samedi 31 août 2024

Was the Drainage System of the Rhine There in the Preflood World?


Characterisation and evolution of the River Rhine system
Sedimentary Geology and Quaternary Research · by F Preusser · 2008
https://www.sedimentologie.uni-freiburg.de/staff/Preusser2008NJG.pdf


The Rhenish Massif is built up by rocks of mainly Devonian and Carboniferous age, which were folded during the Variscian orogeny of the Late Palaeozoic.


Translation:

The rocks are filled with fossils of Devonian and Carboniferous biotopes, which became fossilised in the Flood and folded post-Flood.

However, what exactly was the biotope type "in the Devonian era" and "in the Carboniferous era"? Will, it was marine or at least definitely aquatic fossils.

This means that the fossils around the Rhine prove an area under water before the Flood.

But couldn't the Devonian fish have lived elsewhere and been transported there by the Flood? After all, the Flood transported boulders at 500 km distance!

Sure it did. The boulder was probably half the size when it arrived. Fish bones being half the original size (or less) after 500 km transport in the Flood would no longer be identifiable as fish. The fish fossils we do identify were the lucky ones that were buries in situ. Or not too far off.

This would mean, either the Rhenish Massif was in the pre-Flood seas, or it was in a very big river.

A little caveat though. Some fish could have arrived elsewhere during the Flood, before getting buried in mud. But in that case, it is probable one would find "later" land biotopes under these fossils. Land biotopes that were buried in situ.

I think I mentioned that the four rivers* would probably have gone outward from the Jordan rather than inward to the Jordan (or closer to it than the present springs of each major river), and therefore the Rhine could be a pre-Flood continuation of Frat / Euphrates.

The post-Flood Zagros mountains changed the flow direction but not general drainage area of Euphrates as well as Tigris in the area still bearing these names. The post-Flood Alps preserved the flow direction of the Rhine, but changed it for the Danube (where we also find aquatic pre-Flood fossils, like a whale supposedly from Miocene or something). The pre-Flood Euphrates was starting in the vicinity of Jordan (and not quite in the Persian gulf, unless the pre-Flood Jordan was way longer and reached into what's now the Persian Gulf. It then went NW to where the Zagros mountains are now, same rough drainage area, but opposite direction of modern Euphrates. It went NW through that area and through the Black Sea. It went NW to where the Alps are now, same rough drainage area, but opposite direction of modern Danube. It went NW through where the Alps are now and continued along the modern Rhine, both same rough drainage area, and same direction, this time.

Read the article** and show me a pointer to me being wrong, please! Or any article related to Alps, Danube, Black Sea, Zagros, Euprates.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
St. Raymond Nonnatus
31.VIII.2024

(26.VIII) Cardonae, in Hispania, transitus sancti Raymundi Nonnati, Cardinalis et Confessoris, ex Ordine beatae Mariae de Mercede redemptionis captivorum, vitae sanctitate et miraculis clari. Ipsius tamen festum recolitur pridie Kalendas Septembris.
(31.VIII) Sancti Raymundi Nonnati, ex Ordine beatae Mariae de Mercede redemptionis captivorum, Cardinalis et Confessoris; cujus dies natalis septimo Kalendas Septembris recolitur.

* These ones:
And a river went out of the place of pleasure to water paradise, which from thence is divided into four heads The name of the one is Phison: that is it which compasseth all the land of Hevilath, where gold groweth And the gold of that land is very good: there is found bdellium, and the onyx stone And the name of the second river is Gehon: the same is it that compasseth all the land of Ethiopia And the name of the third river is Tigris: the same passeth along by the Assyrians. And the fourth river is Euphrates
[Genesis 2:10-14]

** Characterisation and evolution of the River Rhine system etc.

mercredi 28 août 2024

Accelerated Decay After All?


Is ICR Making a Case for Geocentrism? · Setterfield · Accelerated Decay After All?

I resumed these as able to get aberrant rates without accelerated decay, but not, I only specialise in the fat ones:

  • Geological biostrata : diverse biotopes at Flood.
  • Geocentrism takes care of Distant Starlight (see previous to previous post)
  • K-Ar : excess argon.
  • U-Pb / Th-Pb : excess lead.
  • Other radiometric : I don't know.
  • Except :
  • Carbon 14 : rising carbon level.
  • Possibly thermoluminiscence : calibrated by C14 erroneous due to rising carbon level.


So, here are two to discuss, two I am normally not speaking about:

  • K-Ar : excess argon.
  • U-Pb / Th-Pb : excess lead.


The first of these, yes, it could theoretically happen without accelerated decay, at least up to Ar-Ar double-checks.

If sth ends up as lead, however, and is in a zircon, it seems accelerated decay is no getting around it, if the world is young. Because zircons don't form with lead inside, they do form with uranium inside, and so, if you find lead in a zircon, it was uranium.

However, the process also leads to helium being formed, and this would leak out if the world is old. Here is this argument spelled out, to the disadvantage of my previous take, by some other guys:

Does Radiometric Dating & The Heat Problem Debunk YEC? Could THIS be evidence for Accelerated Decay?
Standing For Truth | 27 Aug. 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SBYvhTH1ZJk


So, what do I do now? Do I change my mind on Carbon 14? No. They don't say the speeding up was significant for Carbon 14. Also, if anything decays in speeded decay next to Carbon 12 (the clear majority of atoms around Carbon 14), it will increase the number of Carbon 14 isotopes.

Do I change my mind on Distant Starlight? No, they don't say a slowing down of the speed of constants was involved, like the speed of light.

But I do change my mind on U-Pb. It apparently did involve accelerated decay, unless the halflife was measured really badly.

They mentioned the heat problem. I may disagree about how long the accelerated decay was lasting, it could have been slower and longer and the hat they mention could have contributed to solidifying and drying out Flood Mud into Rocks. But I'm not saying their scenario is impossible either.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
St. Augustine of Hippo
28.VIII.2024

Hippone Regio, in Africa, natalis sancti Augustini Episcopi, Confessoris et Ecclesiae Doctoris eximii, qui, beati Ambrosii Episcopi opera ad catholicam fidem conversus et baptizatus, eam adversus Manichaeos aliosque haereticos acerrimus propugnator defendit, multisque aliis pro Ecclesia Dei perfunctus laboribus, ad praemia migravit in caelum. Ejus reliquiae, primo de sua civitate propter barbaros in Sardiniam advectae, et postea a Rege Longobardorum Luitprando Papiam translatae, ibi honorifice conditae sunt.

PS, it was today's saint who, after I was thirty, convinced me to go back from moderate Old Earth to strict Young Earth Creationism, in fact stricter than before. City of God. Books 13, 14, 15 and 16.

samedi 24 août 2024

For Those Who Still Attribute Göbekli Tepe to Noah


Check this video (warning, some adult content near the end).

