
Resources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simulation_hypothesis
https://www.scientificamerican.com/arti ... imulation/
https://builtin.com/hardware/simulation-theory
https://www.simulation-argument.com/
Moderator: Moderators
William wrote: ↑Thu Nov 24, 2022 8:22 pmNo. I wasn't saying that. What I am still saying is that the Breath of YHVH is the interface between Adam in the body set and YHVH in the Spirit.
Remember, Adam is not the body set, but the growing personality within the body set and the personality cannot grow at all/become a personality, without the Breath of YHVH.
William wrote: ↑Thu Nov 24, 2022 8:22 pmWhat people were there up to that point? There were none, unless we also count the Serpent as a 'people' since the Serpent was as sentient as Adam...but for whatever reason, was not suitable for the purpose of breeding.
Should we accept that YHVH had plans for Adam from The Beginning, which involved a woman being created directly from Adam's DNA [Gen 2:22] and it was always YHVH's intention/agenda to have the pair breed and leave The Garden and go into the world and multiply through their offspring and eventually subdue the whole planet?
William wrote: ↑Thu Nov 24, 2022 8:22 pmEven so, we cannot say therein that Adam understood what his role was in YHVH's plans. Adam does not even appear to know what the emotion he is experiencing, is triggered by.
Obviously, Adam did not even understand that much, so why should we expect that he understood YHVH about what death was?
William wrote: ↑Thu Nov 24, 2022 8:22 pmObviously we should therefore be able to agree that YHVH created Adams body set in such a way that the newly forming personality would respond predictably and YHVH would provide that which Adam had missing in his experience, even though Adam would not have had any understanding of why he felt as he did - but only knowledge [intuition] that he felt as he did.
William wrote: ↑Thu Nov 24, 2022 8:22 pmAdams body set was designed by YHVH, even before YHVH gave it breath and then placed it within The Garden...so any desires coming from that must have been to be able to do so. though how the body set was designed
This does not mean that YHVH is at fault for Adam not understanding what death was, or for taking the contrary advice from the Serpent.
William wrote: ↑Thu Nov 24, 2022 8:22 pmBut we aren’t the beasts, we have rationality that they don’t.
If that were the case, Adam wouldn't have succumb to the temptation to listen to any other rather than YHVH...unless Adam did not have a full understanding [rationality] as to what death was...and clearly YHVH did not give Adam any more than inexplicit instruction of what not to do and what consequence would happen if Adam did do what he was told not to do.
As such, Adam's rationality was not based in complete knowledge and thus Adam rationally could not have had complete understanding.
William wrote: ↑Thu Nov 24, 2022 8:22 pmWe can also deduce that The Garden occupied a very small area somewhere on the planet, but did not occupy the whole planet.
Also -we can deduce that - in line with agreement #18 from our Main Agreement List;
[18: We must continually question the teachings we’ve bought into, what we grew up in, what we want to be true, etc.]
That there were other humans in existence on the planet - in most habitual areas - before Adam was created and placed within The Garden setting, as the science verifies that we are all related and our common [DNA] relationship can be traced back to a female who has been named "Lucy" [and sometimes "Grandmother Lucy"] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucy_(Australopithecus)
and therefore, YHVH must have borrowed from Lucy's DNA some of the coding which went into YHVH's creation of Adam.
"I disagree" is too vague to be a useful expression in an ongoing discussion Tanager. It gives the reader no information on why one disagrees.I remember that you see Adam as a personality in a body set, yes. I disagree.
3: YVHV placed humans into this universe to grow personalities.
4: The purpose of YVHV growing human personalities is so that these would potentially gain experience of the truth of the reason for their environment and their temporary experience within it.
5: It is an advantage to all grown personalities to be consciously and consistently connected with YVHV and thus understand and support YVHVs initiatives.
9: YHVH's agenda continues regardless of whether humans understand good or evil the way YHVH understands it, or not
YHVH said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.Genesis 1:26-28 directly says that YHVH made male and female to rule over the planet as His image bearers and commanded them to be fruitful and multiply, filling the earth.
Indeed, it is obvious that whatever YHVH puts Their creative hand to - there is an explicite agenda involved in doing so.So, yes, we should accept that YHVH had these plans from the beginning for Adam and Eve; the text explicitly says this at the first mention of creating humans.
We do not know because we are not informed.This wouldn’t be leaving the garden as much as it would be extending the garden.
