Good to read.
Eight panels and the solar water heater are enough to power our home. We live closer to the equator than you do, and have over 2000 hours of high sun a year, meaning that each panel receives and harvests a relatively large amount of sunlight.
I've watched quite a bit of documentary television about Western Europe revealing all kinds of wind farms, including massive arrays of windmills in the North Sea and the Norwegian Sea. Even in the background shots of various ports and piers, I frequently see windmills.
Congratulations to your government and culture for its contribution to the welfare of the world as well as making itself politically and economically more secure.
Yes, you've told me that. What I've asked you before is, metaphor for what? Metaphors represent something else, as when I say that somebody is a pistol. It's clear that the pistol is a metaphor for a certain kind of personality and demeanor.
What does Genesis represent? What really happened?
I don't see why we don't simply call it what it appears to be - an account of the early earth that was once widely believed as written, but is now known to be mostly wrong.
You're reading into my words and injecting a message of your own invention into them, not the one I offered. What I wrote is that science is not responsible for the ways that government and industry apply it, not that science is all knowledge, and certainly not anything supernatural or religious.
Science deserves our respect and our gratitude. There is nothing else like it. I mentioned the recent explosive revolution in forensic science to you in an earlier post, one which has made police investigations and courtroom trials much more likely to identify the guilty and exonerate the innocent, which has been of benefit beyond just ensuring justice. Many of these cases are so compelling that the accused simply confesses to avoid an inevitable conviction and a harsher sentence, thus saving the taxpayer and the families of the victim and defendant the cost and ordeal of a trial, not to mention the disincentive of having potential criminals coming to believe that if they commit such crimes, they'll probably be caught however careful one is, however much you scrub up the blood, stage the crime scene, avoid leaving fingerprints, or try to collect your spent shell casings.
That progress deserves a standing ovation. Once again, science has improved the human condition and made life better. Acknowledging that is hardly turning science into more than it is or deifying it as you have suggested.
But you are correct that science itself doesn't do harm. It just tells us how the world works. The worst it can do is get that wrong.
What matters is if they witnessed the flood described in Genesis, not just any bid flood. You would recognize the biblical flood had it occurred as the one that inundated all dry land following a 40 day rainstorm, and killed all but eight people. If that's not what these witnesses were looking at, then their witness is irrelevant to the matter of the biblical flood.
Personally, I think that global flood myths are the result of finding marine fossils at high altitudes in mountains that were formally sea floors. It was certainly easier to envision the water rising to the level of the highest mountain tops than to picture the mountain rising that far out of the sea. And of course, routine floods, which aren't miles deep, wouldn't account for that finding anyway.
Also, when we explain the Bible in terms of the limitations and shortcomings of the people of the past and their misinterpretations of observed phenomena, we're basically taking the magic and divinity out of it and rendering it an ordinary human endeavor of historical value only, not a divine guide to living and learning.