C) OESTES CLAIMS FAILED A SIMPLE TEST
Oeste could not use Leviticus 13:28 TO EVEN DIFFERENTIATE LEPROSY FROM SIMPLE ECZEMA
Absolutely Clear, nor would I even try. I'm not a Levitical priest, and I'm certainly not a medical clinician who use Leviticus to diagnose patients.
I also know that the "leprosy" of Leviticus has nothing to do with modern leprosy of today.
But just to put this nonsense to rest, IF eczema existed back in the day, and IF it existed back then as it does now, and IF this was something inflicted upon the Jews then it would be "covered" or addressed under Leviticus 13:39.
See how easy that was? Another strawman unravels.
Oeste now claims : “You simply asked how a medical clinician might diagnose leprosy in a young girl using Leviticus. “
Yes, that 's what you asked and I answered it for you. I wish you would do the same courtesy for my questions sometimes. For instance, I'm still waiting for that criteria on when we can and can't use dynamic equivalence, and what makes "Lord" for "rock" okay, but "exact" with "representation" a non-starter.
No, I did not ask how to diagnose leprosy.
But of course you did
@Clear. Did you forget? Here is is again for you, from post
#765:
I am a medical clinician and I saw a χαρακτηρ a few days ago on the skin of a teenage girl.
You claim Leviticus, tells the priest "exactly" what marks leprosy and what does not.
If so, can you use the information from Leviticus, tell me EXACTLY what it looked like that tells me it was not leprosy.
OR, did I make a mistake and should I call the parents back and tell them their child has leprosy.
Since you claim the verse describes “exactly what marks leprosy and what does not”, you can help me out?
Please read your argument CAREFULLY @Clear. There is no mention of eczema. The only skin lesion here is
leprosy and absolutely no request for a differential diagnosis.
Your request at this point is whether you, as a medical technician, can diagnose the child's skin lesions as leprosy using the book of Leviticus.
NO MENTION OF ECZEMA. This is post 765 and "eczema" doesn't pop up until #772.
I asked you to put your claims to the test by using the “exact” information in Leviticus to differentiate leprosy from a skin lesion I saw.
This makes absolutely no sense
@Clear!
Leprosy is a chronic infectious disease that CAUSES SKIN LESIONS. I have no idea what you saw, except you telling me it might have been leprosy! This is your imagination, your scenario, where you get to make up all the symptoms and all the correct "diagnoses". I told you would prefer not to play in your imaginary, Clear "gets to make up any fact he wants" game.
You could not use Leviticus and instead, you were forced to turn to modern medical literature.
I gave you the correct information Clear. As a medical technician you consult the AMA or whatever board certified you as a clinician. You follow CDC guidelines. If you're tempted to use Leviticus you put the book away because the leprosy there does NOT match leprosy in our modern age.
Your claims about “exactness” in Leviticus failed this simple test.
I'm sorry you feel this way Clear, but it wasn't me, it was your test. It never got off the drawing board. It failed in trials. It went kaput.
The leprosy in Leviticus is a spiritual and not a medical leprosy.
If you still think it was a difficult test, I can give you another very, very, very simple example and you can try to use your claimed “exactness” in Leviticus to EITHER differentiate leprosy OR differentiate between spiritual cleanliness from cleanliness.
I've already declined this in my last post, remember?:
I strongly suspect you’re about to introduce new facts or criteria as if they were already there. This will allow you to build new strawmen into an imaginary scenario where you define and establish all the rules.
Admittedly this is just my unfounded suspicion. It’s possible you were not planning to do this but after two strawmen I think you’ll understand my reluctance to engage in that kind of story building. So I much rather stick to your original scenario: You’re a medical clinician looking to use Leviticus to diagnose leprosy (nothing else) in a young girl.
I guess my "unfounded suspicion" wasn't so unfounded at all.