NEWS | Göbekli Tepe's Stunning New Discoveries 2024 | Taş Tepeler Update | Megalithomania
MegalithomaniaUK | 23—24.VIII.2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gS_CBwKbc7E


To me, while the solstice things could point either way, the boar, the statue spoken of near the end, the vultures, this looks more like ancient Rome in perverted and cruel ways than like Noah's zoo on the Ark.

Plus, all things in Göbekli Tepe that are possible candidates for altars seem to be in hewn stone. That is later on described as typical for Pagan altars (prior to the New Covenant, of course).

Here is a description of Noah's sacrifice:

And Noe built an altar unto the Lord: and taking of all cattle and fowls that were clean, offered holocausts upon the altar.


Pictures of Göbekli Tepe seem to prefer vultures and boars over lambs and doves./HGL

mardi 20 août 2024

A "Dominican" Was Wrong


I will not comment on all of Damien Mackey's essay of pre-Flood writings, though I will share it here, by this link:

Noachic Flood, Ark Mountain, First Writing
Damien Mackey
https://www.academia.edu/123039566/Noachic_Flood_Ark_Mountain_First_Writing


I have already answered his allegation on Bible being "against" a Global Flood:

Was Noah's Flood and Ark Textually Possible? Interrupting Refutation of Robert A. Moore to Turn to Damien Mackey https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2024/08/was-noahs-flood-and-ark-textually.html

However, I will separately answer a Dominican he met:

An extremely well-educated and intelligent Dominican priest once declared to me that “Moses and Joshua wrote nothing, that writing was not invented until about the time of King David (c. 1000-900 BC)”, and this despite passages such as Exodus 34:27: “Then the Lord told Moses, ‘Write down these words, because I’m making a Covenant with you and with Israel according to these words’”, and Joshua 8:32: “There, in the presence of the Israelites, Joshua wrote on stones a copy of the Law of Moses”.


I hope for the good education and intelligence of this Dominican who supposedly had extreme amounts of both, he meant Hebrew writing.

Paleo-Hebrew alphabet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleo-Hebrew_alphabet


Letters that look like *this:



Have been found in the timeperiod dated to:

c. 1000 BCE BC – 135 CE AD


It is supposedly derived from the Phœnician alphabet.

c. 1050–150 BC


But that one in turn was derived from the Proto-Sinaitic script

I'll cite a passage about one of the inscriptions:

The date of the inscriptions is mostly placed in the 17th or 16th century BC.[28] An alternative view dates most of the inscriptions to the reign of Amenemhat III or his successor circa 1800 BC.[29] It has been suggested that the dating period includes the reign of pharaoh Senwosret III.


According to **David Down, whom I follow in this, Senusret III is the pharao who died in the times just after Moses was born, the child killer. Amenemhat III is the man whom Moses was living at the court of. He would have been close enough to Serabit el-Khadim, when going to Mount Sinai, but would probably already have been aware of the Proto-Sinaitic script as a simplification of the Hieroglyphs he equally knew.

Obviously, it is true that scrolls of the law between the time of Moses and those of King David have not been found in Proto-Sinaitic. But most of this time, the scrolls would have been kept in the Tabernacle, the temple before the temple that was a tent. There would be few of them at a time, since only the priesthood (including Levites) were required to read them, the bulk of the Israelites were only supposed to hear them spoken by the High Priest.

And he commanded them, saying: After seven years, in the year of remission, in the feast of tabernacles When all Israel come together, to appear in the sight of the Lord thy God in the place which the Lord shall choose, thou shalt read the words of this law before all Israel, in their hearing Deuteronomy 31:10-11


So, with few scrolls in a temple that strolled around, as tabernacles do, as well as other tents, the lack of archaeological evidence of writing in Hebrew for this period is clearly understandable.

What is less so is the fact that people can get away with wearing the Dominican habit and stating the kind of stupid, halfbaked semi-arguments that are so easy to refute with a little wikipedia ***search, pretty much like Casey Cole is wearing a Franciscan habit which he dishonours by maligning the Constantinian shift in the 300's or Fourth Century on a video.

Certain people have a very solid security of superiority from social prejudice that's floating around and being welcomed for all sorts of bad reasons, and it is based on very little learning. Though even they could often enough refute a Protestant claiming to disown Biblical support from Catholic doctrines they have opposed since the Reformation.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
St. Samuel
20.VIII.2024

In Judaea sancti Samuelis Prophetae, cujus sancta ossa (ut beatus Hieronymus scribit) Arcadius Augustus Constantinopolim transtulit, et prope Septimum collocavit.

* Source:

22 letters of Phoenician alphabet and Paleo-Hebrew alphabet
Tsp2 - Own work | CC0 | File:PaleoHebrew.svg
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleo-Hebrew_alphabet#/media/File:PaleoHebrew.svg


** Here is his article:

Searching for Moses
by David Down | This article is from
Journal of Creation 15(1):53–57, April 2001
https://creation.com/searching-for-moses


*** There is an official reason why Academics hate wikipedia. It's not original research and it can alter original research to suit the flow of the text. But there is a more real reason. Very often an Academic who has looked on only a narrow part of the research (for instanc ignoring all of the Creation Science) can be refuted very quickly by a look at wikipedia, and he doesn't like that.

samedi 17 août 2024

Is Armenia East of Babylonia?


I just on Quora crossed words with a presumed "Catholic" who consideres Genesis 11:1—9 as an etiological myth.

To document that this is not the traditional position, I turn to the Haydock comment.

Here is the comment to the first two verses:

Ver. 1. Speech. Probably Hebrew; in which language we have the most ancient book in the world, the work of Moses. This language has been preserved ever since, though with some alterations. Most of the oriental languages are but like dialects from it, as French, Italian, &c. are from Latin. The arguments which are brought to prove that other languages are more ancient, because the names of men, &c. have a proper significance in them as well as in Hebrew, do not invalidate the right of the latter. The most respectable authors have, therefore, always declared for it. (Haydock)

Ver. 2. The East: Armenia, which lies to the eastward of Babylonia, whither they directed their course in quest of provisions for themselves and cattle, being now grown pretty numerous. (Menochius*)


Let's check.

Yerevan 40°10′53″N 44°30′52″E
Babylon (as Classical Babylon) 32°32′33″N 44°25′16″E


Armenia seems to be lying North, not East of it, N to S. Is sth else meant?

Neo-Babylonian Empire involved lands as far North-West as big portions of Assyria. So, they would technically (from a pov of the second half of the First Millennium BC) be Babylonia as well. Let's try again:

Yerevan 40°10′53″N 44°30′52″E
Edessa 37°09′N 38°48′E


NE to SW. Better.

Or we could take Turkish Armenia:

Cizre 37.332°N 42.187°E
Edessa 37°09′N 38°48′E


E to W. Perfect.

I take it:
  • Menochius was no ace in ANE geography;
  • he relied on older sources;
  • those older sources in their turn relied on limits where Babylonia encompasses Edessa (i e, they are posterior to the fall of Assyria, which fell under Babylonia).


Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
Sts Paul and Juliana
17.VIII.2024

Ptolemaide, in Palaestina, passio sanctorum Martyrum Pauli, ejusque sororis Julianae Virginis; qui ambo, sub Aureliano Imperatore, cum in Christi confessione permanerent immobiles, jussi sunt variis et dirissimis tormentis affligi ac tandem capite obtruncari.

PS, when Menochius spoke of "Armenia" in relation to Genesis 8 (verse 4 has Requievitque arca mense septimo, vigesimo septimo die mensis, super montes Armeniae) and then Genesis 11 (he assumed "they" who were removing from the East were doing so from the landing place, so do I), he was anachronistically naming the mountain region Urartu / Ararat after its later name, he didn't imagine that the Armenian kingdom had already been established. Like if you were saying "Mid South Iraq" about Sumer or "Turkey-Syria-Iraq" about Mesopotamia / Sennaar. By the way, he could also have considered that Babel was more the region of Edessa than that of Baghdad, which I would agree with./HGL

* Menochius, see wiki:

Giovanni Stefano Menochio, 9 December 1575 - 4 February 1655 (aged 79), was an Italian Jesuit biblical scholar.

mercredi 14 août 2024

CMI Seems to Have a Will to Hammer Away Geocentrism


New blog on the kid: Heliocentrism aggravates the wound of ignorance? · Creation vs. Evolution: Sigh. There Are People Who Consider Me a Conspiracy Theorist Already · CMI Seems to Have a Will to Hammer Away Geocentrism

No, the Earth Is NOT Flat!
Creation Ministries International | 2016 18 Oct.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y28OaM5c0Fg


I'll cite two dialogues, somewhat beyond the 10 % provided by fair use legislation.

3:13 — 5:02

Gary Bates
And then there’s another area, where … called geocentrism which are these ideas that in fact the universe revolves around the earth.

Now you with Surveyor of course you helped land a craft on the moon.

Now the moon orbits the earth. So when that Surveyor spacecraft left the earth, where did you have to aim, in advance.

Dr Henry Richter
Well we know the laws of planetary motion and the laws of physics that determine it. And we can compute with great precision where the moon was 100 years ago or where it’s going to be in 100 years from now.

And so when we launch toward the moon or a planet we know about the arrival time and we have to compute where the planet will be in its motion around the sun at that point.

The moon rotates around the earth. It took several days for Surveyor to get there. We knew the speed and the arrival time.

So we could compute just where the moon was, set the guidance system to aim for that point in space so it meets the moon at the proper place at the proper time.

Gary Bates
In other words it intersects its path.

And of course the moon orbits the earth, so that wouldn’t be a violation of what a geocentrist believes.

But now, what about when we send satellites out into those far reaches of space.

We’re intercepting planets like Saturn or Jupiter or even Pluto as they’ve done recently.

It takes years for those craft to travel there.

So if I said to you something like, in fact, the clockwork motion of the planets, I think, is an attribute of God’s design. Would you agree with something like that?

Dr Henry Richter
Oh, absolutely.


I'd disagree. The motion may be very clockwork like, but it is not a clockwork motion. If it were, God would be a designer who then left the designed object to run its own course. Paley is a kind of Deism.

Planetary motions are not just a tribute to God's design, but also of angelic beings guiding them with great precision.

9:21 — 10:04

Gary Bates
So Rob, when I interviewed Dr Henry Richter we talked about design in the universe. He talked about the laws of planetary motion. And, of course, those planets obey gravity.

Gravity is something you and I can test here on earth and in fact, Isaac Newton is credited with the discovery of gravity, one of the greatest scientists, arguably, who ever lived.

He professed to be a Christian.

Dr. Rob Carter
—And a creationist.—

Gary Bates
The laws of planetary motion devised by Johannes Kepler.

Dr. Rob Carter
—Another Christian, great testimony.—

Gary Bates
Another Christian, etcetera.

I understand that there’s a genuine motive in all of this. People believe that they’re wanting to have a high view of Scripture.

Dr. Rob Carter
Absolutely.


... the dialogue with Rob Carter got involved with gravity, without spelling out the implication, and they started spelling out "Sun and Jupiter are bigger than earth" without spelling out the implication of that, and then before they could get back to it, they were bogged down by Flat Earthers denying "Sun and Jupiter are bigger than earth" and forgetting that they had promised and were not keeping the promise of also arguing against Geocentrics who are not Flat Earthers.

There are two possibilities:

  • 1) Gravity is the only motor of motions, along with inertia tending to prolong a movement already initiated, well the implications of this are Heliocentrism holds. But what is it an implication of? Pretty often of Atheism or Deism and especially denying Angelic movers (including denying as not being aware they are even a theory and being so used to not knowing it, you dismiss the theory offhand when you hear it).
  • 2) Gravity and inertia are not the only motors of planetary motion, God told angels where to steer them. In this case, "Jupiter must orbit the Sun, Earth must orbit, if not Jupiter, as too far, at least the Sun" is not implied, since the movements can be determined by other factors than only inertial and gravitational orbitting.


Rob Carter also (actually first) basically pretended there are passages in the Scripture which would if taken strictly literally (without considering context) spell out the earth as flat. No, not one single such. I challenged Hannam to provide, and he didn't.

Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl: With James Hannam on Whether Bible and Fathers Agree or Not on Shape of Earth
https://correspondentia-ioannis-georgii.blogspot.com/2015/04/with-james-hannam-on-whether-bible-and.html


There is a passage of Scripture which was not cited as purported proof of Geocentrism to be refuted by context. Romans 1, verses 18 — 20.

For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and injustice of those men that detain the truth of God in injustice: Because that which is known of God is manifest in them. For God hath manifested it unto them. For the invisible things of him, from the creation of the world, are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made; his eternal power also, and divinity: so that they are inexcusable.

What exact part of natural theology is St. Paul talking of? I can agree with Jonathan Sarfati that the flagellum of the bacterium and the failure of the Miller Urey repeat would add to natural theology. But this can't be what St. Paul was talking of. Because, they are recent discoveries. Imagine someone had in the NT used Babel to appeal to the historic memories of the Jews. He would have been added to by the discovery of Göbekli Tepe, but he would not have been referring to that discovery, he would have been referring to traditions as those in Josephus and especially the inerrant and inspired part of them put by Moses into the book of Genesis, in a place now referred to as chapter 11, verses 1 to 9.

