What misrepresentations?Don't forget my TARDIS booth explanation, either.
Please add that to your misrepresentations too.
I understand.
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What misrepresentations?Don't forget my TARDIS booth explanation, either.
Please add that to your misrepresentations too.
I understand.
Why are stipulating this?
Yes, well aware people claim the ark could float, some people still claim that flu shots will give you autism, just because people claim it doesn't make it true.
Assuming the writers of the account were familiar with maritime terminology.
Genesis 7:11a In the six hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, the seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the fountains of the great deep broken up,
I'll tell you what:
Go stand atop Old Faithful for awhile and see what happens.
Just picking this subject up but how you think about the ark has nothing to do with its survivability. It is physics that determine this not the words we choose to describe it.To convey a proper image of, and probable construction of, the ark. If the ark is thought of as a 'ship' it cannot be thought of as a sturdy building. A 'ship' that big probably wouldn't survive the flood, but a structure like a large box would.
Just picking this subject up but how you think about the ark has nothing to do with its survivability. It is physics that determine this not the words we choose to describe it.
Dizredux
Absurd. The reality is that you do not know many things about the ark. Therefore dreaming up one that cannot float properly is your own invention.
Granted that.
Structural integrity of the ark + hydrologic elements of the flood = survivability (or not).
If one imagines a very violent flood occurred then the ark would not survive. However, the flood as described in the story was certainly survivable.
A kinder, gentler, lazy summer afternoon omnicide?
The flood came and went slowly, like the tides; so yes.
The flood came and went slowly, like the tides; so yes.
Not until you tell me where Mt Ararat was before Pangaea was split up into five continents.[serious];65479740 said:So yeah, flying clams can take a hike.
Why not?The reality is that we know the composition and dimensions of the ark, and that, absent magical thinking complete with a hatful of undocumented miracles on demand, a loaded craft fitting its description would not be seaworthy.
The flood came and went slowly, like the tides; so yes.
That depends...do these assumptions include buoyancy?The study is not a negative for creationists, at least...that is all. It is significant that the boat was sized by God to be of the right order for the number of creatures it was intended to carry.
I guess it was a good job that the boat wasn't tiny.
The assumptions made are not huge.
Nope. The only gaps arise from ignorance of the exact design of the craft, materials used, and laws that determined how it floated!As PsychoSarah said:
And you responded with:
Then we're all in agreement. I (and others) can continue to point out the absurdities of this story, you (and other) can continue to rationalize them by claiming supernatural intervention, whereupon I (and others) will continue to remain unconvinced by your god of the gaps.
I never argued that it couldn't float. The Wyoming, which I compared it too, could float just fine. I argued that a wooden structure of that size wouldn't survive a tsunami, which is something I can evaluate simply knowing the size of it.
Perhaps you can quote the verse that says the water took 40 days to reach the ark?The bible reveals a slow moving flood that took 40 days from the time it started to reach and float the ark.
That's the lamest excuse I have ever heard. MODERN language uses the terms portholes, hatches, and decks. There is no reason that the KJV translators had to use those terms.Gen 6:16 describes a building, not a ship or barge.
"A window shalt thou make to the ark, and in a cubit shalt thou finish it above; and the door of the ark shalt thou set in the side thereof; with lower, second, and third stories shalt thou make it."
Ships use the terms portholes, hatches, and decks. Buildings use the terms windows, doors, and stories.
The ark was a building.
The image I posted WAS of a large box and said that was wrong.To convey a proper image of, and probable construction of, the ark. If the ark is thought of as a 'ship' it cannot be thought of as a sturdy building. A 'ship' that big probably wouldn't survive the flood, but a structure like a large box would.
Unfortunately that stipulation is impossible both from a Biblical standpoint and a scientific one.I'm also trying to stipulate that the flood was not a tsunami-like event, at least in regard to the survivability of the ark.
Not until you tell me where Mt Ararat was before Pangaea was split up into five continents.
Your Newtons and resistance and all that other techno stuff sounds pretty convincing, but without a launch point and height of geysering, you have zip.