Lionz wrote:I meant all as in Mt. Hermon and the monolith and the trilithon specifically maybe. Are they not all in Lebanon? What if vibration or magnetism or antigravity or a combination were employed? Have you read about Edward Leedskalnin and Coral Castle before? A freemason single-handedly lifted and maneuvered blocks of coral weighing up to 30 tons in Florida using secret technology perhaps.
Look, I think we're now getting to the heart of why you're arguments are very difficult to take seriously.
1) You use a lot, and I do mean a lot, of anecdotal evidence. By that I mean you consider a story being told by someone to be true without considering the source, or the way that source draws on other sources.
2) You use a technique I like to call "what aboutery". When someone makes a significant argument against your theories, you don't address them, but rather start a new argument that runs something like "Ok- but what about...". Note that you don't propose a new theory. Just ask "What about...?"
3) God of the gaps. Really, you should look this up. Using the divine or the supernatural as a legitimate explanation for any event that is up for scientific debate at the moment does not make for a strong theory of God.
4) Sources- you post a lot from a handful of sources, none of which have any decent reputation. With no references. When you post you typically fail to explain the where, when and what of the things you post. You think you're arguing, but you may as well hold up a picture of a kitten, then a picture of the Great Wall of China and say "Nephilim". That's just annoying.
5) Doubt does not equal proof. I'm not sure if you really understand the scientific process, but an ocean full of doubts does not constitute a proof, no matter how you combine them. To give you a clear example- other beings recounted in folklore that I don't believe built the Great Pyramid include: vampires, Satan, ghosts, vampire-ghosts, demons, fertility godesses, witch-doctors, Achilles, and werewolves.