Originally posted by: Crono
If I engraved "Zeppelin the igoramus" on a bowl, do you think that would make it true if archaeologists discovered it 2,000 years later?
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
*grabs lawnchair*
Originally posted by: KLin
Originally posted by: Crono
If I engraved "Zeppelin the igoramus" on a bowl, do you think that would make it true if archaeologists discovered it 2,000 years later?
Igoramus? Like a giant Igor?
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
*grabs lawnchair*
well no crap early christianity and paganism intertwined in the ancient world.then the discovery may provide evidence that Christianity and paganism at times intertwined in the ancient world.
Originally posted by: ElFenix
well no crap early christianity and paganism intertwined in the ancient world.then the discovery may provide evidence that Christianity and paganism at times intertwined in the ancient world.
Originally posted by: darkswordsman17
Two things:
Isn't it funny how human are. Imagine the foundation for a religion that, what 1/4 of the world's population follows, could be the equivalent to a modern day David Blaine or Chris Angel? It really isn't that far fetched either, especially considering all the other crap people believed at the time.
Based on the general idiocy of the modern world when it comes to grammar and spelling, imagine how bad the people in the past must have been, considering far fewer of them were educated at all. It'd be interesting to see what people thousands of years from now would try to glean by reading stuff posted on the internet.
Originally posted by: darkswordsman17
Two things:
Isn't it funny how human are. Imagine the foundation for a religion that, what 1/4 of the world's population follows, could be the equivalent to a modern day David Blaine or Chris Angel? It really isn't that far fetched either, especially considering all the other crap people believed at the time.
Based on the general idiocy of the modern world when it comes to grammar and spelling, imagine how bad the people in the past must have been, considering far fewer of them were educated at all. It'd be interesting to see what people thousands of years from now would try to glean by reading stuff posted on the internet.
Originally posted by: darkswordsman17
Two things:
Isn't it funny how human are. Imagine the foundation for a religion that, what 1/4 of the world's population follows, could be the equivalent to a modern day David Blaine or Chris Angel? It really isn't that far fetched either, especially considering all the other crap people believed at the time.
Based on the general idiocy of the modern world when it comes to grammar and spelling, imagine how bad the people in the past must have been, considering far fewer of them were educated at all. It'd be interesting to see what people thousands of years from now would try to glean by reading stuff posted on the internet.
Originally posted by: darkswordsman17
Two things:
Isn't it funny how human are. Imagine the foundation for a religion that, what 1/4 of the world's population follows, could be the equivalent to a modern day David Blaine or Chris Angel? It really isn't that far fetched either, especially considering all the other crap people believed at the time.
Based on the general idiocy of the modern world when it comes to grammar and spelling, imagine how bad the people in the past must have been, considering far fewer of them were educated at all. It'd be interesting to see what people thousands of years from now would try to glean by reading stuff posted on the internet.
Originally posted by: Crono
If I engraved "Zeppelin the ignoramus" on a bowl, do you think that would make it true if archaeologists discovered it 2,000 years later?
The magus might then have used the engraving on the bowl to legitimize his supernatural powers by invoking the name of Christ, the scientists theorize.
Goddio said, "It is very probable that in Alexandria they were aware of the existence of Jesus" and of his associated legendary miracles, such as transforming water into wine, multiplying loaves of bread, conducting miraculous health cures, and the story of the resurrection itself.
Originally posted by: esun
Originally posted by: Crono
If I engraved "Zeppelin the ignoramus" on a bowl, do you think that would make it true if archaeologists discovered it 2,000 years later?
What if I scrawled a big story on some parchment and called it "Bible"? Then would it be true?