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Google Brings the Dead Sea Scrolls To the Digital Age

skade88 writes "Google has been working to bring many old manuscripts to the internet at high resolution for all to see. From their announcement: 'A little over a year ago, we helped put online five manuscripts of the Dead Sea Scrolls—ancient documents that include the oldest known biblical manuscripts in existence. Written more than 2,000 years ago on pieces of parchment and papyrus, they were preserved by the hot, dry desert climate and the darkness of the caves in which they were hidden. The Scrolls are possibly the most important archaeological discovery of the 20th century. Today, we're helping put more of these ancient treasures online. The Israel Antiquities Authority is launching the Leon Levy Dead Sea Scrolls Digital Library, an online collection of some 5,000 images of scroll fragments, at a quality never seen before.'"

51 of 202 comments (clear)

  1. Where do they put all of those digitized works? by partyguerrilla · · Score: 2

    I've been typing recaptchas every day like a maniac for years. Where are they offering these works I helped digitize?

    1. Re:Where do they put all of those digitized works? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      You do recaptchas in ancient Aramaic?

  2. Some extra info by butalearner · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can't find the percentage of identified vs. unidentified, but among the identified scrolls:

    40% are copies of text from the Hebrew Bible
    30% are copies of texts not canonized in the Hebrew Bible (i.e. fanfiction) from the Second Temple Period like the Books of Enoch, Jubilees, Tobit, Sirach, and additional psalms
    30% are "sectarian manuscripts" - texts that describe rules or a set of beliefs held by certain groups within Judaism.

    1. Re:Some extra info by lucm · · Score: 2

      30% are copies of texts not canonized in the Hebrew Bible (i.e. fanfiction) from the Second Temple Period

      For using the expression "fanfiction" to describe Dead Sea scrolls, you sir deserve a mod point I don't have.

      Disclaimer: I opted out of the moderation system because I do not trust collective wisdom.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    2. Re:Some extra info by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      30% are copies of texts not canonized in the Hebrew Bible (i.e. fanfiction)

      I don't think you can characterize ancient texts that way. Canonization is a complex "theopolitical" process, and what gets in and what is left out doesn't necessarily have much to do with its quality, or who wrote it, or when (unless of course it was written after the canonization process was complete.) It's mostly a matter of whether the influential people in the society that does the canonization think a document supports their views or conflicts with them.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    3. Re:Some extra info by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2

      30% are copies of texts not canonized in the Hebrew Bible (i.e. fanfiction)

      You mean, "The Gospel According to Mary Sue"?

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
  3. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Kergan · · Score: 5, Informative

    More like bronze age, actually. Mideast bronze age ends 1200BC, as opposed to 600BC in Europe... Jewish scriptures changed tremendously during the Babylonian captivity, which indeed occurred around 600BC (it basically blended in ideas from Zoroastrianism, chiefly the ideas of angels, demons, hell, and basically morality and good vs evil; and its final written form got written around then), but the general ideas of judaism had been around for far older than the end of the mideast bronze age.

  4. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek, and Nabataean

  5. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by lucm · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hard to believe, but many, many people still believe the stories told in these documents are the literal word of God

    I don't know a lot of religions where the sacred book is advertised as containing the literal word of God. Most are (allegedly) God-inspired. The closer you get from the "source" is with the Q'ran because it was never translated - however it was written from memory by followers of Muhammad so if this was a CSI episode one would have to admit that the chain of evidence is somehow broken.

    In any event by suggesting that those books are *not* inspired by God (which according to current scientific knowledge may or may not exist) you are taking a position that is not supported by established facts, therefore promoting yourself a "fable". If you want to drape yourself in the cloth of Science make sure you follow its basic tenets. Hypothesis are only the 2nd step in the scientific method.

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  6. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by pwizard2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Mod parent up. If these fragments were truly the word of god, then surely they would contain useful information that would increase our knowledge of the world/universe and would remain true even today. Instead, we get re-worked fables plagiarized from other sources, tribal customs codified into law, doomsday prophecies, and rants against various enemies (all of which the old testament is full of).

    --
    "It is a denial of justice not to stretch out a helping hand to the fallen; that is the common right of humanity."
  7. Pooh. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The Scrolls are possibly the most important archaeological discovery of the 20th century.

