Greta wrote: ↑February 8th, 2018, 6:28 pm I don't see anything in Lucky's post that would contradict the idea that we are part of the Earth.
That really wasn't the issue I was trying to address but it was an attempt to establish what man is. That is a starting point that man is of the earth and bound to the earth. I believe that truth self evident no? Ok.. so maybe even I can contradict my own statement.. maybe man is the microcosm of the universe and our origins actually were before earth or maybe man is just a phantom of the imagination, maybe that's how it'll end up (because man has 10 times more bacterial cells in his body and more than 1000 time more expressive bacterial DNA I've heard it said man is bacteria having a human experience)
Greta wrote: ↑February 8th, 2018, 6:28 pm I do think we need to respect the fact that each generation is keen to pass on their learning to the next, and the Bible, along with numerous other works, is an attempt to pass on information to save the next generation from copying the previous one's mistakes. To that end, we also need to respect the many works produced since with the benefit of more societal experience and learning. The Bible is just one source of information, with perspectives of people in the Middle East, how they lived at that time and what they did (often presented in metaphorical form, especially the OT, which is dated enough to be more of a historical curio than a useful guide for modern humans).
This is your assumption, mine differs in that I find the Bible more than just a historical curio but what exactly it is is part of the discussion. The Bible begins with an account of creation and I believe that to be a very powerful statement.
Greta wrote: ↑February 8th, 2018, 6:28 pm There is no reason to believe that the Middle Eastern mythology was any more tuned into reality than the perspectives stemming from African and islander animism and paganism, the Chinese Tao, Japanese Shinto, the Aboriginal and native Americans' relationship with the Earth. Each group's beliefs were initially shaped by their natural and cultural environments.
I don't that that's correct though I do believe there are truths found throughout man's attempts but none as pertinent to our modern thought as the influence we've been given through the Bible. I'm not trying to defend the Bible or it's teachings but I believe simply stating what I see as fact.