Even so, we cannot say therein that Adam understood what his role was in YHVH's plans. Adam does not even appear to know what the emotion he is experiencing, is triggered by.
Obviously, Adam did not even understand that much, so why should we expect that he understood YHVH about what death was?
Again, such a statement is too vague to be a useful expression in an ongoing discussion Tanager. It gives the reader no information on why one thinks it is not obvious.It’s not obvious that Adam didn’t even understand that much.
So do I, but this is because we have information about NY.
As you wrote;Can we understand things about NY without experiencing those parts of NY?
We can know things, but not necessarily understand those things in the actual context that those things really are best understood.I know certain things about New York without having ever experienced them.
Why do you think Adam understood his relationship with the Voice of YHVH?
The storyline definitely infers as much, is why.
YHVH had interaction with Adam and taught Adam language.
Understanding language is part of what helps the communication process, is why Tanager.How do you know Adam understood it, rather than just had knowledge about it?
The only way in which Adam could have understood what death was, would have been if he had witnessed what death was.Why are you claiming that Adam didn’t understand death? See: Gen 2:17.
“But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.”
Genesis 1 places the creation of animals prior to Adam’s creation.
Correct.
This could still be true. YHVH could have created specific types of animals designed specifically for The Garden environment.But if we take your chronological view of Gen 2:18-20, then the animals were formed after YHVH saw Adam was lonely.
Gen 2: 18-20Where does it say that the animals were brought to Adam to help relieve Adam’s sense of being alone?
Of course it mentions that Tanager. YHVH would have known and understood of course, but the point was in Adam coming to that same knowledge.It says YHVH wanted to make a helper fit for him (2:18). It then says YHVH had formed beasts and brought them to Adam to be named, but no mention of easing his loneliness (2:19). It then says that no helper was fit for him among the beasts (2:20). No mention of YHVH offering the animals as the possible helper.
I having been building a case. The Word Document that I copy and paste this thread content into, is currently 287 pages and growing.Make a case for your interpretation.
Adam was made to be in community with other humans, to multiply and fill the earth, not just to reign over it.
Do we also agree that it was only YHVH who knew and understood this at the time, and Adam did not?
This may have something to do with the humans created prior to Adam.No, we don’t agree. Genesis 1:28 explicitly has YHVH telling them, male and female, to be fruitful, multiply, fill the earth, and reign over it.
What separates humans from other beasts?
What sins do other beasts commit?
What do you mean by "thinking like a beast"? and "listening to a beast"?
The Serpent was a self aware sentient being, as was Adam.They listen to a beast’s, the serpent’s, “wisdom”.
Adams body set was designed by YHVH, even before YHVH gave it breath and then placed it within The Garden...so any desires coming from that must have been to be able to do so. though how the body set was designed
This does not mean that YHVH is at fault for Adam not understanding what death was, or for taking the contrary advice from the Serpent.
This lends itself nicely to the idea that Adam was not the body set but The Breath of YHVH within the body set.Yes, those desires naturally come. But we aren’t beasts. We can overcome our fleshly desires because we are made in the image of YHVH.
Given that you claim the Serpent is a 'beast', we can ascertain that the Serpent was simply acting on instinct re its roll in the temptation?Beasts just act on instinct.
Nope. We cannot bring in the idea that YHVH is at fault in any way, or this conversation will have to end.YHVH’s at fault for allowing this possibility,
What 'alternative'?but it’s better than the alternative.
What it does mean is that YHVH would still be able use Adam for YHVH's agenda, even if Adam did eat of the forbidden fruit, because the task of having this Family Unit go into the world and breed and subdue it, would still be able to be made to happen.
Then we could add to our Garden Agreement list;Yes, which will come through the woman’s offspring (3:15).
But we aren’t the beasts, we have rationality that they don’t.
If that were the case, Adam wouldn't have succumb to the temptation to listen to any other rather than YHVH...unless Adam did not have a full understanding [rationality] as to what death was...and clearly YHVH did not give Adam any more than inexplicit instruction of what not to do and what consequence would happen if Adam did do what he was told not to do.
As such, Adam's rationality was not based in complete knowledge and thus Adam rationally could not have had complete understanding.
I am not saying that at all Tanager. I am simply pointing out that Adam did not understand what death actually was. as the Garden Story tells it.Humans, having full knowledge of what death is, even by your interpretation, as the storyline continues, continually succumb to temptations rather than listen to YHVH. So, I don’t understand why you are saying that experiencing death would lead humans to not succumb to the temptation.