But St. Paul was here not stating anything about Plato or Aristotle having access to Jewish tradition. He was stating their idolatry was inexcusable, because natural theology. Here is an analysis of Aristotle:

Based on what Aristotle proves in Metaph. Λ6-8 and Phys. Θ5, I reconstruct Aristotle’s cosmological proof as follows. Having accepted the astronomical findings of his time, Aristotle believes that there are fifty-five heavenly bodies in the universe.10 Aristotle also establishes an important principle, namely, that what is moved must be moved by something (ἐπεὶ δὲ τὸ κινούμενον ἀνάγκη ὑπό τινος κινεῖσθαι, Metaph. Λ8, 1073a26).11 On this basis, Aristotle states that among these heavenly bodies, A is moved by B, B is moved by C, and C is moved by D. However, this would lead to an infinite regress, which Aristotle does not recognize. Because of the limited number of heavenly bodies, the chain of moving and being moved among them cannot enter infinite regression. In addition, Aristotle’s universe does not allow for infinity because, in his view, the universe is finite, bounded, and cannot expand infinitely, in contrast to the Big Bang theory of recent scientific cosmologists, according to which the universe has no boundaries and is still expanding. In the case of an Aristotelian finite universe and a finite number of heavenly bodies, one can either recognize the last two heavenly bodies interacting or establish a heterogeneous first mover to end this infinite regression. Aristotle does not recognize the interaction between the heavenly bodies12 but believes that there must be a first mover that moves the heavenly bodies without being moved by anything else.13 Given the prohibition of infinite regression, Aristotle thus deduces God as the First Mover from the moved heavenly bodies.


On Proofs for the Existence of God: Aristotle, Avicenna, and Thomas Aquinas
by Xin Liu, Department of Philosophy, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, China
Religions 2024, 15(2), 235*
https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/15/2/235


I would disagree on the possibility of expansion into infinity as disproving the supposition of Aristotle that infinite regress is impossible, since an infinite regress would depend on a regress of already existing and therefore actual infinity, while the expansion, as supposed by Big Bang, is an expansion into potential infinity. The universe is at each point still finite.

But I would totally agree that this was the proof of God that Aristotle had in mind. And God turning the universe around earth each day would be a very perfect illustration of God's eternal power. One that's not just observable now, not just observable in St. Paul's time, not just observable in the time of Aristotle, but which had been observable since back in the time of Adam, and even two to five days** before he was created. In other words, this is a perfect match to what St. Paul is talking about.

So is Plato's tracking of the human mind back to God, it's not just the visible things that are made, but also the invisible things that are made, that show the invisible things of God. This is the proof of God repeated by C. S. Lewis in Miracles. Both Aristotle and Plato offer proof that's not often repeated by CMI, because they are scientists, not philosophers, not trained to deal with that kind of stuff. But St. Paul was speaking of the philosophical proofs from everyday experience, not of specifical science facts discoverable only by microscopes. The latter are valuable, they add to that, but they are not what St. Paul is mainly talking of.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
Vigil of Assumption
14.VIII.2024

Vigilia Assumptionis beatae Mariae Virginis.

PS. "the flagellum of the bacterium and the failure of the Miller Urey repeat" While, as said, not the prime example of what St. Paul was talking about, CMI do have very good resources on them, and when Geocentrism is culturally out, these are a valuable standin. Enantiomeric amplification of L amino acids: part 1—irrelevant and discredited examples, The Miller–Urey experiment revisited, The Amazing Cell Evidence for creation and against evolution!

Let me quote the middle one of these links:

Studying Table 2 in this paper ... they failed to detect the proteinaceous amino acids phenylalanine, proline, histidine, tyrosine, lysine, asparagine, arginine, or glutamine.


Abiogenesis from "Primordial Soup" is, pun intended, dead in the water./HGL

* https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020235
** Before God turned the mass of planets (including Sun and Moon) and of stars around earth each day, since day IV, He had been turning the division of light and darkness around earth since day I (see St. Augustine, De Genesi ad Literam Libri XII, Book I, which has a longer discussion of what the days were before there was a Sun).

mardi 13 août 2024

Extract from a Sermon in Latin, from Swedish Middle Ages


My friend Stephan Borgehammar sent this, along with some more material contributions.

In the University Library of Uppsala, a manuscript called C 381, on fol. 75 r contained Sermo de sancta cruce.

My point is, it very totally links Redemption and Fall as parallels and opposites. If one is historic, so is the other.

Christus per suam passionem satisfecit pro culpa prime transgressionis:

  • Ibi enim fructus vetitus de ligno est ablatus,
    hic fructus benedictus Virginis ligno est affixus;

  • Ille ablatus per inobedienciam,
    iste affixus per obedienciam;

  • Ille fuit occasionaliter fructus maledictionis et culpe,
    iste fructus benediccionis et gracie;

  • Illa traxit homines de paradyso et alienavit a Deo,
    iste traxit homines ad celum et restituit Christo.


Hoc est:
Ego, si exaltatus fuero a terra, omnia traham ad me ipsum (Joh. 12:32).


I'll extemporate a translation:

Christ by his passion satisfied for the guilt of the first transgression:

  • There the forbidden fruit was taken off the wood,
    here the blessed fruit of the Virgin is fastened onto the wood;

  • That one taken off by disobedience,
    this one fastened on by obedience;

  • That one was by the occasion it gave* the fruit of curse and guilt,
    this one is the fruit of blessing and grace;

  • That one drew men from paradise and made them strangers to God,
    this one drew men to heaven and restored them to Christ.


This is:
And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all things to myself. (Joh. 12:32).


* Stephan Borgehammar prefers "due to the circumstances" but we agree that the preacher considered the fruit good in itself, not bad in itself. Giving an occasion for evil and being evil are two different things. Had the fruit been taken with permission, which could have happened later, it would have been good.

mercredi 7 août 2024

Sigh. There Are People Who Consider Me a Conspiracy Theorist Already


New blog on the kid: Heliocentrism aggravates the wound of ignorance? · Creation vs. Evolution: Sigh. There Are People Who Consider Me a Conspiracy Theorist Already · CMI Seems to Have a Will to Hammer Away Geocentrism

Less* than one hour ago, a certain person going under the handle Morgan Oviatt (not positive it is his real name) called me a conspiracy theorist and in reverse psychology "encouraged" me to paranoia because I had rejected the idea I'm a Eugenicist, or because I had affirmed the idea Eugenics had roots in Marxism. It's the first of the two dialogues, today's date of 7.VIII.2024:

Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere: Tolkienophobe Identified?
https://assortedretorts.blogspot.com/2024/08/tolkienophobe-identified.html


If the idea was that it's conspiratorial of me to feel maligned when painted a Eugenicist, what can I say? I think I should know my own ideology better than he does.

But if the idea is it's conspiratorial of me to consider Eugenics a Marxist thing and to consider Catholicism as Anti-Eugenics, I just gave him these links:

Eugenics and Racial Biology in Sweden and the USSR: Contacts across the Baltic Sea
PER ANDERS RUDLING (Department of History, Lund University.)
CBMH/BCHM / Volume 31:1 2014 / p. 41-75
https://www.utpjournals.press/doi/pdf/10.3138/cbmh.31.1.41


Eugenics and Other Evils
http://www.gkc.org.uk/gkc/books/Eugenics.html


So, I just defended myself against the idea of me being a paranoid conspiracy theorist. Now I am, for some, going to ruin that defense. By my answer to CMI's article for tomorrow (it already is tomorrow in Australia).

