Bro Dave has put forward theBro Dave wrote:Yes, there is the eye witness account [to Jesus' resurrection] given in the Urantia Book.

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Bro Dave has put forward theBro Dave wrote:Yes, there is the eye witness account [to Jesus' resurrection] given in the Urantia Book.
McCulloch wrote:I am glad to see that one Urantia Book reader agrees with me about the subjective nature of the alleged facts revealed in the Book.
You are right.Rob wrote:Either perhaps you are not reading my posts, or else you should have said "I am glad to see that [two] Urantia Book reader agrees with me about the subjective nature of the alleged facts revealed in the Book."
McCulloch should have wrote:I am glad to see that at least one Urantia Book reader agrees with me about the subjective nature of the alleged facts revealed in the Book.
This seems to indicate there is plenty of calcium. Perhaps it is the different forms present that presents the problem.A 6,000 mile thick crust of Calcium on the Sun? No conflict with modern science. Sounds perfectly reasonable to me.
A 6,000 mile thick crust of Calcium on the Sun? No conflict with modern science. Sounds perfectly reasonable to me.
I will not argue about there being plenty of calcium in the sun. However, the authors of the Urantia Book explicitly make the claim that "there is a calcium layer, a gaseous stone surface, on the sun six thousand miles thick. " By my rough calculation, a calcium layer six thousand miles thick on the surface of the sun would make the sun about 2 per cent calcium. Current estimates put calcium at about 0.00019% of the sun. Somebody is off by more than a few orders of magnitude.Billurantia wrote:This seems to indicate there is plenty of calcium. Perhaps it is the different forms present that presents the problem.
Dear McCullock,McCulloch wrote:Current estimates put calcium at about 0.00019% of the sun. Somebody is off by more than a few orders of magnitude.
I got this number from Basic Facts About the Sun Part 2 from University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR). © 2002 University Corporation for Atmospheric Research. All Rights Reserved.McCulloch wrote:Current estimates put calcium at about 0.00019% of the sun. Somebody is off by more than a few orders of magnitude.
Thanks McCullock. I am going to have to wait until I can make a trip to the University library before I do any real research on this question, so it might be a while, but I will get to it eventually.McCulloch wrote:I got this number from Basic Facts About the Sun Part 2 from University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR). © 2002 University Corporation for Atmospheric Research. All Rights Reserved.McCulloch wrote:Current estimates put calcium at about 0.00019% of the sun. Somebody is off by more than a few orders of magnitude.
Hi Sandy,Sandycane wrote:Greetings All!
It's been a loooong time since I've been here but, I see Woody and Dave (and a few new faces) are still waving the UB flag.![]()
For some mysterious reason, I received an e-mail notification about this thread.so, I logged back in and read all 10 pages...well, I skimmed over some parts.
Mr. McCulloch! What a superb job you are doing of moderating this debate.
I don't really have anything to add to this thread but, I will look around and see if something grabs me...I'm sure I'll find something.![]()
Just wanted to say, 'Hi' and and 'Thanks' for the invitation.
Sandy