RE: [asa] dinos

From: Don Perrett <donperrett@theology-perspectives.net>
Date: Thu Jan 11 2007 - 10:55:03 EST

As you reaffirmed, ancient cultures "recognized" extinction. I did not say
however that they agreed with the concept. But seeing as they specifically
denied it, they must have at least understood what it meant and recognized
the possibility. For it to have even been discussed, meant that someone
stood in agreement with it even if culturally it was not accepted.
 
Don
 

  _____

From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] On
Behalf Of George Murphy
Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 3:24 PM
To: donperrett@theology-perspectives.net; 'Duff,Robert Joel'
Cc: ASA Discussions
Subject: Re: [asa] dinos

The possibility which Joel pointed out, that stories about dragons &c arose
from observations of fossils is fascinating - especially if it's true! Of
course that's very different from the YEC claim that those stories arose
from observations of extant dinosaurs.
 
In your 1st sentence below you refer to the idea that ancient peoples
recognized the possibility of extinction. In the west there is a tradition
extending back to Greece which denied the possibility of extinction, the
philosophical idea of "the great chain of being." (Arthur O. Lovejoy's book
with that title, originally published in the 30s, is a classic discussion.)
This was baptized in the idea that God as the perfect creator would not
allow any link of this chain, extending from God himself through angels &
humans down to the lowest creature, although there is no biblical support at
all for such a claim. This idea wasn't overcome until the 19th century, &
even at that lies behind such things as Conan Doyle's "lost world" in which
there are still living dinosaurs hidden somewhere. The discovery of
extinction was a shock to the western intellectual tradition which had to be
absorbed before the shock of evolution through a process of natural
selection in which extinction played a role could be dealt with. Loren
Eiseley's Essay "How Death Became Natural" (in The Firmament of Time) is
good on this.
 
Shalom
George
http://web.raex.com/~gmurphy/

----- Original Message -----
From: Don Perrett <mailto:donperrett@theology-perspectives.net>
To: 'Duff,Robert Joel' <mailto:rjduff@uakron.edu>
Cc: ASA Discussions <mailto:asa@calvin.edu>
Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 2:34 PM
Subject: RE: [asa] dinos

The idea that ancient peoples would have recognized the possibility of
extinct animals, and extinction in general, seems apparent to me. Some may
have thought the bones (not sure they understood fossilization) were of
animals that either no longer existed or that existed in far off exotic
lands. Either way there is already enough evidence that fossils were
discovered (albeit limited) during ancient times.
 
Don

  _____

From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] On
Behalf Of Duff,Robert Joel
Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 1:25 PM
To: donperrett@theology-perspectives.net; burgytwo@juno.com
Cc: ASA Discussions
Subject: RE: [asa] dinos

Don,
I agree with your comment about the possibility of dragon lore resulting
from Pterosaur remains or the like. Up until just a couple years ago I was
under the illusion that man didn't recognize fossils for what they may be
until the middle ages or after. I think I got this impression from Rudwicks
classic book on fossils. I just read a book that really opened up my eyes
to seeing the importance of fossils an ancient civilizations. The book The
First Fossil Hunters by Adrienne Mayor contains some fascinating accounts
and speculations about paleontology in the Greek and roman times. Mayor, I
believe, makes an effective case that the fantastic creatures of classical
mythology resulted from the imaginations of people who found bones of
mammoths and other large megafauna. These bones were attributed to long
dead heroes and were collected and treated as relics of importance.

Especially relevant is the legend of the griffins in which these dragon-like
creatures where said to guard gold deposits in the east. Mayor makes a nice
case for this legend to have come about via the stories of travelers who
came by skeletons of protoceretops which are common in the southern Gobi
desert. It seems likely that seeing these great fully articulated skeletons
that it would be assumed that they represented dragons that had died but
that there must be others that yet remained alive.
Joel

-----Original Message-----
From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu on behalf of Don Perrett
Sent: Tue 1/9/2007 5:59 PM
To: burgytwo@juno.com
Cc: ASA Discussions
Subject: RE: [asa] dinos

Normally I don't get into the YEC/ID discussions. HOWEVER

IMHO I feel that more likely than a direct descendancy from Noah, which
cannot account for Native Americans being here before the flood, I believe
it is more likely that the flood stories from around the world are in
reference to past human experiences (tales) of the floods which likely
occurred at the end of the last ice age which would have been seen globally
but would not have been global. Being that it would more likely be at a
more recent time, it may have been as a result of mountain glaciers melting
rapidly and not the larger glaciers that may have cut the Grand Canyon for
example. Any area in a low land near mountains with remaining ice age
glacier caps would have experience localized (regional) flooding.

As for the flying dinos, is it not likely that the tales may have originated
from hypotheses drawn from those that found Ptero remains?

Don

-----Original Message-----
From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] On
Behalf Of burgytwo@juno.com
Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2007 3:35 PM
To: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: [asa] dinos

AIG recently tossed out the following:

Q: Were dragons just mythological?

A: You may have heard about the flood legends that have come down from many
different people groups around the world, many of which are very similar to
the Bible's account of Noah's Flood.

For instance, the Australian Aborigines, before they even met missionaries,
had stories about a global flood. The stories included many similarities to
the Bible's account. The same can be said of the legends of the American
Indians, Fijians, Eskimos, and other cultures all around the world.

The reason for this is that these people are all descendants of Noah.
They handed down the story of the Flood to succeeding generations. The
stories changed over the years, but the similarities to the Bible are still
there.

The same sort of thing likely happened with dragon legends. These stories
are based on real encounters with real beasts. The stories exist all over
the world, handed down from generation to generation.

What were the dragons? When you read about the descriptions of many of these
dragons in the old history books, you will see that they fit with many of
the descriptions we have today of dinosaurs.

Yes, dragons were probably dinosaurs!

-----------------------------------------------------------

Now I'm going to confess that the first time I saw this argument, it argued
(for me) somewhat persuasively that -- perhaps -- dinos and humanity existed
at the same 6time. The stories in the book of Job reinforced this. Then when
I saw dino tracks in a river in San Rose
(?) Texas, the credibility increased. Those tracks "looked" fresh -- not 100
MY old. (They still do).

So to a limited extent I stll hold a small chance (.01% perhaps) that dinos
did survive into recent times.

Of course, that possibility has nothing to do with the YEC view, I think.
Should a living T Rex be found in -- say -- S America, it WOULD be
interesting. I keep hoping ... .

Burgy

To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with "unsubscribe
asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.

To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with
"unsubscribe asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.

To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with
"unsubscribe asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.
Received on Thu Jan 11 10:53:25 2007

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Thu Jan 11 2007 - 10:53:25 EST