For sure I am attempting to follow The Garden storylineI thought we were trying to follow the storyline. Yes, the garden was a specific area to start from.
It may well be, considering the storyline has two creation stories. Other humans as well as other animals.The existence of other humans and all of this is not a part of the storyline.
Even so - if we are to take the Story as true, we have to be able to reconcile it with what science shows us to also be true.Genesis is not a science book.
William wrote: ↑Fri Nov 25, 2022 11:14 amShould we accept that YHVH had plans for Adam from The Beginning, which involved a woman being created directly from Adam's DNA [Gen 2:22] and it was always YHVH's intention/agenda to have the pair breed and leave The Garden and go into the world and multiply through their offspring and eventually subdue the whole planet?
Genesis 1:26-28 directly says that YHVH made male and female to rule over the planet as His image bearers and commanded them to be fruitful and multiply, filling the earth. So, yes, we should accept that YHVH had these plans from the beginning for Adam and Eve; the text explicitly says this at the first mention of creating humans.
Indeed, it is obvious that whatever YHVH puts Their creative hand to - there is an explicite agenda involved in doing so.
William wrote: ↑Fri Nov 25, 2022 11:14 amUnderstanding language is part of what helps the communication process, is why Tanager.
In this case, Adam would have understood that he was not to eat the forbidden fruit. This is because he has first hand knowledge and thus understands what 'eating fruit' actually is. Why he was not to eat of it, didn't need to be understood and was not explained to him by YHVH. YHVH simply told Adam that if the fruit was eaten, then Adam would "die". YHVH doesn't explain to Adam why YHVH did not want Adam to have knowledge about good and evil.
What makes you think that Adam understood what death was?
William wrote: ↑Fri Nov 25, 2022 11:14 amGen 2: 18-20
It says YHVH wanted to make a helper fit for him (2:18). It then says YHVH had formed beasts and brought them to Adam to be named, but no mention of easing his loneliness (2:19). It then says that no helper was fit for him among the beasts (2:20). No mention of YHVH offering the animals as the possible helper.
Of course it mentions that Tanager. YHVH would have known and understood of course, but the point was in Adam coming to that same knowledge.
In the story we have Adam and The Voice in The Garden [YHVH] and YHVH understands that a Voice in The Garden won't be enough for Adam, due to the nature of the body set Adam was growing within.
YHVH wants Adam to learn and be occupied with gaining and distributing knowledge and understanding.
Thus - the animals were placed into The Garden which meant that Adam had company and something to do, in giving names to the company of animals.
However, as YHVH would have known - this would not permanently fix Adam's loneliness. Nor for that matter would it allow for YHVH's agenda for Adam to be able to multiply, to be enabled.
William wrote: ↑Fri Nov 25, 2022 11:14 amObviously we should therefore be able to agree that YHVH created Adams body set in such a way that the newly forming personality would respond predictably and YHVH would provide that which Adam had missing in his experience, even though Adam would not have had any understanding of why he felt as he did - but only knowledge [intuition] that he felt as he did.
Stop using ‘obviously’ as that is empty rhetoric. Make a case for your interpretation.
I having been building a case. The Word Document that I copy and paste this thread content into, is currently 287 pages and growing.
William wrote: ↑Fri Nov 25, 2022 11:14 amIf no such humans were created prior to Adam, then we will have to explain why YHVH did not create both Adam and Eve at the same time, out of the same substance - and explain why YHVH chose to put Adam through a particular series of events with only Adam, before creating Eve.
"I disagree" is too vague to be a useful expression in an ongoing discussion Tanager. It gives the reader no information on why one disagrees.
All that is required then, is if we spot something which has already been mentioned, a quick reminder helps with the flow of conversation...We have been discussing the reasons in this thread.
We should accept that YHVH had plans for Adam from The Beginning, which involved a woman being created directly from Adam's DNA [Gen 2:22] and it was always YHVH's intention/agenda to have the pair breed and leave The Garden and go into the world and multiply through their offspring and eventually subdue the whole planet, yes.So, do you agree with me that the answer to your question about the bolded section above is “yes”?
Extending The Garden would be problematic as differing climates would prevent some of the plant life from being able to grow as well as they could do.