Why CMI rejects ‘conspiracy’ theorizing
by Robert Carter and Jonathan Sarfati
First published: 13 April 2017
Re-featured on homepage: 8 August 2024
https://creation.com/cmi-rejects-conspiracy-theory


One good thing.

At the same time, not all conspiracy theories have the same weight, and not all of them are necessarily wrong. We also do not deliberately lump all conspiracy theories together in order to dismiss them in one fell swoop.


Good. Unfortunately, they lumped a bit too many of them together. Which ones?

Before we get into this, however, let us be perfectly clear that government-based conspiracy (e.g. JFK assassination, 9-11 terrorist attack) are not part of our mission, while some science-based ones like flat earth or geocentrism are, hence the focus on these two below. The moon landings are also fair game for us, but only because they are part of (and clearly refute) the flat earth and geocentrism debates and also touch on the ‘how do we know what we know’ aspect of teaching biblical creation, basic science, and important ideas in the Bible.


What is their take on the Moon landings?

Several alternate theories unfairly and inaccurately pick on government bodies like NASA or the UN. But NASA is not a person. It is a government institution that employs thousands of people. It would be impossible to create a conspiracy of this scale and nature, and it would be impossible to maintain it in the face of so many contrary witnesses.


It so happens, for the moon landings to be fake, most employees of NASA had no need to be in the know. I've said it before, I'm saying it again, the people in the conspiracy could well exclude 99.9 % of the Employees of NASA. Only a few need to be in the know, those few could be people of a mindset like secret agents, well trained on how to keep secrets secrets, and most would not have been witnessing the rocket at take off.

I am not saying the Moon landings are fake. I am still less saying they are not fake. I am saying the fake would be clearly possible.

Now, why does CMI bother about the NASA vs Moontruthers? I'll highlight a quote again:

but only because they are part of (and clearly refute) the flat earth and geocentrism debates


If the Moon landings are genuine, they do refute flat earth, the roundness of our globe was seen from the Moon. But it has no bearing on Geocentrism. And in fact, the article never spells out the bearing Moonlandings would have on Geocentrism. My mother was at a certain point, when I discovered Geocentrism, under the care or rather miscare of Swedish psychiatry. They used her to give me backfire "we have observed the earth rotate, from the moon" and I replied then, as I reply now: if a chopper circled around (the tower of) Stockholm City Hall, one could observe from it that that tower was rotating around itself. Which obviously it isn't. Hence, the observations from the Moon, even if perfectly genuine, do not refute Geocentrism, since in Geocentrism the Moon would parallel the chopper.

Some people feel obliged to believe in the parallactic optic illusion being key to the 0.76 arcseconds "parallax" of α Centauri, or the rotation of the Universe around Earth each day, but equally obliged to ignore that this same optic illusion would explain the observations of "rotating earth" without either Geocentrism or Moonlandings being wrong. To me, this shows a very ingrained cultural bias.

But they actually will say why they disbelieve Geocentrism in the article:

Another case in point: we can explain the way the universe works using simple Newtonian physics and a dose of Einsteinian relativity. This model of the universe includes a spherical earth and a geokinetic system, and it has incredible explanatory power. On the other hand, if the earth were flat or if the earth were the center about which the rest of the universe rotates, one could not use laboratory physics to explain it. Instead, one must resort to unknown processes or scientifically impossible situations. The universe could not, then, follow the simple rules of logic, and would fail to be explained by simple observational evidence. What kind of God creates an ongoing illusion?


I have seen the last point used about my view that angels perform the "parallax" of α Centauri, "if so, this fools scientists to believe Earth rotates" and why would God be an author of deception. My answer to that other angle is, well, God also made it so that when I was born the setting Sun was in Virgo, making the opposite sign Pisces my ascendant. I also have the Moon in Pisces and Jupiter in Virgo. Should I say we need to believe what Café Astrology has to say about these four astrological items and a few more, because otherwise God would act deceptively towards astrologers and by extension mankind as a whole? Of course not.

The CMI had another take, which also involves the Drama Queen "clincher" it would make God the author of deception. Let's take a look at it.

if the earth were the center about which the rest of the universe rotates, one could not use laboratory physics to explain it.


One could not use laboratory physics to explain very important aspects of it, agreed.

Instead, one must resort to unknown processes or scientifically impossible situations.


God turning the universe around Earth each day by omnipotence is scientifically impossible? Sounds like naturalism to me. Or unknown? Well between this scenario and the universe acting as Paley's clockwork, with God as Paley's watchmaker, I think it is known in the Bible even:

But Jesus answered them: My Father worketh until now; and I work.
[John 5:17]

On the first Sabbath, God the Father and God the Son rested from creating new things, but not from running what they had created.

Or it is scientifically impossible for God to allow angels to move celestial bodies within the overall moving space fabric (my identification for raqia, by the way)? Sounds like naturalism. It is also not unknown.

When the morning stars praised me together, and all the sons of God made a joyful melody
[Job 38:7]

Praising God and making a joyful melody sounds more like what "sons of God" (angelic beings) can do, than what rocks, gas lumps and burning gas lumps can achieve, yet "the morning stars" are enumerated among the "sons of God" — a term which the very same book uses about angels, angelic beings:

Now on a certain day when the sons of God came to stand before the Lord, Satan also was present among them
[Job 1:6]

Laboratory physics may be unable to explain why over time planets other than Sun and Moon run in a kind of spirograph patterns (which they do in Geocentrism with accurate observations). But laboratory physics are unable to explain why a child would love to play with a spirograph (as I did). In movers endowed with will and mind, movements not explained by laboratory physics are possible.

It's not a conspiracy theory that God's continuous action by divine fiat runs the universe around us. It's not a conspiracy theory that angels make celestial bodies move. These are metaphysical theories, over and above laboratory physics, but well within the scope of Christian theology to affirm. There is no conspiracy necessarily involved in NASA being against it, any more than there is a conspiracy necessarily involved in NASA being for abiogenesis. It's at first glance at least a cultural question. Not a criminal one.

What are some things that become better theologically if we accept this?

  • Earth wasn't moving around the Sun before it was created on day four, and STILL doesn't move, so Earth did not change position that day.
  • The Epicurean attempt to explain Geocentrism as a kind of whirlpool effect within space was clumsy, and Geocentrism can only be explained by God, hence Romans 1, which by the way needs to be talking of sth seen since Adam, which the flagellum of the bacterium or the four dimensional DNA, wonderful testimonies to the Creator as they are, weren't.
  • When Joshua had prayed, he didn't adress Earth to stop rotating, or God to halt the Sun and Moon, he adressed Sun and Moon on God's behalf. With Geocentrism, he adressed the right entities for the miracle, not the wrong, but apparent and culturally accepted explanation. Precisely as his namesake Jesus, when driving out demons, was not adressing a factually wrong explanation of epilepsy or schizophrenia.


