Other views: https://www.nytimes.com/20 ... .html?_r=0
They certainly don't seem as thick as popular media has long asserted them to be - least as smart as most politicians.
They certainly don't seem as thick as popular media has long asserted them to be - least as smart as most politicians.
What I don't get is why they don't think they were human. They were human just like us.Philip wrote:Of course, Hugh Ross and Reasons.org don't believe the Neanderthals were human: http://www.reasons.org/blogs/the-cells- ... n-mooallem And: http://www.reasons.org/articles/neander ... erbreeding
Other views: https://www.nytimes.com/20 ... .html?_r=0
They certainly don't seem as thick as popular media has long asserted them to be - least as smart as most politicians.
Here's what Reasons.org has to say about Neanderthals:thatkidakayoungguy wrote:What I don't get is why they don't think they were human. They were human just like us.Philip wrote:Of course, Hugh Ross and Reasons.org don't believe the Neanderthals were human: http://www.reasons.org/blogs/the-cells- ... n-mooallem And: http://www.reasons.org/articles/neander ... erbreeding
Other views: https://www.nytimes.com/20 ... .html?_r=0
They certainly don't seem as thick as popular media has long asserted them to be - least as smart as most politicians.
OK, snowflake - explain. This is not new about RTB.I'm so offended, I'm lost for a response.
I think he's offended that Mrs. K gave me that picture of him. She said she's tired of going out in public with a man that looks like that.Philip wrote:OK, snowflake - explain. This is not new about RTB.I'm so offended, I'm lost for a response.
I think the reason Moses (or God, rather) used similarities from the Mesopotamian myths is to teach truths that they would understand. Like for example the sun, moon, and stars are first mentioned in day 4, while most cultures in that time and place held them with high regard. That's not to say there weren't real events that took place (like separating light from dark) or the creation of man but ofttimes we overlook the deeper meanings in text.Philip wrote: If you read the ancient Creation myths of the region, there is no way it is an accident that the Moses accounts are so incredibly similar - actually, it's impossible!
The thesis of the Miller book is all about that God, through Moses, was more likely been correcting the new nation of Israel's false Creation understandings, as when this accounts were written, Israel was a brand new nation that had just absorbed four centuries of pagan Creation myths. This was a pre-scientific age people - they wouldn't have understood the scientific views if they'd been explained. So Miller asserts that the reason the ancient Egyptian and Mesopotamian creation myths are so eerily similar is that God was using what they DID know/had absorbed, to correct their false THEOLOGICAL understandings about God, and NOT their scientific ones (which were totally alien to them).