Do we agree then that "extending The Garden" simply means "transforming the wild world by taming it? [thus subduing the Earth]?Why do you think extending the garden would mean having identical plant life everywhere?
It appears to annoy you, which is not my intention. I am speaking from the concept of YHVH's point of view. It would be obvious to YHVH. Obviously.It was answering in like kind since you had just said “Obviously, Adam did not even understand that much, so why should we expect that he understood YHVH about what death was?” I see that you agree with me that it is not useful, so, stop saying “obviously”.
You mean immediately he was told re after being placed within The Garden?How do you know that Adam understood what it meant to “eat”? They hadn’t eaten in the storyline yet.
He named the animals. Is it too much to assume that YHVH instructed Adam to do so, or do you think this happened by some other means?How do you know Adam understood his relationship with the Voice of YHVH
Please remind the reader in bullet points all the reasons you say you have already mentioned.I think Adam understood what death was because of all the reasons I’ve already mentioned.
So you think the text implies that Adam understood what death was. Can we ascertain from that, that Death was in The Garden already? Perhaps Adam witnessed it before even been placed within The Garden, and thus understood what YHVH meant by death?I think Adam understood those things because the text implies it by mentioning them.
The only way in which Adam could have understood what death was, would have been if he had witnessed what death was.
I was not born with the knowledge of what death meant. Were you?You claim this, but where is the support for this claim?
The misdirection/misunderstanding might occur in how the individual understands what they are. "Spirit" or "flesh".Main List agreements wrote:6: Human personalities - upon the death of their body-sets - move on to other experiences.
YHVH could have created specific types of animals designed specifically for The Garden environment.
Then we can regard the idea that YHVH placed those types of animals into The Garden, which would suit the situation/position The Garden was grown on the Earth.The story line doesn’t say these are specific types of animals designed specifically for the garden environment.
The script I have already provided Tanager.So, which phrase in these verses does it say the animals were brought to Adam to help relieve his loneliness?
Why do you think YHVH choose to go that particular way with Adam, rather than simply create a suitable animal that Adam could mate with at the same time YHVH created Adam?
“Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh” is what the text offers (1:24).
Genesis 1:24
“And God said, Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after his kind: and it was so.”
This may have something to do with the humans created prior to Adam.
The story line implies as much, since there are two creation stories. Scientific research also shows us that there are differing epochs between the two, re the traditional ideas that Adam was created by YHVH some thousands rather than tens of thousands of years ago.Assuming there were any.
If no such humans were created prior to Adam, then we will have to explain why YHVH did not create both Adam and Eve at the same time, out of the same substance - and explain why YHVH chose to put Adam through a particular series of events with only Adam, before creating Eve.
Do you mean the part where YHVH does not create Eve from the dust of the earth? I must have missed that. Can you show where you addressed that?I addressed the first part above.
I did not argue it was a problem.What’s the problem with putting Adam through a series of events without Eve?
The Serpent was a self aware sentient being, as was Adam.
Do you think that Adam should also be referred to as a 'beast' which YHVH created?
Then we can examine what clear distinctions these might have been.The serpent is directly referred to as a beast, so there is a clear distinction being made between Adam and the serpent.
For some reason it appears that Adam did not understand this about himself. What about Adam gave Adam this extra thing which other animals - including the Serpent - did not have?Adam and Eve listen to the beast’s logic, but they are meant to be different, ruling over the beasts, and following YHVH’s commands, not their own desires.
Yes, those desires naturally come. But we aren’t beasts. We can overcome our fleshly desires because we are made in the image of YHVH.
This lends itself nicely to the idea that Adam was not the body set but The Breath of YHVH within the body set.
Until you provide the attribute that sets Adam aside from the beasts, we have no identification that this "spirit-matter composite being ontologically separate from YHVH" actually exists as a real thing separate from YHVH.Not any nicer than Adam being a spirit-matter composite being ontologically separate from YHVH.
Given that you claim the Serpent is a 'beast', we can ascertain that the Serpent was simply acting on instinct re its roll in the temptation?
Well we can say the same of Adam. Indeed, the Serpent is more closely related to Adam than the other beasts re intellect and verbal communication with language.The serpent is presented as different than the other beasts, so we can’t conclude this.
Nope. We cannot bring in the idea that YHVH is at fault in any way, or this conversation will have to end.
If you are unwilling to see no fault in YHVH, we can end it now.Then end it.