And didn't I hear the "God author of deception" strawman in another context? Yeah, right, distant starlight problem for a universe created thousands, not billions, of years ago. That's when I became a Geocentric. If the 0.76 arc seconds back and forth each year of α Centauri are parallax, we have a distance involved, that of Earth to Earth, we have also two angles. If they are performed by an angel, Earth being still, we have no distance and one angle. That's a very different case in Trigonometry. If Geocentrism is true, "4 light years away" is calculated on the wrong assumptions and stellar distances are moot. Distant starlight problem is a laughable idea, like trying to disprove Young Earth Creationism by astrology.

Well, nearly moot. You see, while I think Moonlandings could have been faked, I don't wallow in generalised mistrust of NASA. It's not just computer scientists at Goddard Space Flight Center who would be more honest than Armstrong (he would have needed to be one of the conspirators, if any), I'd also pretty well consider Voyager 1 and 2 are about as far away as reported, hence the fix stars would be at least one light day away (the two way travel time of radio signals being less than 48 hours, but more than 36 in each case). Though, there too, a pretty small number of conspirators (far from including computer scientists or people fabricating materials) would suffice to conspire. But any possible conspiracy there is pretty irrelevant to Geocentrism, precisely as with the Moon landing.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
St. Cajetan of Thiena
7.VIII.2024

Neapoli, in Campania, sancti Cajetani Thienaei Confessoris, Clericorum Regularium Fundatoris, qui, singulari in Deum fiducia, pristinam Apostolicam vivendi formam suis colendam tradidit, et, miraculis clarus, a Clemente Papa Decimo inter Sanctos relatus est.

PS. A flat earth is not in and of itself a conspiracy theory, but given the non-abstract, non-theoretic, very direct sensory evidence for different parts of Earth adding up to a globe, by now it would need one. Also, the four corners of Apocalypse 7:1, if taken as outer corners of the continents against the Pacific, are more easy to observe as a rectangular figure on a globe than on the most popular modern flat earth map./HGL

* As I started writing.

lundi 5 août 2024

Was Noah's Flood and Ark Textually Possible? Interrupting Refutation of Robert A. Moore to Turn to Damien Mackey


Was Noah's Ark Impossible? Building the Ark · Was Noah's Ark Impossible? Baraminology · Was Noah's Flood and Ark Textually Possible? Interrupting Refutation of Robert A. Moore to Turn to Damien Mackey

Bible may not seem to favour the concept of a global Flood
Damien Mackey, Academia
https://www.academia.edu/122579140/Bible_may_not_seem_to_favour_the_concept_of_a_global_Flood


To get one thing out of the way, it's not "some" Young Earth Creationists who have given up the idea the Flood was the first rainfall, it's basically all who are in organisms like Answers in Genesis, Creation Ministries International, Kolbe Center for Creation Research, Catholic Apologetics International, or my own "quasi-organism" Antimodernism (before my blogs, I owned an MSN-Group of the name, it had 30 members before it ended like the rest of them in February or early March 2009). We believe rain fell and rainbows were visible before God for the future made the rainbow a reminder of His past wrath, and of His promise to not destroy in water again, to that global extent.

First attack:

Because, as I see it, they are reading the Bible in a modern language, say English, with a modern ‘scientific’ - even to a great extent a pseudo-scientific - mentality, instead of in a way that gives due consideration to the meaning of the language used by the ancient (not modern) scribes with those scribes’ intended meanings.


So, Geography is a science, as scientia certa per causis? No, Geography is a species of historia, an empiric research into arbitrary fact in their detailed facthood, much as the other historia which is known as History.

Stating that Genesis is geographically correct in stating the Flood was global is not misattributing to Genesis the genre of modern science, it is correctly attributing to Genesis the genre of historia, mostly History, but this sometimes also involves some Geography.

Damien and presumably Tim Martin (who called Creation Science a right wing modernism, it could be correct in reference to its denying angelic movers* and geocentrism, except** myself, but that's not what he meant) are now going to show that the phrase type used in describing the Flood meant sth different in Matthew 12:42 or Acts 2:5—11.

At least they do so when it suits them, such as in the case of the Flood or Babel.

For they are not consistent.

If they were, would they not have the Queen of the South, who came “from the ends of the earth” (Matthew 12:42), making her way northwards from somewhere in the southern hemisphere?

And how do they account for the fact that, at Pentecost, people “from every nation under heaven” are actually listed as being inhabitants of only a very small part of the global world – basically, Rome, Crete, and Egypt, through Syria and Turkey, to Mesopotamia? (Acts 2:5-11)


The guy just upbraided YEC for not knowing how to read ancient authors (which argues unfamiliarity with the scope of specialities they have at academia, with, or in my case without degree). He is here asking us to treat the Bible as a whole as if it held complete terminological, and actually even metaterminological consistency.

"Episcopé" is a term. It meant sth slightly different to the LXX translator of some OT prophecy, than to St. Luke applying it to one of the first twelve bishops and his dignity conferred upon someone else, namely St. Matthias. But "every" is not a term, it's a metaterm. In "every high mountain under heaven" we have the term "high mountain under heaven" and the metaterm "every" ... and metaterms are in daily use. And daily use usually precludes complete terminological consistency. I'm reminded of the heretic Zwingli requiring exegetes to use "is/are" with metaterm complete consistency between Genesis 41:26 and Matthew 26:26.

So, "every nation under heaven" could refer to a saying, and "every high mountain under heaven" could refer to literally every high (as pre-Flood mountains went) mountain under heaven.

The example of the Queen of Sheba is literal, she literally came from land's end*** and in that case specifically the South Coast of the Arabian Peninsula (that she also held rule over Abyssinia, like her son, doesn't prove she travelled West of the Red Sea: she might have found Peninsular Arabia safer to travel through than Egypt and also wanted to get in touch with caravans to buy gifts from).

To return to Acts and Genesis, both involve "every" but what about "pulled" ... if I read "I sensed he was pulling my leg" I think it would normally refer to a saying, does that mean "I felt he was pulling my arm" can't be a lady literally complaining about literal sexual harrassment? No. This argument is so silly, it's precisely as silly as a policeman concluding the lady was speaking in metaphors and should have no complained, because she has on some other occasion used the expression "pull my leg" ...

Second attack:

The verse that eliminates a global flood follows: "You set a boundary they [the waters] cannot cross; never again will they cover the earth." (Psalm 104:9)…. Obviously, if the waters never again covered the earth, then the flood must have been local.


Is the cited author using King James? My English Bible is Douay Rheims? This reminds me that much of today's "Catholic" polemics against YEC was in use among Liberal and Semi-Conservative Lutherans and Anglicans, when I was young. It was not prevalent in the Diocese of Stockholm when I converted in 1988. It was not being promoted. It was not being foisted onto a Convert. And given I was a YEC and had come into conflict with co-parishioners and especially co-youthgroupers of KU (now SKU), I am so aware of this. I remember one of them asking me if my Creationist position was not a bit too much like the Catholic position on Matthew 26:26. That obviously helped me to convert. In the 90's, I was mostly among Trads, and that mostly at a geographical distance, so, if this was getting pushed in Sweden already in the 90's, I missed it. It only came to my notice in 2000 or 2001, in a fairly conservative Novus Ordo parish, where they had a copy of CCC and obviously §283 (which was written and promulgated by what I take to be an antipope after I converted).

