Although it should be understood from my previous post I'll make it clearer. There is nothing stupendously impressive in Biblical law. Nothing which makes me pause in awe or epiphany. The Bible is not the only document in the ancient Near East or the East in general. Out of curiosity, before you crowned Biblical laws for being so superior, how much of the literature of ancient Egypt for example have you read? How much of the Vedic literature have you read? or Greek philosophy? How many of the ancient codices of the ancient world have you covered?
My impression is not many, since you so arbitrarily champion Biblical laws as just and shrug off the laws of Hammurabi as unjust. Any member here can examine the Biblical text and choose several paragraphs in order to present the entire text as unjust. What you did to the laws of Hammurabi was done to the Bible by passing trolls for years on this forum, to pick and choose or quote mine the text in order to prove how lowly it is.
Of course, you are correct.
One can pick and choose any text from anything to make it support a point of view.
It was your caustic sarcasm that engendered my responses. That, your caustic dismissal - I do not understand.
It is very true that I find the Torah; G-d; and G-d's relationship to Jews both unique and awe inspiring. And, singularly a-historical.
No, I do not find the Vedic literature; the Ramayana; the Code of Hammurabi; the Egyptian Book of the Dead; Egyptian history and mythology; the Epic of Gilgamesh; Babylonian or Sumerian history and mythology; Greek literature, philosophy, history, and mythology - all of which I have, indeed, read; or from Zhuangzi to Swedenborg and everything in between, to be comparable at all to the Torah.
IMHO.
However, I suspect (and I could be wrong, of course), that when you are referring to "Biblical laws," you are referring to the Jewish part of what is commonly called the "bible" or the "old testament" and Writings and the Prophets.
If so, that is not what I am referring to when I write about "G-d's Laws" or the Torah.
I am referring to the Jewish Tradition of the Written Torah; the Oral Torah; the Talmud; and all of the accompanying commentaries of the last 3,000 years.
It is That study which makes the Jews; the Torah; and G-d's Laws singularly unique.
This is what I use to compare to other philosophies and religions. And, I am not aware of ANY other philosophy or religion that has been so studied and so developed over the last several thousand years.