Nevertheless, there is no fault on YHVH's part.I think YHVH’s decision to allow for the possibility of sin...
How would YHVH even make such a community, should YHVH want to do so?...is better than the alternative of a community without the possibility of love.
7: Regardless of what humans choose to do, YHVH's agenda will get done
Yes. We both agreed with that as per the Main Agreement List.My view is that part of YHVH’s agenda is allowing humans to set their own agenda, choosing whether or not to join YHVH’s agenda. Do you agree with that?
For sure I am attempting to follow The Garden storyline
You answered that already when you noted that Genesis is not a science book.Then why talk about what science verifies and make a conclusion that YHVH must have borrowed from Lucy’s DNA in YHVH’s creation of Adam? The story line says nothing of these things.
Are you therefore arguing that Adam was a completely new creation, unrelated to Lucy?Science doesn’t show us that Lucy’s DNA was used by YHVH in the creation of Adam.
William wrote: ↑Sat Nov 26, 2022 10:43 pmYou mean immediately he was told re after being placed within The Garden?
How was Adam's body set fed between the time it was created and The Breath of YHVH giving it life, and it eventual placement within The Garden?
The story does not say either way.
Are we thus to assume at the point Adam was informed, that he hadn't ever eaten anything?
William wrote: ↑Sat Nov 26, 2022 10:43 pmThen we can regard the idea that YHVH placed those types of animals into The Garden, which would suit the situation/position The Garden was grown on the Earth.
For example, if The Garden was positioned somewhere near the equator, it is unlikely that YHVH placed Polar bears in The Garden.
William wrote: ↑Sat Nov 26, 2022 10:43 pmSo, which phrase in these verses does it say the animals were brought to Adam to help relieve his loneliness?
The script I have already provided Tanager.
The LORD YHVH said, It is not good that Adam should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him and out of the ground the LORD YHVH formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what Adam would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof.
William wrote: ↑Sat Nov 26, 2022 10:43 pmThe script also shows us that prior to that, YHVH took Adam, and put him into the garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it. So Adam was alone in The Garden and YHVH saw that it was not good for Adam to be alone, and so YHVH created animals and placed them in The Garden with Adam and this helped Adam focus on something other than his own aloneness…
William wrote: ↑Sat Nov 26, 2022 10:43 pmScientific research also shows us that there are differing epochs between the two, re the traditional ideas that Adam was created by YHVH some thousands rather than tens of thousands of years ago.
This seems to be one of the contentions between so-called evolutionists and so-called creationists - the age of human beings...
William wrote: ↑Sat Nov 26, 2022 10:43 pmThen we can examine what clear distinctions these might have been.
We know that the Serpent was intelligent and that it could speak language and converse with Adam.
Therefore, according to your reasoning, to be intelligent and speak and converse in language, is something beasts can do [since the Serpent called a "beast" could do that].
Can you tell the reader what it is that Adam could do, or had etc, which the other animals did not have, which shows us clearly that there are distinctions between Adam and the other animals?
William wrote: ↑Sat Nov 26, 2022 10:43 pmAdam and Eve listen to the beast’s logic, but they are meant to be different, ruling over the beasts, and following YHVH’s commands, not their own desires.
For some reason it appears that Adam did not understand this about himself. What about Adam gave Adam this extra thing which other animals - including the Serpent - did not have?
William wrote: ↑Sat Nov 26, 2022 10:43 pmUntil you provide the attribute that sets Adam aside from the beasts, we have no identification that this "spirit-matter composite being ontologically separate from YHVH" actually exists as a real thing separate from YHVH.
For now, all you appear to be arguing re that, is that YHVH's Breath is separate from YHVH.
Perhaps it is the idea of YHVH being separate from the physical universe which is causing some confusion between us?
The idea that personalities come to the realization that can have them think "I am not the flesh but the spirit", follows the same conceptual principle.
In that case, it would be a simple matter of saying - "a personality is ontologically separate from matter" and examine the possibility that most folk think of themselves as matter rather than of mind [spirit].
William wrote: ↑Sat Nov 26, 2022 10:43 pmThis does not mean that we have to ignore what evidence science has brought to the table as science should only verify how YHVH creates, and not be contrary to the biblical creation stories.
This would signify that any issues re creationists and evolutionists are not because of YHVH or the Genesis account.
YHVH would have created "Lucy" just as surely as YHVH would have created Adam.