    Atlantis was discovered hundreds of times during the 20th Century. Surely that adds up to more than a single discovery of some scrolls.

    On a serious note, I'm skeptical of the claim anyway. We discovered entire civilizations we never previously knew existed, and a great number of unknown texts, entire unknown languages and writing systems, etc.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  8. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2

    Hard to believe, but many, many people still believe the stories told in these documents are the literal word of God, rather than things that our Bronze Age ancestors cooked up to explain things they didn't understand and keep the population in line. Hopefully, at some future point, we will evolve beyond such fables and things like this will be an archeological curiosity, and nothing more.

    Even harder to believe that an A/C passed up on an opportunity for a First Post for some mere boilerplate trolling.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  9. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 3, Informative

    To answer your question:

    "The easiest form of parochialism to fall into is to assume that we are smarter than the past generations, that our thinking is necessarily more sophisticated. This may be true in science and technology, but not necessarily so in wisdom."

    That quote is from the introduction to this brilliant essay: "Macaulay on Copyright"
    http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2002/4/25/1345/03329

    > Hopefully, at some future point, we will evolve beyond such fables ...
    Stories will never go away. Why? What is the purpose of a story? To teach a moral -- it doesn't matter if the story historically happened or not IF you learn the lesson.

    Besides, the disciple Peter already commented on how scriptures should be used that Judaism, Christianity, and Islam continues to ignore:

    The allegorical nature of scipture:

    Tell me, you who want to be under the law, are you not aware of what the law says? 22 For it is written that Abraham had two sons, one by the slave woman and the other by the free woman. 23 His son by the slave woman was born according to the flesh, but his son by the free woman was born as the result of a divine promise.

    24 These things are being taken figuratively: The women represent two covenants. One covenant is from Mount Sinai and bears children who are to be slaves: This is Hagar. 25 Now Hagar stands for Mount Sinai in Arabia and corresponds to the present city of Jerusalem, because she is in slavery with her children. 26 But the Jerusalem that is above is free, and she is our mother.

    The contradictions in the scriptures:

    For, according to the rule delivered to them, they endeavor to correct the discordances of the Scriptures, if any one, haply not knowing the traditions, is confounded at the various utterances of the prophets. Wherefore they charge no one to teach, unless he has first learned how the Scriptures must be used. And thus they have amongst them one God, one law, one hope."

    The prophets were sent to the spiritual immature minded:

    "Since, therefore, both to the Hebrews and to those who are called from the Gentiles, believing in the teachers of truth is of God, while excellent actions are left to every one to do by his own judgment, the reward is righteously bestowed upon those who do well. For there would have been no need of Moses, or of the coming of Jesus, if of themselves they would have understood what is reasonable."

  10. Re:Not interesting.... by lucm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Talk about throwing pearls to the pigs... You must be one of those entitled Gen-Y.

    Here is an idea that would be "worth your time" [1]: why don't you build an internet company that is worth billions of dollars then use some of the profits to fund a project where Leonardo Da Vinci's manuscripts are being found (or made available), digitized and published online for all to see?

    I suspect that the day you accomplish that, your opinion about the Dead Sea scrolls will have a bigger impact. Meanwhile feel free to tweet about it, I'm sure your 8 followers will be delighted, you may even get a Like if posted on Facebook.

    [1] with those quotes around "worth your time" I hope to convey how annoyed I get by reading the part of your comment where you talk about things that are worth spending your time with.

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  11. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Mod parent up. If these fragments were truly the word of god, then surely they would contain useful information that would increase our knowledge of the world/universe and would remain true even today. Instead, we get re-worked fables plagiarized from other sources, tribal customs codified into law, doomsday prophecies, and rants against various enemies (all of which the old testament is full of).

    [emphasis mine]

    Your claim probably makes sense to a lot of people in modern industrialized societies, but actually depends on a lot of assumptions about what a god would want.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  12. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Uh oh, turning burdens of proof around again!?!
    I say the Easter Bunny wrote all those books! But he stole most of it from the FSM. All just as plausible as any other fairy tales. Without proof of existence all the gods are just like any other imaginary character.

  13. Quality... by SIR_Taco · · Score: 2

    "...at a quality never seen before.'"