Now, Psalm 103:9 is not very different in Douay Rheims:

Thou hast set a bound which they shall not pass over; neither shall they return to cover the earth.

I absolutely do not get why not returning to cover the earth would imply locality. The interpreter might of course argue there are some localities where the earth never was covered again, others where it was. I would answer the entire earth is one where it wasn't. Besides, when King David wrote 103, not just the Flood, but also the Ice Age variations in sea level were over. So, localities of earth (except very small ones, coastal lines or small islands) which were not covered in King David's time by the sea have not been covered since then either.

Rich Deem happens to be a Protestant scholar, more precisely Church of God. That's obviously why he enumerated the Psalms in Masoretic numbering, not in LXX numbering.

Third attack:

Genesis 2 proves the limitation of the world Moses' audience was aware of, so Genesis 6 through 9 cannot have been more global than that.

My answer is double. But first, this is also a meme this Catholic took over from the kind of Protestantism I came to know in the Swedish Church.

1) The river names in Genesis 2 may have had similar directions from the centre, but a very much larger scope. Imagine for instance Frat starting in the Jordan valley, going up through most of today's Euphrates, but NW instead of SE, over the area which in post-Flood times became Zagros Mountains, over the area which became Black Sea, over most of today's Danube, but NW instead of SE, over the area of post-Flood Alps, over the post-Flood Atlantic, or as wide as the gap was just after the Flood and up through New Foundland and Alaska, like a St. Lawrence river, but NW instead of SE. Similar for Hiddekel starting from Jordan through reverse Tigris and reaching the Pacific somewhere like The Yellow River Basin. And Blue and White Niles continuing to Mekong and to Congo and Amazonas. In that case, the Genesis 2 account of the four rivers certainly includes the area shown on Damien's map, which is why Cush is mentioned, but it is not limited to it.

2) Suppose it were textually possible for the world covered by the Flood to cover the map shown by Damien (Ancient Near East), it is not physically possible. On a second map, he shows a small continent surrounded by the Thetys Sea, but if that one were covered, how could the water stay high above that one while not drowning the areas outside the Thetys Sea?

Fourth attack:

Common sense, I think, would tell us that (as according to the Catholic mystic, Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich) there must have been significantly more than just eight people aboard the Ark, and that the eight were the progenitors from whom every person on earth - including those others in the Ark - are descended.


I think I have more confidence in Valtorta than in Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerick.° Her views on the pre-Babel language as "not Hebrew" might reflect some slight tinge of Antisemitism in her priest and even more her views of it as "similar to Sanskrit" would reflect his interests in very early stages of Indo-European studies.

The idea that for instance the Genesis 10 list of people or all except Nimrod were on the Ark, if this is what Damien refers to is not beyond the capacity of the Ark, but would seem to contradict Genesis 11:10. As far as I have heard, it is the common opinion that 8 people entered and possibly nine or ten people went out of the Ark.°°

1) Some have considered Cham and his wife engendered Kush before the Flood was over and some have considered this was punished by making him black or swarty. But he may still have been born after the Flood.
2) Some have considered Noah and his wife engendered a fourth son, who after the Flood became a magician.°°

But it seems that Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerick did think otherwise:

Noah and the Flood according to the visions of Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich
Posted on 27 February 2014 by Ron Conte
https://ronconte.com/2014/02/27/noah-and-the-flood-according-to-the-visions-of-blessed-anne-catherine-emmerich/


While the theologian Ron Conte is perfectly orthodox on contraception (yes, it is immoral in itself, not just against marriage, the married couple that commits it is both abusing the marriage and engaging in an act immoral in itself), he's less reliable on the universality of the Flood.

It seems that the passage on the grandchildren of Noah on the Ark reveals that the Blessed was probably partly doing her exegesis in visions:

There were over one hundred people in the ark, and they were necessary to give daily food to the animals and to clean after them. I must say, for I always see it so, that Shem’s, Ham’s and Japheth’s children all went into the ark. There were many little boys and girls in it, in fact all of Noah’s family that were good. Holy Scripture mentions only three of Adam’s children, Cain, Abel, and Seth; and yet I see many others among them, and I always see them in pairs, boys and girls.


Well, the thing is, the explicit mentions of Cain, Abel and Seth are never given in a setting concludable as exhaustive enumeration. She may have shied back from contemplating the fact that even this one includes at least two daughters of Adam, namely the wives of Cain and Seth. She probably missed Genesis 5:4b

and he begot sons and daughters.

And she missed that St. Peter said Noah was one out of eight.

That's a bit how Father Fulcran Vigouroux reasoned from St. Augustine allowing one deflection from literal six days (reduced to one moment) to the opposite one (expanded to ages of thousands or millions of years) also being licit, while missing Mark 10:6. Not howlers in overall theology, but bloopers in extension of their Bible knowledge. (Theirs, not St. Augustine's).

The part about hundreds being necessary to cater to the animals ignores the use of waves and the rolling period of the Ark being fairly long. The inside of the Ark was more high-tech than the farms that she had known, before lying on a bed, speaking to her family, priests and Brentano.

As we are on Ron Conte or Ronald L. Conte Jr., he stated the dimensions of the Ark were as symbolical as the ages of pre-Abraham patriarchs:

In the Old Testament, numbers are often used in a figurative, not a literal manner. The ages of the Biblical persons prior to Abraham are figurative. The seven days of Creation are also figurative. So when the Bible gives the size of the Ark, the numbers are not literal.


As I have argued, there is no available figurative meaning of the ages of the patriarchs. Their names, yes, but not their ages.°°°

Fifth attack:

Noah simply would have taken pairs of such animals as he and his family would need for food and sacrifice, and to kick-start his new life on terra firma, until conditions began to revert back to normal.

The animals depicted at the Göbekli Tepe ‘menagerie’, close to where Noah’s Ark actually landed at Karaca Dag:

Noah’s Ark Mountain
(4) Noah's Ark Mountain | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu

might be a clue to the sort of animals that were to be found on board the Ark.


Sigh ... no, Göbekli Tepe may be near enough to the landing place or further off, but it is at a North limit of a plain that can be found between (post-Flood! modern!) Euphrates and Tigris, so in the land of Shinar. The skulls that have been perforated and the nearby evidence of corpses without heads exposed to vultures (with a probable parallel on the pillar shown, "birdman" being man without head and vulture sitting on the back or shoulders, before feasting), Göbekli Tepe definitely has more to do with Nimrod than with Noah.

I've said so over here:

Creation vs. Evolution: Göbekli Tepe was not Pre-Flood
https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2024/07/gobekli-tepe-was-not-pre-flood.html


Sixth attack:

Not the last in order of his paper, but the one I saved for last. Once again highly reminiscent of my part time background among Lutherans who weren't sharing YEC with me.

