Flood to that year, 677 from that year to twenty years before the birth of Moses.

The former goes from "40 000 BP" to "6000 BC" and the latter from "6000 BC" to "2000 BC". "38 000 BC" - "6000 BC" = "32 000" carbon years, and "6000 BC" - "2000 BC" = "4000" carbon years.

38000  6000  2000
-2957  2287  1610
=35043  3713   390


But how does this work? Am I presuming the halflife was faster before, and speed of light too? No.

I am simply assuming the original carbon 14 content of samples was 1.279 pmC in 2957, 63.387 pmC in 2287 and 95.201 pmC in 1610 BC. 670 years going from 1.279 to 63.387 pmC, a net rise of 62.108 pmC points, and 677 years to go from 63.387 to 95.201 pmC, a net rise of 31.814 pmC points.

But the 62.108 points give so many more years than the 31.814 points, not just double?

Yes, once one is up in 63.387 pmC, you cannot rise to twice that, in the rise to 100 pmC. It only gives 3713 extra years, less than a halflife.

But from 1.279 to 63.387 pmC, you do more than just one doubling - meaning the original must add more than just one halflife more than those 3713 extra years.

1.279 (1) 2.558 (2) 5.116 (3) 10.232 (4) 20.464 (5) 40.928
5 * 5730 = 28 650 - not very far from 32 000. 28 650 + 3713 = 32 363.

Meanwhile, the additions of carbon 14 into the atmosphere are faster the first half than the second half. Of the first half, I consider them faster the first 401 years than later. C. 10 to 11 times as fast. Adding carbon 14 takes cosmic rays adding radioactivity, and some gets to the lower atmosphere or ground instead of forming C14 in the very high atmosphere. This time coincides with the ice age, because lower atmosphere ionising particles cause colder climate (not saying this was the only cause) and it also coincides with human lifespans degrading. Radioactivity going down to ground hurts genomes.

Now look at this:

Over-ill rejected

Most secular scientists have rejected over-ill as implausible because there is little, if any evidence, to support it. Multiple random diseases, which are in any case most often species-specific, would have affected only local to regional populations at best. This wouldn’t explain the hemisphere-wide extinctions of some animal groups.6 Some sort of global hyper-disease affecting many different species has been proposed. However, it is difficult to imagine any disease selectively killing off large animals while sparing both man and smaller animals. The only possible modern global-disease analogue, the West Nile Virus, could not selectively target the large animals and generally provides no support for over-ill.


Over-kill, over-chill, or over-ill?
Why a mass extinction at the end of the Ice Age?
by Mike Oard | This article is from
Creation 43(1):40–43, January 2021
https://creation.com/kill-chill-ill


Would seem one of the assets with being small is, you can creep under rocks and hide from radioation a bit better. And thickskinned animals survived best. Thick skin also protects the genome.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
Epiphany
6.I.20212022

dimanche 2 janvier 2022

My C14 Calibration, Has it Any Stability?


My C14 Calibration, Has it Any Stability? · 670 Actual Years = 32 000 or 4000 Carbon Years? Both.

The other day, I looked at a some years old essay on gold from Bulgaria.

Φιλολoγικά/Philologica : Le premier or, chronologie des pages 42-43 récalibré
https://filolohika.blogspot.com/2017/02/le-premier-or-chronologie-des-pages-42.html


And I took the dates as calibrated by me then, and I made a new calibration as per my New Tables.

I'll not give the results, I did that on a quora answer which will come to a blog of mine; I'll just say the tables have changed because ...

1) New blog on the kid : Avec un peu d'aide de Fibonacci ... j'ai une table, presque correcte
http://nov9blogg9.blogspot.com/2015/10/avec-un-peu-daide-de-fibonacci-jai-une.html

[aussi sur http://ppt.li/377 comme lien abrégé de celui en haut] *

2) New blog on the kid : Raffiner et finir ma table de Fibonacci?
http://nov9blogg9.blogspot.com/2017/02/raffiner-et-finir-ma-table-de-fibonacci.html


Et la nouvelle table selon:

New blog on the kid : Table modifiée, analysée par convergence avec l'a priori
http://nov9blogg9.blogspot.com/2017/02/table-modifiee-analysee-par-convergence.html


And it referred to this post:

Creation vs. Evolution : If Göbekli Tepe is Tower of Babel ...
http://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2017/02/if-gobekli-tepe-is-tower-of-babel.html


... in which I posed the question : Is 2733 BC a good Biblical date for Tower of Babel?

In other words, the dates that are aberrant by a few centuries in my old calibrations are so because I hadn't got a firm Biblical date for Babel, though I was already considering Göbekli Tepe as the good corresponding reality of archaeology.

Since then, I have taken and still take the stance that Babel was between Noah's death 350 after the Flood and Peleg's birth in 401 after the Flood.** This has changed the tables, I am not changing it back./HGL

PS, as to principles too, I had to update a comment section under a Kent Hovind video, and that with a dialogue from 29.IV.2022 - here are the two posts, first one being updated : ... updating Hovind on C14 · ... updating Kent Hovind on C14, part 2/HGL

* An URL burner no longer linking to any of my shortened URL's, alas ... ** In other words 2607 and 2556 BC.

samedi 1 janvier 2022

Bonum Festum Circumcisionis Domini


Christifidelibus et aliquibus aliis exopto./HGL

Circumcisio Domini nostri Jesu Christi, et Octava Nativitatis ejusdem.