    With the exception of when I saw them at the Royal Ontario Museum.

    At a quality never seen before *online* maybe

    --
    I say don't drink and drive, you might spill your drink. Before you get behind the wheel just stop and think.
  14. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by pwizard2 · · Score: 2

    By useful information, I meant something that would helped helped people living in that era improve their quality of life. For instance, scientific or medical information (cures for common diseases would have been nice) instead of the ritualistic rubbish found in Leviticus. Do you really need some religion to tell you that murdering, rape, stealing, etc. is wrong? IIRC the story of the garden of Eden comes from Mesopotamia and is something the Hebrews picked up during the exile. The Epic of Gilgamesh (which is older than Genesis) contains a remarkably similar flood myth.

    --
    "It is a denial of justice not to stretch out a helping hand to the fallen; that is the common right of humanity."
  15. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 4, Informative

    They also adopted Zoroastrian monotheism. Prior to this, Yhvh was the local tribal patron god, in a monopolar paganism. The term is henotheism.

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  16. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 3, Funny

    god wants steak.

    oh wait, that's dog. I confused the owt.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  17. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Darinbob · · Score: 5, Interesting

    An ethical code is probably more important in some ways than a lot of scientific knowledge. Granted the ethical code may be messed up. However the emphasis of what is important or not is a tough subject in itself.

    While we don't need religion to tell us that murder is wrong, perhaps we do need something to tell us other things. For instance, what tells us that charity is good? I have coworkers who have told me that I'm stupid for giving money to charities, which says to me that it's basic ethical ideas are not clear to even modern people in modern societies. Even something simple like "treat others how you'd like to be treated yourself" is a new concept to far too many people today.

    Look at new testament for other examples, where instead of just saying that murder is wrong it says that even thinking about murder is also wrong, one's internal actions can be just as important as external actions. Other religions and ethical structures also have the same idea. Modern psychology could also tell us this but I don't think it would have as big an impact.

  18. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 3, Funny

    We have had the wheel for thousands of years but people don't get into a pissing contest about who invented / discovered it.

    its either apple or samsung. one of those.

    (what??)

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  19. Lots of uninformed opinions about the scrolls by shadowofwind · · Score: 2

    It might be worth at least skimming a translation of the scrolls before forming a strong opinion about their content and value.

    Yeah I know what site this is, and I'm not new here.

    Something I think is worth keeping in mind....Just as there is ignorance now that rivals ancient ignorance, there was also intelligence in ancient times that rivals the best the modern world has to offer. Though its true that religious writings are largely fiction, a lot of very intelligent people worked on them, and there is significant understanding mixed in unevenly with the nonsense.

    Modern academics are very good at understanding subjects where the same observations consistently yield the same statistical distribution of results. They're even better at studying things that can be perturbed in a controlled way, and dynamics that can be modeled well mathematically. They're generally very bad at understanding anything else. Many go so far as to assert that if a phenomena can't be modeled in a predictive way then for practical purposes it doesn't even exist. In this manner they ignore everything they're not good at solving. In my experience some ancient scriptures describe discoverably real aspects of life that modern experts are mostly ignorant of.

    I didn't find much of interest in the Dead Sea Scrolls, but a lot of that is just me personally, it doesn't mean there's nothing there for anyone. Other old writings such as in the Nag Hammadi discovery have a lot of interesting content though, notwithstanding that they're not trustworthy as standards of truth. And I don't mean interesting from a historical perspective, I mean there is insight there that can not be found elsewhere.

  20. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Empiric · · Score: 2

    They do contain useful information, increasing our knowledge of central issues of existence. That you do not acknowledge, within your framework of evaluation, their value, doesn't actually matter at all. Get Naturally Deselected, become totally irrelevant, and we'll move on.

    --
    ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
  21. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Empiric · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Correlation does not imply causation" is a clear concept here at Slashdot--unless the topic is religion. In that case, any broad correlation is fully sufficient to demonstrate that Worldview X "stole" its concepts from Worldview Y.

    But, let's get serious. Cite your primary-source documents, showing even the level of correlation, so that the evaluation of independent individuals, rather than your dogmatic posturing, can evaluate their relevance within the context of -overall- similarity.

