heavycola wrote:tzor wrote:The problem heavycola is that this is not an argument; this is a dismissal. Mind you it's a nice dismissal, a viagra for the ego as it were, a means of distinguishing yourself from those who went on before. Yet it remains a dismissal. Just because something is a folk tale doesn't mean it is automatically incorrect.
Well thanks for the analysis, doctor. The historical fact remains that yahweh was a local, tribal god, one of many at the time. The Israelites only worshipped him - i.e. they were monolatrous - but they acknoweldged the existence of others. Baal, for example, was one. Their contemporaries the Babylonians had Marduk. Monotheism came later. It is survival of the fittest ideas, that's all.
First of all, we can argue the points (thanks for the promotion, but my highest degree is only an MA, not a PhD. I'm the Master, not the Doctor, so be a nice poster or I'll end this discussion with my tissue compression eliminator) but your argument in effect breaks down to realitivism; that there exists other examples of gods (tribal or otherwise) therefore they must all be wrong.
We then come to your notion of the "survival of the fittest ideas." I would hardly call the evolution of Judasm the "survival of the fittest ideas," as most of the ideas were effectively scupted by outside events. This continued through the evolution of the early christian church which was technically called "athiest" by the Roman authorities. While the notion of pantheons had fallen into compete disfavor at the time of Christianity, there was a definite competition between them and the Gnostics, who used a similiar message and were not as actively presecuted (or rather made the scapegoat du jour) by the authorities.
But then the question begs the underlying question. Was the evolution of all of this the result of Asimovian Liars or was there an underlying hand that pushed the idea across in spite of all the messingers? I am not going to suggest that such can be proven, but such cannot be dismissed off hand.
This is the reson for the "viagra of the ego" comment. The notion that all tribal religions must be equivalent is roughly the same non argument that all forms of governmetn must be equivalent or that all theories in science must be equivalent. That's why we constantly get comparisons to the "flying spaghetti monster" and so forth because it's easier to build a straw man and fun to watch him burn.