Do we agree then that "extending The Garden" simply means "transforming the wild world by taming it? [thus subduing the Earth]?
9: Extending The Garden" means "transforming the wild world by taming it? Thus subduing the EarthYes.
The support has been ongoing throughout our discussion. That there is nothing obvious therein for you, is the issue.“Obviously” isn’t the main issue, but the lack of support for the claim you followed the “obviously” up with.
How was Adam's body set fed between the time it was created and The Breath of YHVH giving it life, and it eventual placement within The Garden?
The story does not say either way.
Are we thus to assume at the point Adam was informed, that he hadn't ever eaten anything?
So is it necessary to agree that there was Death in The Garden, even that no death was mentioned?I don’t think so, but the logic you used concerning ‘death’ would seem to lead to that.
In the same way that Joey understands his relationship with the cowardly voice which he hears when not on medication.What do you mean by “understood his relationship with the Voice of YHVH”?
To interpret it that way, - that Adam didn't know, but only assumed that the voice he heard interacting with him, was YHVH...And why don’t you interpret this as Adam knowing he was told to name the animals, without understanding the relationship, like you interpret Adam knowing he was told that death would result, but not understanding what that really meant?
We can address those points after we agree with how Adam knew the voice he heard interacting with him, was YHVH.• Adam knew what YHVH wanted him to do (1:28, 2:15)
• - Adam knew YHVH cared enough about him to seek a partner for him rather than leaving him alone (2:18)
• - YHVH told him eating of that fruit would bring death (2:16-17)
• - Eve knows this death is not desirable because the serpent tries to convince her it won’t lead to death (3:4)
• - YHVH, in Genesis (or the Pentateuch or the Tanakh or the Christian Bible) isn’t a random God, punishing people for no reason, yet your interpretation would involve YHVH punishing Adam and Eve for something they didn’t understand
• - Adam and Eve don’t ever say anything like “but we didn’t know what death meant” or “you gave us nothing to distinguish right from wrong” or anything like that.
• - Your interpretation would seem to also mean Adam and Eve didn’t understand other concepts mentioned, but you accept that they understood those, so your interpretation seems like special pleading
• - It seems pointless for YHVH to tell Adam the explanation for why not to eat of the tree, if YHVH knew he didn’t understand it; rather YHVH would have just said “but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat”
So you think the text implies that Adam understood what death was. Can we ascertain from that, that Death was in The Garden already? Perhaps Adam witnessed it before even been placed within The Garden, and thus understood what YHVH meant by death?
I agree that it must have been present within The Garden setting, in order for Adam to grasp what YHVH may have meant by telling Adam "for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die."Physical death could have already been present within or without the garden (through the animals, plants, etc.).
Without actual experience, one can grasp the fundamentals but this does not mean one understands fully about what anything means.But I’m not convinced one needs to experience something to understand it, so, physical death wouldn’t have had to be present.
Hindsight is a wonderful device. However, we are not talking about the readers point of reference, but about Adam's, re the storyline.But the death spoken of isn’t just about physical death; it’s also about a relational separation.
How did you learn to understand about death?
I think that those who have NDEs and share their experiences, understand a lot more about death, than those who have not.I don’t remember, but even if I learned it by seeing dead things, you need to show that no one can understand death without experiencing it.
Even then, it cannot be said that in seeing things die, that we understand fully about what death is.
What makes you think that I think that?Sure, but why think “full understanding” is needed?
Yes - the text does offer that to us. I even quoted the text to show that this was the case.This doesn’t mean YHVH brought them to Adam after sensing the loneliness and then discovered that this didn’t do the trick. The text doesn’t offer the reason as being to try to ease Adam’s loneliness.
For the time being, my focus is upon the second creation story involving The Garden and Adam.We already know from Genesis 1 that YHVH always planned to have male and female.
It is not good that Adam should be alone; I will make him an help meetWhere in this script does it say the animals were brought to help relieve his loneliness?
I think the reader will understand the importance of other animals - how they are able to exhibit love and other sentient attributes among their own kind and in some cases, also with others not of their kind.Yes, reader, Adam had other beings he was interacting with, but they weren’t intended to meet his loneliness.