    --
    ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
  22. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Empiric · · Score: 2

    Besides, the disciple Peter already commented on how scriptures should be used that Judaism, Christianity, and Islam continues to ignore:

    Depends on which subset you are referencing. Origen of Alexandria, as one of the "fathers" of the Christian Church, was arguing for allegorical interpretation of Genesis in the second century AD. I wouldn't form your notion of the demographics based on Bishop Ussher's 17'th century error and the subsequent Straw Men characterizations issuing lately primarily from Dawkins et al. History simply isn't one of science "stepping in" and correcting the supposed universal Christian error of Young Earth Creationism. History just didn't happen that way.

    Overall, though, interesting post.

    --
    ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
  23. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by SternisheFan · · Score: 2

    People then thought that what they wrote on especially expensive, meant to last a very long time material was very, very important information. They took great strides to ensure those writings would be preserved for future mankind. Now that's us who can benefit from whatever can be discerned from it. Perhaps taking a smug, dismissive attitude that today we know far more than they knew then might turn out to be very short sighted on our part. Why not wait until their meaning is fully known and understood before taking such a superior stance?

  24. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 2

    I am quite well aware of Origen's position. :-) Sadly, too many modern-day Christians think they know the gospel better then a 2nd century scholar!

    For the benefit of other readers you are referring to:

    "What man of sense will agree with the statement that the first, second and third days in which the evening is named and the morning, were without sun, moon and stars, and the first day without a heaven. What man is found such an idiot as to suppose that God planted trees in paradise in Eden, like a husbandman, and planted therein the tree of life, perceptible to the eyes and senses, which gave life to the eater thereof; and another tree which gave to the eater thereof a knowledge of good and evil? I believe that every man must hold these things for images, under which the hidden sense lies concealed."

    - Origen - Huet., Prigeniana, 167 Franck, p. 142

    This theme is repeated over and over by those who understood the literal, allegorical, and spiritual multi-dimensional nature of the scriptures:

    Paul states that "their minds were blinded" by God, "for until this day remaineth the same vail untaken away in the reading of the old testament⦠even unto this day, when Moses is read, the vail is upon their heart" (2 Cor 3:14-15 KJV).

    Theologians Moses Maimonedes says the same thing:

    "Every time that you find in our books a tale the reality of which seems impossible, a story which is repugnant to both reason and common sense, then be sure that the tale contains a profound allegory veiling a deeply mysterious truth; and the greater the absurdity of the letter, the deeper the wisdom of the spirit"

    And more importantly, Rabbi Simeon:

    "If a man looks upon the Torah as merely a book presenting narratives and everyday matters, alas for him! Such a torah, one treating with everyday concerns, and indeed a more excellent one, we too, even we, could compile. More than that, in the possession of the rulers of the world there are books of even greater merit, and these we could emulate if we wished to compile some such torah. But the Torah, in all of its words, holds supernal truths and sublime secrets.

    "See how precisely balanced are the upper and the lower worlds. Israel here below is balanced by the angels on high, concerning whom it stands written: "who makest thy angels into winds" (Psalms 104:4). For when the angels descend to the earth they don earthly garments, else they could neither abide in the world, nor could it bear to have them. But if this is so with the angels, then how much more so it must be with the Torah: the Torah it was that created the angels and created all the worlds and through Torah are all sustained. The world could not endure the Torah if she had not garbed herself in the garments of this world. (temple of Solomon, and within us)

    "Thus the tales related in the Torah are simply her outer garments, and woe to the man who regards that outer garb as the Torah itself, for such a man will be deprived of portion in the next world. Thus David said: "Open Thou mine eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of Thy law" (Psalms 119:18), that is to say, the things that are underneath. See now. The most visible part of a man are the clothes that he has on, and they who lack understanding, when they look at the man, are apt not to see more in him than these clothes. In reality, however, it is the body of the man that constitutes the pride of his clothes, and his soul constitutes the pride of his body.

    "So it is with the Torah. Its narrations which relate to the things of the worlds constitute the garments which clothe the body of the Torah; and that body is composed of the Torah's precepts, gufey-torah (bodies, major principles). People without understanding see only the narrations, the garment; those somewhat more penetrating see also the body. But the truly wise, those who serve the most high King and stood on mount Sin

  25. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by another_twilight · · Score: 4, Informative

    completely incorrect

    Science

    fact

    These words do not mean what you think they mean.