Surely Creation Science, teaching a belief in God the Creator of all things, and vehemently defending the inerrancy of the Sacred Scriptures, ought to be warmly welcomed by the Church as an invaluable ally.

On the other hand, the God-fearing are not always right in their estimations, no matter how sincere, and they may need to be corrected.

Consider Our Lord’s constant corrections of good people along the lines of:

‘You have heard it said … but I tell you’
(e. g. Matthew 5:21-22).


In fact, the best go to for that formula is the Sermon on the Mount. And it is not a correction of how the law was understood, it's a new completion of it. Our Lord had authority to add to the law, which He had Himself given to Moses.

No one alive on earth today, probably not even if Henoch and Elijah were already returned~, has such authority, not even the Pope. If YEC was always understood by the Church to be the correct interpretation, it is. If Global Flood was always understood by the Church to be the correct interpretation, it is.

However, the link to half and half liberal Lutheranism, as I mentioned, is the idea that Jesus was more than once complaining about misunderstandings. Hence, the Church could have misunderstood sth for millennia (like, for instance, the reason why Jesus chose only men among the 12, and according to tradition, among the 72 as well).

The idea that we can correct the constant understanding of the Church is a trap for heterodoxy or sometimes even heresy.

Seventh attack:

Catholics (those tending to be of the conservative variety) who have followed Creationism over the years would be well aware that mainstream Catholic scholars have shown virtually no interest whatsoever in its teachings, and that official Catholic documents never seem to support Creation Science.


Myself, Hugh Owen, Robert Sungenis, and the past before 100 years ago, obviously excepted.

Prior to Lyell, all Catholic commentators were YEC with Global Flood. Between 1830 and 1900 authors wrote on three distinct solutions. Literal six days literally just after God created, also known as YEC. Gap Theory. Day Age theory. The medical doctor and friend of St. Clement Maria Hofbauer was no more fringe than Cardinal Wiseman or Father Vigouroux. In 1920, a fourth idea was proposed, what Protestants call "Framework theory", and it came from Paris of all places (not too many km from where I am now). It came to gain popularity, but certainly no exclusivity or near-exclusivity prior to CCC. I am glad Jimmy Akin considers someone in communion with "Pope Francis" has a right to chose whichever option, but here in Paris, this seems to not be the case, the traditional option or simply tradition, being excluded. Or at least it seems I am treated as having no right to express it.

A not so well thought through present, relying heavily on what was Lutheran and probably Anglican mainstream in more modernist Europe 40 years ago, simply does not trump Tradition.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Paris
Transfiguration
First Vespers
6 (5) Aug. 2024

In monte Thabor Transfiguratio Domini nostri Jesu Christi.

* St. Thomas held angels moved celestial bodies, Sun, Moon, Planets (Earth not being such a thing!), Potentially even Fix Stars.
** Sungenis also holds to Geocentrism, but so far I have not seen him defend angelic movers, and c. a decade or half decade ago, he considered me wrong for defending them.
*** Four corners (Apocalypse 7:1) are by the way four land's ends. Probably, starting at the Arctic Sea and going clockwise, 1) Kamtchatka, 2) Singapore / Sydney / Hobart, 3) Cape Horn, 4) Alaska.
° The locally favoured pronunciation of her place of origin, also origin of "surname" is Emmerick, it's near Munster.
°° I recalled wrongly. Here is the quote:

Quare vero primus coeperit dominari ostendit, agens de quodam filio Noe, de quo non egit Moyses, sic dicens: Centesimo anno tertiae chiliadis natus est Noe filius in similitudinem ejus, et dixit eum Jonithum . Trecentesimo anno dedit Noe donationes filio suo Jonitho, et dimisit eum in terram Ethan, et intravit eam Jonithus usque ad mare orientis, quod dicitur Elioschora, id est solis regio, hic accepit a Domino donum sapientiae, et invenit astronomiam.


°°° Here is the saga of my wild goose chase to refute myself and actually find a numeric symbolism:

Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere: Ussher III · Φιλολoγικά / Philologica: Numeric Symbolism in Genesis 5 Patriarchs? · HGL'S F.B. WRITINGS: Number Symbolism in Genesis 5? · Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere: Ages or Names Symbolic?

One cannot affirm of any part of the Bible "this is symbolic" unless one says what it symbolises. Or could in principle say it.

~ See Apocalypse 11.

jeudi 1 août 2024

A Reminder to Kristian Kristiansen


Has Kristian Kristiansen at Gothenburg University Disproven My Calibration? · A Reminder to Kristian Kristiansen · Dates for Scandinavian Prehistory, Revisited, Most Recent Tables

Table by him:

2850-2350 BC SGC, Pitted Ware and TRB Disintegration, SGC = Proto-Germanic
2350-1750 BC Dagger period Integration = formation of Proto-Norse
1750-1500 BC Early Bronze Age Disintegration = west/east Germanic
1500-450 BC Nordic Bronze Age Integration = mature Norse/Gothic
450-150 BC Pre-roman Iron Age Disintegration = west/east Germanic
150 BC-1000 AD Roman and Viking Age Integration = traditional Norse


Proto-Indo-European Languages and Institutions: An archaeological Approach
Kristian Kristiansen | 2009, Departure from the Homeland(eds.): M. vanderLinden and C. Jones-Bley(2009)
https://www.academia.edu/236975/Proto_Indo_European_Languages_and_Institutions_An_archaeological_Approach


450 BC onwards, I have basically no comment (execpt that making a difference between 450 and 750 may be difficult due to the Hallstatt Plateau, but OK, he could have been using tree rings).

Prior to that BC years, I have a recalibration. My pmC value refers to the atmosphere back then, therefore to the original C-14 proportion in the sample:

2850 BC = between 1734 and 1711 BC

1734 B. Chr.
86.8913 pmC, so dated as 2884 B. Chr.
1711 B. Chr.
87.3468 pmC, so dated as 2811 B. Chr.

2350 BC = between 1655 and 1633 BC

1655 B. Chr.
91.4498 pmC, so dated as 2395 B. Chr.
1633 B. Chr.
93.3283 pmC, so dated as 2203 B. Chr.

1750 BC = between 1766 and 1743 BC

1566 B. Chr.
97.441 pmC, so dated as 1776 B. Chr.
1543 B. Chr.
97.813 pmC, so dated as 1723 B. Chr.

1500 BC = between 1431 and 1408 BC

1431 B. Chr.
99.0919 pmC, so dated as 1511 B. Chr.
1408 B. Chr.
99.1755 pmC, so dated as 1478 B. Chr.


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


For me, his paper is not necessarily a test on my theories (ignoring the linguistic side and sticking to my recalibration), but for him, my reply may give a hint on how the recalibration already alluded to functions generally. And knowing Scandinavians, I think he may have wanted to refrain from a reply before giving me this chance to clarify./HGL