The Tanager wrote: ↑Sun Dec 17, 2023 7:54 am
a) But there still is an author and authors write within cultural contexts and fit into genres. While it helps, you don’t need to know the author to know the genre.
If you do not know the author, you cannot <verify> the author's intent, like you displayed with Tolken. This is exactly why I brought up the (2) points you made about Tolken and his writings. Those (2) points make it logically impossible to dispute that Tolken was intending to write works of non-fiction. We don't have those (2) points for the author of Genesis. Heck, we do not even know who wrote Genesis? Hence, we cannot ever really verify the intent of the writing style, can we? If we do not, one can just as easily argue/justify Genesis being written by a deranged or self-deluded individual. Or, merely copied from other pre-existing stories floating around.
The Tanager wrote: ↑Sun Dec 17, 2023 7:54 am
b) You don’t think Tolkien weaved any of his beliefs about truth into his work?
Sure, but we also <know> Tolken's intent was to be fictional. We also know Tolken's intent was not to be literal. We have no such starting point with Genesis.
The Tanager wrote: ↑Sun Dec 17, 2023 7:54 am
c) That’s the question we are discussing; this begs that question. Plus, truth is not a synonym to literal, as non-literal works can still contain truth (as you’ve said).
Since we cannot verify the author, then I guess we cannot verify if the author's intent was to be literal or not. Since "science" most likely debunks, or causes the believers quite a bit of stress, I guess it's easier to just assume this anonymous author's intent was philosophical/metaphorical alone.

This is exactly how one might protect their beloved book.
The Tanager wrote: ↑Sun Dec 17, 2023 7:54 am
We have debates in every field. The realism vs. anti-realism scientific debate will never go away. Neither will interpretation debates, especially of a book read by hundreds/thousands of different cultures and worldviews all thinking it is something worth taking note of. There are even debates about what Tolkien meant by this character or this feature of his writing, etc. That's the nature of writing a book.
You may have missed my point. Yes, almost everything is debatable. Many things in which both you and I agree upon as established fact, like the earth being spherical, many may still debate. There still exists a group of 'flat-earthers BECAUSE of their translation of the Bible. They too are protecting their beloved book. So I still ask anew... Have the hermeneutic scholars solved this question? Is Genesis meant to be a literal account of events, or not? They have had a long time to investigate.
The Tanager wrote: ↑Sun Dec 17, 2023 7:54 am
a) Yes, if a book isn’t making a scientific claim, then it can’t be scientifically debunked. That’s logic.
But the question remains unanswered. Was the intent of the Genesis author meant to be taken literally, or not? Let's start here, with some facts where we both agree....
1) The Bible is non-fiction while Tolken's works are fiction.
2) The authors of the Bible write about literal events while Tolken does not write about any literal events.
3) The Bible is based upon actual events, while Tolken's work are not based upon any actual events.
Of course, it's logical to conclude science cannot debunk Genesis if it is philosophical/metaphorical. But we already know Tolken's works could not be scientifically challenged because we already know the intent of his stories were not meant to be literal anywhere.
The Tanager wrote: ↑Sun Dec 17, 2023 7:54 am
b) No, I do think the Exodus is debunkable, albeit very difficult because of the nature of archaeology. I also think the reverse, using archaeological evidence to try to prove the Bible, has a very difficult before it for the same reasons. But even the archaeological scholars are still hotly debating where the evidence should be, where it is, and what that evidence does or does not show. To paint it as "there is no evidence" misunderstands the scholarly debate.
This goes back to the video in the Exodus thread. Your only argument is that we are looking in the wrong time period. But the video covers this too. You have demonstrated a differing reason to protect the Bible. With Genesis, it must be philosophical/metaphorical. With the Exodus, it's still hotly debated. Well, it's not, if you watch the video. As stated prior, flat-earthers still 'debate' their position. It does not then
still make it a
real debate.
The Tanager wrote: ↑Sun Dec 17, 2023 7:54 am
c) No, I do think it can be falsified. I think it can’t be 100% disproven, but so what, hardly anything that isn’t definitional can’t be. I do think you can, theoretically, show such things are not the rational positions to take, although I think those cases fail for rational reasons.
If a virgin birth did not happen 2K years ago, but a book says it happened, how might one disprove that claim? I don't think 'history' or 'philosophy' can disprove it either. It's not falsifiable. Just like "
Muhammad flying to Heaven on a wingrf horse" is not falsifiable. Thus, you have a built-in mechanism to protect your beloved Bible here too. Just like the ones who believe in the Holy Quran.
The Tanager wrote: ↑Sun Dec 17, 2023 7:54 am
No, one should use literary analysis that takes into account culture context and all of that to understand what a book was trying to claim. Reading science back onto it is taking it out of context. So, yes, don’t discount the Bible because of an out of context eisegesis thousands of years after the fact from within a different culture from when the book was written. But don’t accept the Bible as true because of that.
Since we do NOT know who the author is, we cannot rule out some dude who looked around, interpreted what he thought, and also thought it came from a higher power. Is it still logically possible to conclude Genesis was meant to be a literal account of events? I don't think you can answer 'no' without knowing WHO the author even was?
For the life of me, why not instead, (at most), be completely agnostic to the Bible, rather than being a believer? It's a large collection a claims, which apparently has not met its burden of proof.
In case anyone is wondering... The avatar quote states the following:
"I asked God for a bike, but I know God doesn't work that way. So I stole a bike and asked for forgiveness."