    I love systems that give rise to emergent behaviour at sufficient levels of complexity. I have no problem seeing the interactions of people as giving rise (having already started to give rise?) to something like this. I'm not sure if that's what you mean by a 'spirit of consciousness', but it's the most ... generous interpretation I can come up with.

    In any event calling that 'god' is ignoring the very different definition of that word that most people have and comes across as dishonest. I would be interested in a citation or link to what you are claiming as 'fact'.

  26. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by lister+king+of+smeg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The ritualistic stuff in Leviticus was to insure it got taught to the next generation as it made it seem important to their souls survival in the afterlife, and there was a lot in there about health for example the ban on pork could be so tha they would not get trichinosis. It also banned marring of close relatives which is definitely good thing for genetic diversity and over all populations health, (that one was obviously good I mean look a pharaonic Egypt where the ruling family married siblings and cousins to keep a pure bloodline which left them with debilitating health problems). It baned polygamy and sex out side of monogamous marriage which is great for a society that lack condoms and has no other way to stop std's from spreading let alone detect or treat them. Leviticus also contains much in the way of basic sanitation and on personal hygiene, very useful for bronze age society that lacks soap that had recently escaped enslavement where they were treated like animals. It also implemented a justice system and basic legal structure and common system of shared ethics that we can all agree on (don't steal don't murder). all necessary for the building blocks for "modern" society.

    if you tried to explain any of the real causes behind diseases or give them medical/scientific information they would think you a nutter. (you tell them the water down stream of the latrine has little bugs in it that will get inside of them and make them sick the would look in the water not see bugs and say your crazy, you make it a decree that their immortal soul is in the balance and the will pay attention)

    --
    ---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
  27. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    god wants steak.

    oh wait, that's dog. I confused the owt.

    Have you heard the one about the agnostic, dyslexic, insomniac who lies in bed awake at night wondering is there is a dog?

  28. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Darkness404 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you look at the old testament law, a lot of it was pretty useful for survival outside of religion.

    Of course you've got the basic ethical principles (don't steal, don't murder, etc.) but then you've got things that their value is not apparently obvious such as don't eat pork. Why pork? Well for one undercooked pork can more easily make you sick than many "kosher" animals. For another pigs aren't exactly the best animals to keep in the desert because they tend to need a lot of water and are best kept in the mud, two things that the Middle East doesn't exactly have a lot of. You've got prohibitions against marrying family members, a pretty good idea to help strengthen genetic diversity at a time when genes were not understood. You've also got basic sanitation. You've got prohibitions against eating animals that could carry diseases. You've got quarantining of people who could carry diseases. Etc.

    If you read through Leviticus you can see a whole lot of useful things for the Jews during that era. Of course it isn't presented as "don't eat pork because you'll get Trichinosis" but its all quite useful.

    --
    Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
  29. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by dryeo · · Score: 2

    Is goat skin really that expensive in a goat herding society?

    --
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  30. Lost in translation by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 2

    The whole idea is that you learn the language so you can understand the subtleties of it yourself. Many things get lost in translation and interpretation, so you would gain by learning the language.

    If you wouldn't do that, you could just as well buy any modern bible and state "it's exactly the same". Given the enormous amount of religions based on stories in these scrolls, they are relevant to a large amount of people. Remember that these religions differ and have gone to war about the interpretation of the stories in these scrolls for the last two thousand years or so. Stating that you don't need to learn the original language because "everything has been translated and annotated" is, in my opinion, the worst advice you could give to someone regarding these scrolls. Their discovery and the discussion about their translation has been one of the most controversial "scientific" discussions in the last few decades of several related religions, Christianity and more precise, Catholicism.

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
  31. Plenty of preachers state this by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 2

    TV preachers and preachers in many churches, many religions, state the bible to be "the word of god". Since those people tend to be the official delegates of their respective religion, I'd say quite a lot of religions actually *do* advertise "the sacred book" (is bible a taboo word??) as the literal word of God.

