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Bible double day is proven by top Science in 1890 by C. Totten

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member

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leibowde84

Veteran Member
Why does proving this long day prove that God, religion and the church are right? It seems like you are saying that proving part of the whole proves the whole is right, but I will assume you aren't doing that, as that is merely a well-known logical fallacy.
 
Why does proving this long day prove that God, religion and the church are right? It seems like you are saying that proving part of the whole proves the whole is right, but I will assume you aren't doing that, as that is merely a well-known logical fallacy.
You're one of those skeptics that could see Jesus walk on water and say that it's only because He can't swim. No amount of evidence will convince you.
 

lewisnotmiller

Grand Hat
Staff member
Premium Member
You're one of those skeptics that could see Jesus walk on water and say that it's only because He can't swim. No amount of evidence will convince you.

So you support this then, do you? Or are you skeptical of nothing, and see any skepticism in others as suspicious? Either way would seem to be problematic.

What's your opinion of these articles?
Reasons To Believe : Joshua's Long Day and the NASA Computers: Is the Story True?
Has the “Missing Day” in Joshua been proven scientifically?
 

It Aint Necessarily So

Veteran Member
Premium Member
You're one of those skeptics that could see Jesus walk on water and say that it's only because He can't swim. No amount of evidence will convince you.

I already know without looking at the link that it doesn't prove what it claims to prove.

How? If it were true, I would have learned about it before now. Proof of such a celestial miracle would have made basic science books and be common knowledge among those that read science.

I'm also familiar with the agenda, ethics, and methods of Christian apologetics, none of which I respect enough to trust anything that originates from such a source. I never go to them for information.

Why? Besides the reasons just given, there is nothing that is known to be true that is known only to Christian apologists. They discover nothing. If it's on an apologetics website and its true, it was imported from somewhere else and can be found in places not promoting religion. Link me to such mutually acceptable sources instead. If it's a claim of fact found only on a Christian apologetics site (or book), it's not believable.

Past performance matters. Reputation matters.
 
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Skwim

Veteran Member
FYI

Totten, Charles Adiel Lewis:


"Charles Adelle Lewis Totten (February 3, 1851 – April 12, 1908) was an American military officer, a professor of military tactics, a prolific writer, and an influential early advocate of British Israelism.

After a leave of absence [from military service], Totten resigned his commission in August 1893 and settled in Milford, Connecticut with his office in New Haven. He devoted most of his remaining life to writing, chiefly on biblical chronology, biblical prophecy, the Great Pyramid, British Israelism, the symbolism of the Great Seal of the United States and other esoteric subjects.

He was a prolific author, writing over 180 books and articles, including a massive 26 volume series entitled "Our Race" defending British Israelism, and his writings continue to exert influence in some Christian Zionist circles. Totten's works were read and embraced by Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of the Christian Science Church. British Israelism was later embraced by Herbert W. Armstrong, founder of the Worldwide Church of God and the white supremacist Christian Identity movement.
"
Source: Wikipedia​

Assessment: OCD fruitcake.

.
 

YmirGF

Bodhisattva in Recovery

blü 2

Veteran Member
Premium Member
Long day is proven, so God, Religion, Church and hell are proven.
You open yourself to the argument that if the long day can be shown not to have happened, God, Religion, Church are refuted, no?

And the short answer to Charlie Totten is: if his explanation were correct in modern scientific terms (although it wasn't correct even according to the science of his say) then it would be orthodoxy and we'd know when and how the earth ceased rotating for 23 hours and a bit. But the physical consequences would have been be utterly catastrophic, utterly unmissable. Picture for example the momentum of the water in the oceans, traveling eastward with the earth's rotation at 1037 mph at the equator, continuing east while the earth's rotation suddenly ceases, and humans, animals and objects all flung eastward at such speeds as the ground under them simply stopped. Even Joshua would have blinked at such a massacre.

I found this summary of Totten's book by Robert C. Newman, a christian and a scientist:

Reading Totten's book brought another surprise: [Totten's earlier] dramatic story of a skeptic convinced does not appear. Instead, Totten himself, a non-skeptic all along, seeks to show that a total of 24 hours is missing from past time, of which 23 hours and 20 minutes were lost in Joshua's day and 40 minutes at the time of Hezekiah. Totten does not actually reproduce the calculations by which he seeks to prove his 'case'; he merely gives the results. On pages 39, 59, and 61 of the third edition, the fact emerges that Totten relies on an assumed date of creation – the autumnal equinox, September 22, 4000 BC (p.61) – as the 'known' fixed point before the long day of Joshua. Taking the first day of creation to be a Sunday, by his understanding of Scripture, and finding that by calculating back from the present, September 22, 4000 BC would fall on a Monday, Totten concludes, "It can come so by no possible mathematics without the interpolation or 'intercalation' of exactly 24 hours" (p.59).
Not much sign of science in Totten then, you'd have to agree.
 
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ThePainefulTruth

Romantic-Cynic
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