LittleNipper wrote:If basic math played a part in the theory of evolution, that theory would have been dumped ages ago. The numbers simply do not add up. There is not enought time for a single celled organism to develope, let alone for that single celled organism to branch out and eventually be the ancestor of all living species. And yet, I must assume that those figure are acceptable to some --- when such suits their logic.
Let's get back to the Ark, but nice try attempt to obfuscate. Anyway (and this is for Subgenius's CFR) the 16,000 animal number comes from a source that LittleNipper cited form answersfromgenesis. We can play by whatever game you want; I was just playing with the oblong ball LittleNipper threw into the arena.
Back to LittleNipper, do you think it's realistic that a monkey can feed and water 741 animals at a rate of 1 animal per 2 mins (let's be generous and give him 2 mins)?
I believe an animal can be used to help transport food and I do believe animals have been doing such for man for thousands of years. Such is not unimaginable nor a novel idea. It is also very possible that the ark was designed with rainwater collectors and cisterns that could have channeled water to troughs to many if not all the animals. I mean even the Romans had plumbing.
LittleNipper wrote:I believe an animal can be used to help transport food and I do believe animals have been doing such for man for thousands of years. Such is not unimaginable nor a novel idea. It is also very possible that the ark was designed with rainwater collectors and cisterns that could have channeled water to troughs to many if not all the animals. I mean even the Romans had plumbing.
Question: If the Ark had rainwater collectors that funneled water directly into the Ark how did the Ark not sink...you know when forty days and nights worth of rain fell covering the entire earth with water?
Also are you suggesting that Noah had a water channeling system on par with the Romans and/or that the Great Flood happened sometime during the Roman era? Because it didn't.
Whatever appears to be against the Book of Mormon is going to be overturned at some time in the future. So we can be pretty open minded.-charity 3/7/07
MASH quotes I peeked in the back [of the Bible] Frank, the Devil did it. I avoid church religiously. This isn't one of my sermons, I expect you to listen.
LittleNipper wrote:I believe an animal can be used to help transport food and I do believe animals have been doing such for man for thousands of years. Such is not unimaginable nor a novel idea. It is also very possible that the ark was designed with rainwater collectors and cisterns that could have channeled water to troughs to many if not all the animals. I mean even the Romans had plumbing.
Question: If the Ark had rainwater collectors that funneled water directly into the Ark how did the Ark not sink...you know when forty days and nights worth of rain fell covering the entire earth with water?
Also are you suggesting that Noah had a water channeling system on par with the Romans and/or that the Great Flood happened sometime during the Roman era? Because it didn't.
Bond James Bond wrote:Question: If the Ark had rainwater collectors that funneled water directly into the Ark how did the Ark not sink...you know when forty days and nights worth of rain fell covering the entire earth with water?
Also are you suggesting that Noah had a water channeling system on par with the Romans and/or that the Great Flood happened sometime during the Roman era? Because it didn't.
Simple. One's job becomes one of closing off the supply when the cistern is full. and opening the "window" when the cistern needs to be topped off. Hollow logs or a series of troughs could be used to channel the water to where one wants it. I mean God told Noah how to build the Ark. I'm sure every detail of the Ark is not disclosed in the Bible. The Bible is not about the Ark. The Bible is not about the Flood. The main aspects of the story are presented to help enlighten and not entertain.
LittleNipper wrote:Simple. One's job becomes one of closing off the supply when the cistern is full. and opening the "window" when the cistern needs to be topped off. Hollow logs or a series of troughs could be used to channel the water to where one wants it. I mean God told Noah how to build the Ark. I'm sure every detail of the Ark is not disclosed in the Bible. The Bible is not about the Ark. The Bible is not about the Flood. The main aspects of the story are presented to help enlighten and not entertain.
Yes simple. I assume the same water system was used to take away animal waste?
Whatever appears to be against the Book of Mormon is going to be overturned at some time in the future. So we can be pretty open minded.-charity 3/7/07
MASH quotes I peeked in the back [of the Bible] Frank, the Devil did it. I avoid church religiously. This isn't one of my sermons, I expect you to listen.
Little Nipper, do you believe that the flood took place circa 2,300 bc?
“We look to not only the spiritual but also the temporal, and we believe that a person who is impoverished temporally cannot blossom spiritually.” Keith McMullin - Counsellor in Presiding Bishopric
"One, two, three...let's go shopping!" Thomas S Monson - Prophet, Seer, Revelator
Bond James Bond wrote:Yes simple. I assume the same water system was used to take away animal waste?
And deliver food. And take the animals for walks.
~Those who benefit from the status quo always attribute inequities to the choices of the underdog.~Ann Crittenden ~The Goddess is not separate from the world-She is the world and all things in it.~
Bond James Bond wrote:Yes simple. I assume the same water system was used to take away animal waste?
And deliver food. And take the animals for walks.
I would suggest that the animals tended to sleep, as as such ate little, and would not produce a lot of waste. When hibernation occurs the animals' vital functions slow down. Hibernation might even be a remembered trait stemming from the time of the Flood.
Last edited by Guest on Wed Aug 29, 2012 1:06 pm, edited 2 times in total.
just me wrote: And deliver food. And take the animals for walks.
I would suggest thst I imagine that the animals tended to sleep, as as such ate little, and would not produce a lot of waste. When hybernation occurs the animals' vital functions slow down. Hybernation might even be a remembered trait stemming from the time of the Flood.
They ALL hibernated for a year?
Do you have any science to back that up?
Did the humans hibernate, too?
~Those who benefit from the status quo always attribute inequities to the choices of the underdog.~Ann Crittenden ~The Goddess is not separate from the world-She is the world and all things in it.~