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
  32. So the story goes. by dutchwhizzman · · Score: 2

    "Transcribed word for word" is what the book claims it is. There are many fantasy novels that also claim to be the literal diary or words of a (fictitious) person. Robinson Crusoe comes to mind, as an example. There is no original manuscript written in verified samples of Muhammad's hand writing to directly link the contents of the book to at least his writing, be it original or a copy of previous work by someone else.

    The statement that "it was later compiled and the script standardized" implies redacting by the person/people doing that very work. It may very well be that 95% of it is actually rather literal transcript of what Muhammad dictated, but we don't know which parts may, or may not be and more important, which parts have been left out. He may very well have dictated other texts that should have been part of the Q'ran in his mind, that never made it into the "final transcript".

    This may sound rather heretic to any modern Muslim, but take one look at how newspapers, magazines, and books are made. Ask anyone that has been interviewed by a reporter or that dictated stories for their (auto)biography to a (ghost)writer. You can tell a story one way, but it gets published totally different, usually. That is a well known fact and it happens while people are still alive. Stories about them and what they said after they died, usually tend to be way more moral and way less literal, unless there's a funny anecdote or some "hand picked quotes" that can be used to prove a point. Things that other people write down, tend to be their interpretation of what you say, especially if you can't verify that they wrote it down correctly. If those things also get redacted, they tend to be the interpretation of what the redaction wants to get out into the world of the interpretation of someone that may or may not have written down what you have said, but probably not what you have meant to get across.

    Before someone gets angry and declares a Fatwa on me (what would Jesus do?), this is my personal opinion and interpretation. I wasn't there when Muhammad dictated the Q'ran or when it was redacted after his death. It may just happen to be the full, true and literal words he wanted to be in there. I just happen to think it's not very likely that it is. Regardless of that, you should judge the book on it's contents, not on who allegedly wrote it. For the last few thousand years, that seemed to have worked just fine for Islam, so why bother with someone that questions it's author, but not it's contents?

    No, I did not read the Q'ran, so no, I'm not judging it's contents. I don't think that would be fair, although it would fit the SlashDot tradition just fine. ;)

    --
    I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
  33. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by cold+fjord · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Jewish scriptures changed tremendously during the Babylonian captivity, which indeed occurred around 600BC (it basically blended in ideas from Zoroastrianism, chiefly the ideas of angels, demons, hell, and basically morality and good vs evil; and its final written form got written around then), but the general ideas of judaism had been around for far older than the end of the mideast bronze age.

    When you write, "Jewish scriptures changed tremendously," that is a bit misleading. There were new books added to the Jewish scriptures, including prophetic works during that period. But did the nature of the Jewish faith and scripture change in the manner you indicate? It doesn't look like it. Although the snippets I quote below are instructive, the whole paper is relatively short and informative.

    ZOROASTRIANISM AND BIBLICAL RELIGION - CHARLES DAVID ISBELL

    . . . as Eichrodt insists, "the idea that the eschatological resurrection hope, in the form attested in the Old Testament, was influenced by Persian conceptions, can be shown by any reasonably detailed comparison to be inadmissable."

    To this point, I have spoken of Persian or Zoroastrian matters as if they themselves were composed during and reflective of the Persian era of contact with the exiled Judahites (fifth-fourth centuries BCE). But they were not. In fact, the severe deficiencies in the written sources of Zoroastrianism make accurate analysis virtually impossible. No modern scholar dates Zoroaster earlier than ca. 1400 BCE, and while both Arabic and Avestan29 traditions date Zoroaster to the sixth-fifth centuries BCE, most scholars are more comfortable with a date between the two extremes; the date 1000 BCE is most widely presumed. But scholars of written literature are faced with a problem that has yet to be solved. No written materials are linked to the era of Zoroaster regardless of when he lived, and even scholars who argue that early Iranian texts are linked to ca. 1000 BCE, admit that these Gathas ["hymns" (of Zoroaster)] are so difficult that their meaning can be grasped, "only with the help of the later Zoroastrian scriptures."30

    Iranian priests of the early first millennium actually rejected the use of writing for their holy beliefs, and the fact is that these beliefs existed only in oral form until the sixth century CE! And yet these written texts are the ones which Persian scholars are required to use in interpreting the teachings of Zoroaster, who lived between 1000 and 2000 years earlier. Shaul Shaked has framed the matter accurately and concisely:

    All arguments about possible contacts between Israel and Iran come to the stumbling block of the problem of chronology. All detailed accounts of any aspect of Zoroastrian theology exist no earlier than in books compiled during the Sassanian period [third - seventh centuries CE] or later, after the Arab conquest of Iran.31

    In short, the texts being examined in comparison to the Bible were written more than 1000 years later than the Persia with which Judahites came into contact.

