Congratulations, for the first time ever, you've actually managed to properly assign a fallacy. However it matters not, since the entire purpose of your apologetic source is to rationalize the obvious religion-inspired ignorance in the past, in order to justify a self-imposed ignorance in the future. Go ahead, if you think this strengthens your position, accuse me of it. I still don't have any reason to consider such excuses, as I shall explain later on. Furthermore, the passage you've mentioned is really the least of your worries (go back and look at all the verses I had quoted). Interesting to note is, the simple fact that even your petty source admits to something you never would: The bible is a metaphor !!!!ad hominem...attacking the source instead of their claim.
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Duke...Either you are ignorant of history, or you are a history denier
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denied the sphericity of earth by mistakenly taking passages such as Ps. 104:2-3 as geographical rather than metaphorical statements.
Here's a tip for you, when you're jumping on a tiny piece, clinging on to it like a bulldog and vociferously denying/ignoring the rest of the picture (like you always seem to do in every matter we've ever discussed so far), then it's a sure sign of dogmatic dishonestly. But if that's what you need in order to feel warm and fuzzy on the inside, so be it.No problems from me with ltitle Galileo said. Keep in mind his perspective that God's Word is inerrant.
For someone who denies science, that's a very bold statement. So here you go:That quote was actually from a history professor. DavisBJ seemed to agree with it. If you want to be a history denier, perhaps argue with those two.
Show me a calculation of the earth's circumference made in Europe after the fall of Rome and before the Renaissance. Be aware that Indian scholars could get the value (not to mention the cosmology) up to less than 1% wrong in the 6th century, muslim scholars in the 11th.
And of course, the Greeks also knew very well about the spherical shape. Despite all of this, your "inerrant" book somehow managed to rely instead on the Babylonian flat earth concept (technically, not surprising as the cult of Yahweh grew especially prominent in the Hebrew diaspora in Babylon). As far as I know, before Copernicus no one could really figure it out back in Europe, and those who tried, couldn't penetrate the citadel of ignorance perpetuated by arrogant religious zealots.
But here's your chance, prove me wrong!
Epilogue: Since you seem to be adamant that christianity had anything to do with the renaissance and the scientific revolution, explain this: How come it wasn't before the extended contact with the muslim world that european scholars even realized they had foundations laid down by Greek and Roman philosophy?