The script also shows us that prior to that, YHVH took Adam, and put him into the garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it. So Adam was alone in The Garden and YHVH saw that it was not good for Adam to be alone, and so YHVH created animals and placed them in The Garden with Adam and this helped Adam focus on something other than his own aloneness…
The story lends itself to that as a matter of having to in order to grasp it more fully. It is not the readers fault that the story was written in such a succinct manner, but this manner was inspired by YHVH [3: The Garden Story is inspired by YHVH.]No, it doesn’t say that. You are reading that into the passage.
Why do you think YHVH choose to go that particular way with Adam, rather than simply create a suitable animal that Adam could mate with at the same time YHVH created Adam?
We have not got to that point in the storyline yet. When we do, then we can look into that in more detail.Sorry, Gen 2:24. “Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.”
Scientific research also shows us that there are differing epochs between the two, re the traditional ideas that Adam was created by YHVH some thousands rather than tens of thousands of years ago.
This seems to be one of the contentions between so-called evolutionists and so-called creationists - the age of human beings...
Given the evidence of evolution, I agree.The traditional idea that Adam was created by YHVH some thousands years ago is built off of treating Genesis 1-11 as modern history and science, when it wasn’t written that way.
The story of The Garden and Adam may be far more older than that, and something told around the fireside - in far more detail than the biblical version.The earliest known writing was invented there around 3400 B.C. in an area called Sumer near the Persian Gulf. The development of a Sumerian script was influenced by local materials: clay for tablets and reeds for styluses (writing tools).
Do you mean the part where YHVH does not create Eve from the dust of the earth? I must have missed that.
It appears to have been because Adam had things YHVH wanted Adam to learn, before starting with the breeding program.No, I mean the part about not creating Adam and Eve at the same time. What is the point behind that?
Rather I am arguing that YHVH saw this as a necessary thing to do with Adam, and our task is to try and understand why.
Yes, we need to understand why this detail is there.
Therefore, according to your reasoning, to be intelligent and speak and converse in language, is something beasts can do [since the Serpent called a "beast" could do that].
Can you tell the reader what it is that Adam could do, or had etc, which the other animals did not have, which shows us clearly that there are distinctions between Adam and the other animals?
No, according to my reasoning, beasts can’t do that.
Can you explain the apparent contradiction you are arguing?They listen to a beast’s, the serpent’s, “wisdom”.
Are you saying that Adam was a 'beast' like all the other animals YHVH created, but not exactly like all the other beasts?Adam and the serpent are different than all the other beasts, but Adam is also different than the serpent. Adam is meant to live by trusting YHVH, living by spiritual desires; the serpent appeals to beastly desires.
It would be fair to say then, that Adam was different from the other beasts - including the Serpent - on account of his unique position in The Garden - in communion with YHVH and undertaking specific tasks assigned to his by YHVH.They think with their desires, instead of as images of YHVH; they reject YHVH’s commandments for their own desires.
Adam and Eve listen to the beast’s logic, but they are meant to be different, ruling over the beasts, and following YHVH’s commands, not their own desires.
For some reason it appears that Adam did not understand this about himself. What about Adam gave Adam this extra thing which other animals - including the Serpent - did not have?
Because he listened to a voice which wasn't YHVH and which contradicted what YHVH had spoken to himWhy do you think it appears Adam didn’t understand this?
Perhaps it is the idea of YHVH being separate from the physical universe which is causing some confusion between us?
The idea that personalities come to the realization that can have them think "I am not the flesh but the spirit", follows the same conceptual principle.
In that case, it would be a simple matter of saying - "a personality is ontologically separate from matter" and examine the possibility that most folk think of themselves as matter rather than of mind [spirit].
This moves us to the crux.If YHVH’s breath is a human soul (and therefore, there are numerous YHVH’s breaths), then yes, I’m arguing the the text shows this ontological separation.
If by ‘fault’ you mean something like “made an unloving choice,” or “made a mistake,” then I agree.
...is better than the alternative of a community without the possibility of love.
How would YHVH even make such a community, should YHVH want to do so?
What do love and morals have to do with each other? What is "morally perfect"?Make a world where all agents are pre-determined to always make the morally perfect choice in every situation.
This does not mean that we have to ignore what evidence science has brought to the table as science should only verify how YHVH creates, and not be contrary to the biblical creation stories.
This would signify that any issues re creationists and evolutionists are not because of YHVH or the Genesis account.
YHVH would have created "Lucy" just as surely as YHVH would have created Adam.
Then we can add that to our Garden Agreement List.I agree they aren’t contrary.
