polonius wrote:
Is the Old testament fictional regarding the Exodus story?
1. The story begins with Joseph, his faather and his brothers.
2. The Hebrews were supposedly in Egypt for about 400 years.
3. At the time of the Exodus they numbered about 2.4 million, computed from the number of 600 Hebrew soldiers, their wives, children, and men too old or to young to fight.
So evidently Joesph and his brothers were overwhelmed with procreating!
4. And in spite of the number of Hebrews and all the time spent in Egypt, as one archeologisgt put it, they didn't even leave any broken pottery. In short, nothing that showed that 2.4 million had been there.
5. And to make matters worse, Moses l
led them into Canann, a Egyptian terrirtory at that time.
Don't we just love bible stories

Ok so if we were to do the math, say we start with the 12 brothers (sons of Jacob), and 400 years later we end up with 2.4 million decedents from those 12 brothers.
Now say that the average age of conception is 22 years old. That means every 22 years a new generation is born.
If we take 400 years, and divide that by 22, we get about 18. That means there would be 18 generations in 400 years.
now (for example), lets say the 12 brothers had an average of 2 children apiece, the equation would be 12*2=24, meaning there would be 24 children. Now say those 24 decedents also had 2 children apiece, the equation would be 12*2*2=48, meaning in the second generation there would be 48 decedents... Note ill simplify the equation using exponents, so 12*2^2, where the exponent is the number of generations.
From this equation we can build the main equation.
2,400,000(decedent)=12(sons of Jacob)*x^18
now we can solve for x and get the number of average children that would have to be born to a family to end up with 2.4 million.
Doing the math, x=1.97
So this is a completely reasonable number to get in 400 years, when assuming the age of conception is 22 years old. And if we do a variation of that year of conception, if it was 25 years old, we would get x=2.14.. If we did 20 years old we would get x=1.84...
So this tells us that the Israelites would have to had an average of about 2 children per family to end up with 2.4 million decedents 400 years later...
This is completely reasonable to be true
Also, saying there were no pottery is bizarre.. Are you really saying we havent found pottery in Egypt? Of course we found pottery in Egypt. We have found all kinds of archeological treasures in Egypt, we just dont have much actually naming the Israelites on the pottery, or some how indicating Israel was there (this is my assumption of what you mean when you say we didnt find pottery showing the exodus of the Israelites... Is my assumption wrong? what do you mean when you say we didnt find any pottery pieces? becuase i can guarantee you we have found tons of pottery pieces in Egypt)...
Like for example, how much pottery do we have that names any tribes? Ill let you come with your evidence that shows we have pottery naming any tribes.. How many tribes do we have on pottery being named?
Further more, we even have this archaeological find in Egypt, the Merneptah Stele, that mentions Israel in 1200 BC (the same time they were believed to be living in Egypt).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merneptah_Stele