349d
@ghost-of-a-duke saidMost of it is stories and bones correct?
There is a huge weight of archaeological evidence that we evolved as a species. To compare the validity of this evidence with witness testimonies and the like is really quite laughable.
349d
@ghost-of-a-duke saidHistorical stories, instead of those made up on the fly describe the bones that are found.
At least we have bones. You only have stories.
Happy new year Kelly.
@ghost-of-a-duke saidHappy New Year
At least we have bones. You only have stories.
Happy new year Kelly.
349d
@ghost-of-a-duke saidHappy New Year to all who have bones.
At least we have bones. You only have stories.
Happy new year Kelly.
WE? KellyJay has bones too. An average adult human body has around 206 bones.
Allow me to hold your head in my hands for a while, to give yours a rest for one day. Even the Lord Almighty, as mighty as he is, rested one day out of seven. However, his creation never rests. Rest in peace!
349d
@pettytalk saidPettyTalk can I ask you then, as KellyJay is still in his long term huff with me.
Happy New Year to all who have bones.
WE? KellyJay has bones too. An average adult human body has around 206 bones.
Allow me to hold your head in my hands for a while, to give yours a rest for one day. Even the Lord Almighty, as mighty as he is, rested one day out of seven. However, his creation never rests. Rest in peace!
Do you believe that dinosaurs and humans walked the earth at the same time?
@pettytalk saidFunny (bone).
Happy New Year to all who have bones.
WE? KellyJay has bones too. An average adult human body has around 206 bones.
Allow me to hold your head in my hands for a while, to give yours a rest for one day. Even the Lord Almighty, as mighty as he is, rested one day out of seven. However, his creation never rests. Rest in peace!
349d
@divegeester saidAs a martyr, I do, because I saw them in Jurassic Park.
KellyJay, simple question for you Sir
Do you believe that dinosaurs walked the earth at the same time as humans?
Which dinosaurs and which of our human ancestors? And in which period are you referring to for the walking together? There were some which were said to not only walk, but also flew. with and without feathers, over the earth?
You seem to, typically, lack in details. The way some questions are put is just as important as to how some answers are given. They are mutually inconclusive if either lacks the necessary details.
Happy New Year to you, nevertheless.
349d
@kellyjay saidPlease explain the origin of dinosaur bones and how they relate to the age of the Earth? (And please don't speak of bones in the singular. There are many examples of near complete skeletons being discovered of a whole range of species).
Historical stories, instead of those made up on the fly describe the bones that are found.
349d
@pettytalk saidHow do you personally understand and contextualise the (proven) existence of Tyrannosaurus rex?
As a martyr, I do, because I saw them in Jurassic Park.
Which dinosaurs and which of our human ancestors? And in which period are you referring to for the walking together? There were some which were said to not only walk, but also flew. with and without feathers, over the earth?
You seem to, typically, lack in details. The way some questions are put is just as impo ...[text shortened]... utually inconclusive if either lacks the necessary details.
Happy New Year to you, nevertheless.
Happy new year sir.
@ghost-of-a-duke saidI had to refresh my memory from my old school days on funny bones.
Funny (bone).
The "funny bone" is not actually a bone, but a nerve in the elbow called the ulnar nerve. This nerve runs down the inside of the elbow and is located near the area where the bones of the forearm meet. When you hit the "funny bone", you're actually striking this nerve, which causes a unique sensation - a tingling or prickly kind of dull pain.
You, sir, certainly have the nerve to be funny. Jesus was said to have a funny bone too. He was tickled to death.
From that time on Jesus began to explain to his disciples that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things at the hands of the elders, the chief priests and the teachers of the law, and that he must be killed and on the third day be raised to life.
Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him. “Never, Lord!” he said. “This shall never happen to you!”
Jesus turned and said to Peter, “Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me; you do not have in mind the concerns of God, but merely human concerns.”
I must say, that Peter's Church seems to have, and have had, merely human concerns, primarily. Paul lent a hand too, a big hand.
349d
@ghost-of-a-duke saidWell, that is more problematic for your worldview than mine. If you accept that all life started from a single lifeform and over time evolved into the vast array of life we see today, your problem is the bones of life all over the world. There should have been a slow increase in life from the early periods, but that is not what we see, there are explosions of new life according to our dating methods. So the process doesn't match the theory concerning reality. The timing of what is required to go from one lifeform to another isn't large enough either, that is math, not a story. This is on top of the fact no one can explain how life started under a rock or some pond when we try to do it ourselves in our best labs. I don't think your evidence is as sound as you make it to be.
Please explain the origin of dinosaur bones and how they relate to the age of the Earth? (And please don't speak of bones in the singular. There are many examples of near complete skeletons being discovered of a whole range of species).