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Is that the best you have? What's that got to do with a global flood event?
In an iceage there is less water covering the planet.
There is NO evidence in support of a global flood event. Present any evidence that suggests there was such an event here.
During Ice Ages sea levels drop more than 100m.
Do you think that would be enough to cover the landmass?
Sea levels drop more than 100m during Ice Ages.
At the completion of the Ice Age, does the water just magically reappear in the seas?
What? Do you know what you are talking about?
That doesn't mean there is any less or more water. The reason that sea levels drop during an iceage is that much of the water on the planet is concentrated in icecaps closer to the poles.
Show me the evidence in support of a global flood event.
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Really? Please. That is laughable.
Not magically at all. The water is meltwater from the receding ice caps.
Show me the evidence in support of a global flood event.
How much water do you reckon you would need to take out of the seas for the sea levels to drop more than 100m ACROSS THE GLOBE?
It's just a little meltwater. LOL
Now go ahead and evidence these claims of miracle production please?Nearly every miracle Jesus performed was because of faith. Faith comes from reading the Bible.
Confirmation bias is an assumption.
Go and do some basic science. You have no idea.
When are you going to show me the evidence in support of a global flood event?
Here's what the planet would like like if all ice on the planet melted.
If I'm to take that at face value, that would imply that you think there's currently enough ice in the north and south poles to serve as a counterpart for an ice age. Would you say that's an accurate depiction of your statement?During Ice Ages sea levels drop more than 100m.
Do you think that would be enough to cover the landmass?
So sea levels drop 100m and all that water magically gets to the poles, then when it's all done all that water magically gets back to seas.
I thought all sorts of climate-y stuff happens to make it all happen.
Turns out it's just all magic. One minute it's in the seas, nek minnit it's in a glacier, but only at the poles because we don't wanna upset science-y people.
My atheist uncle used to use his childhood bible to reach the liquor shelf. Like Finnegan he fell when replacing the bottle, and also like Finnegan he rose from the fall, intact. I think resurrections are metaphors.Well I had the bible drummed into me from an early age and the last thing it gave me was faith (which, let's be honest here, is just wishful thinking).
If I'm to take that at face value, that would imply that you think there's currently enough ice in the north and south poles to serve as a counterpart for an ice age. Would you say that's an accurate depiction of your statement?
Geewizz, there goes south aussie.Go and do some basic science. You have no idea.
When are you going to show me the evidence in support of a global flood event?
Here's what the planet would be like if all ice on the planet melted.
View attachment 1292325
It's not magic. It's called science.
Here's a picture to help you understand the process.
View attachment 1292330
It does.
But we weren't talking about that.
I'm asking you to provide evidence of a global flood event that has occurred in history. Would you like me to define a "global flood event". as it appears you are having trouble understanding the meaning of the term?
What sort of nonsense is this?
Perhaps you should attend my Year 7 Geography class. We covered the process of ice ages a few months ago and the contribution and process of global cooling and global warming. We looked at the Last Glacial Maximum and the Holocene Climatic Optimum. I can see that you would need a number of extra lessons to get your head around it though. My best 12 and 13 year old students picked it up in under an hour.
Hitchens didn’t spend his entire career attacking religion, he gives his reasons in the latter part his successful career as a writer and political analyst, wanting to break the myths of the superstitious, mostly to allow people, more so, from the Middle East to be freed from the grips of religious persecution.Hitchens, another one of those "I don't believe in God, that's soooo stupid" but I will spend my entire life talking about God....because...... reasons.
Don't you think it is a little bizarre how so many of the high profile Atheists are obsessed with religion?
Does it only apply to certain people, or everybody?
My best 12 and 13 year old students picked it up in under an hour.
Don't you hate it when people do semantics at you?I don't know what you're saying, but you did not understand what I said.
71% of the Earth is covered in water.
If you took that water that covered the 71%, do you think it would cover the other 29%? The simple answer is yes.
Obviously if you took the water that covered the 71% the 71% would no longer be covered in water.
I know this. Doesn't really make it relevant to the question I asked you, though.Some theories conclude that humans ended up all around the globe because during Ice Ages massive landbridges formed from the sea levels dropping, allowing humans to simply walk from A to B.
Hitchens didn’t spend his entire career attacking religion, he gives his reasons in the latter part his successful career as a writer and political analyst, wanting to break the myths of the superstitious, mostly to allow people, more so, from the Middle East to be freed from the grips of religious persecution.
It’s all widely available this information.
No, I only applied it to you in this case, because I believe you misunderstood the greater meaning behind the quote and I know you are no idiot and come to expect better of you.
I think this subject makes you emotionally irrational at times, in most other conversations and threads, your logic and reasoning are sounder than most.
Don't you hate it when people do semantics at you?
I agree that, if you took the water that currently covers 71% of the landmass and put it over the remaining 29%, for the period it would take to run back to lower points - because that is how gravity works - that 71% would indeed cover the entire land mass.
But - again - that isn't the question I asked you.
I asked you if there was enough water on earth to completely cover the surface. Why you decided to approach this question semantically is your prerogative, but it's more than a little standoffish where it doesn't have to be.
I know this. Doesn't really make it relevant to the question I asked you, though.
I think you’re emotionally irrational given the subject matter, simple as that.I am a big Hitchens fan.
Am I emotionally irrational because you don't agree with me or because I am emotionally irrational?
Not by me, there isn't.It's not me being semantic.
There is a lot of energy being expended to disprove things using semantics.
Anti Semantic?It's not me being semantic.
There is a lot of energy being expended to disprove things using semantics.
Well I had the bible drummed into me from an early age and the last thing it gave me was faith (which, let's be honest here, is just wishful thinking).
A miracle is an effect or extraordinary event in the physical world that surpasses all known human or natural powers and is ascribed to a supernatural cause.
I see no evidence that an immortal, supernatural being or deity that is the originator/creator and ruler of the universe and exists outside time and space definitely exists. How could I?
What I do argue is that I or anyone else (despite their claims to knowledge of deities suich as Yahweh/Allah/Jesus or whatever) also cannot know the existance of such phenomena, beyond pure faith.
With faith, any imagined phenomena can be claimed as true.
Until robust, repeated supporting evidence for such a claim is presented, then I cannot ascertain its truthfulness and therefore see no reason in the meantime to believe / suppose that it is true.
Why should I accept one version of a claimed belief arrived at by faith over another claimed belief system also arrived at by faith?
Given that I'm not prepared to accept as correct or true the claimed premise of an unknowable, omnipotent, omnipresent and omniscient originator/creator and ruler of the universe (by whatever name they are called by their followers) by faith alone, my daily life incorporates little to no acknowledgment of such a being, other than reacting with skepticism when others invoke or claim that being's supposed omniscience, omnipresence and/or omnipotency through proselytizing their faith.
I've read the Bible many times.