Since it is not contrary to either creation stories, it can stay on the table in the shadows along with the "conceptual idea of absolute randomness."I don’t know the science of Lucy and the philosophical claims from this enough to discuss its scientific merit and then see how that information fits.
The Garden storyline, specifically - I agree...But we are talking about the story line, anyway.
Q: Why didn't YHVH want Adam to have the knowledge of good and evil?
Q: What in the story can we identify clearly as being YHVH teaching Adam the definitions of good and evil?YHVH didn’t want Adam to choose for himself what was ‘good’ and ‘evil,’ but to listen to and trust YHVH’s definitions of good and evil, and rightfully so, as the omniscient creator of everything.
Q: Do/can beasts sin?
Therefore we could agree that animals in such a state are "Morally perfect"?The story line doesn’t address it. I don’t think they are moral agents with free will and, therefore, they can’t sin.
Re human's aren’t the beasts, we have rationality that beasts don’t.
Q: Is this to say that sin = "having rationality but not using it"?
Too vague. Would you like to add details?No, it's not to say that.
William wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:23 pmIn the same way that Joey understands his relationship with the cowardly voice which he hears when not on medication.
In the same way Tam hears the voice of her lord, and and listens to what she is told by the voice.
Or do you think that YHVH could actually be seen by Adam?
William wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:23 pmThe whole point I have been trying to make is that one doesn't even need to understand anything for them to do what YHVH tells them to do.
Whereas, you appear to be saying that we shouldn't expect punishment from YHVH, if we do not have some kind of understanding as to what YHVH means.
William wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:23 pmMy argument is that the more understanding we have about something, the less likely we are to trip up.
A little knowledge is a dangerous thing, because it can easily lead to exactly what it led Adam to, which appears to be one of the main points of the storyline.
William wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:23 pmYes - the text does offer that to us. I even quoted the text to show that this was the case.
Such can be explained that this was YHVH's way of getting Adam to learn how to work with his loneliness by exercising his intellect and focusing it on things outside of his self. It was precursor to the eventual growing of the personality Eve, which YHVH would introduce to Adam.
…
It is not good that Adam should be alone; I will make him an help meet
William wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:23 pmI think the reader will understand the importance of other animals - how they are able to exhibit love and other sentient attributes among their own kind and in some cases, also with others not of their kind.
Also, we should know that for many folk - animals do indeed help with many symptoms of loneliness, and these are called 'pets' in today's world.
Therefore, I see no reason why YHVH would not want Adam to experience the other animals in The Garden and how to care for them, and how doing so would help alleviate Adams symptoms of loneliness.
A man can do without a woman and not be lonely.
A man cannot do without a woman and "multiple".
William wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:23 pmThe script also shows us that prior to that, YHVH took Adam, and put him into the garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it. So Adam was alone in The Garden and YHVH saw that it was not good for Adam to be alone, and so YHVH created animals and placed them in The Garden with Adam and this helped Adam focus on something other than his own aloneness…
The story lends itself to that as a matter of having to in order to grasp it more fully. It is not the readers fault that the story was written in such a succinct manner, but this manner was inspired by YHVH [3: The Garden Story is inspired by YHVH.]
There is no reason that the reader cannot take the clues provided and flesh the story out, as long as the storyline is still followed.
William wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:23 pmTherefore, according to your reasoning, to be intelligent and speak and converse in language, is something beasts can do [since the Serpent called a "beast" could do that].
Can you tell the reader what it is that Adam could do, or had etc, which the other animals did not have, which shows us clearly that there are distinctions between Adam and the other animals?
No, according to my reasoning, beasts can’t do that.
Earlier you wrote;
They listen to a beast’s, the serpent’s, “wisdom”.
Can you explain the apparent contradiction you are arguing?
William wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:23 pmBecause he listened to a voice which wasn't YHVH and which contradicted what YHVH had spoken to him
If he had understood how different he was to everyone else, and how amazing that it was that YHVH had grown Adam specifically to engage with him in The Garden Setting, there would have been no reason why Adam would consider giving all that up.
William wrote: ↑Sun Nov 27, 2022 7:23 pmQ: Do you think that a system such as evolution where all agents are pre-determined would essentially be a 'morally perfect' system, even that animals evolving are unaware of being created or who their creator is?
Currently my answer to that question is ;
A: Any system which is created by YHVH would be morally perfect, just because it was created by YHVH.