    Still, the larger problem with the written sources of Zoroastrianism is not their late date of composition, but rather the fact that even these late written sources present very few close parallels to biblical ideas.

    In light of this chronological difficulty, it would seem to make more sense to compare Zoroastrian religious texts with talmudic literature. And even here, Neusner, the scholar with the greatest knowledge of Babylonia during the era of Sassanid rule, has concluded that what the rabbis of the Talmud knew of Zoroastrianism amounted to virtually nothing at all.

    . . . Yet, it seems obvious that the claims for Zoroastrian influence on biblical doctrines have been vastly overstated. . . . it should follow that the use of late, very late, written sources of Persian theological tenets must be ruled out as evidence of any significance whatsoever regarding biblical texts. 33

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  34. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Tracy+Reed · · Score: 2

    God wants peace

    God wants war

    God wants famine

    God wants chain stores

    What God wants God gets

    God wants sedition

    God wants sex

    God wants freedom

    God wants semtex

    What God wants God gets

    God help us all

  35. People are fuzzy here about who and what God is... by dtjohnson · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A lot of comments here are dismissing the entire idea of God but they don't seem to have really wrapped their head around 'God.' Generally, God, as known in the old and new testament, is a being...a force...a 'father' who transcends the world and the entire universe and has existed forever and will always exist. God created everything that we see including all of the laws and relationships that define our understanding of 'science.' It is the 'actions' of God that define our understanding of him in the old testament. This is the God who delivered miraculous military victories in the face of overwhelming enemies, who caused bushes to burn but not be consumed, who delivered plagues and pestilence upon enemies, who parted the sea allowing escape, and who fed a people wandering in the desert, gave them a code to live by, and provided a new land for them to live in. We can dismiss all of these events as 'fables', secure in our scientific understanding that tells us such things are 'impossible' but we cannot deny that these events were very real to people who claimed to have experienced them. Similarly, there was a man who lived in what is now Israel approximately 2,000 years ago and performed a variety of miraculous actions before returning to life following a cruel execution. We cannot deny that the events that occurred 2,000 years ago were so amazing to the people who experienced them that their lives were transformed forever and they began living according to a new 'code' that has persisted to the present and is, coincidentally, the basis for most of our current civilization and law. Finally, we cannot deny that a significant portion of the entire population of the world believes in the principles taught by that man and follows them in their daily lives. So those dusty scrolls from 2200 to 1900 years ago, found in those old caves, represent documents produced during a time of religious ferment and upheaval. We are no different than those people were. If there were a religious figure today who was giving sight to the blind, curing uncurable diseases, causing paraplegics to give up their wheelchairs, changing water into wine, multiplying food at the local Safeway by 1000x, teaching us to love others, and then returning to life to walk among us after being beheaded by evildoers, we would be just as impressed as those people were then. Of course, those who were not actually present would be just a little skeptical and their descendants even more so...but, with the power of God, they would recognize the truth for what it was...and so do we.

  36. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Cinder6 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Mod parent up. If these fragments were truly the word of god, then surely they would contain useful information that would increase our knowledge of the world/universe and would remain true even today.

    I disagree. Look at what the world was like during the time the Bible was written. Look at the level of technology, the politics, the treatment of human of human life in general. What's more important for those people: Learning how to harness the atom, or how to live a healthy and fulfilling life? What would the Romans have done with nukes? Were they at the right stage of social advancement that they would rightly fear their use? I would imagine universal themes--brotherhood, love, all that jazz--are more important than mathematics or physics. I also don't think God--if such a being even exists--would care too much about our technological progression.

    Besides, there definitely are things in the Bible that still hold true to this day. Don't steal, don't murder, love thy neighbor, etc.

    (Disclosure: I'm not religious, and probably never will be. I do know a lot of religious people, though, and have some devout Christians in my immediate family. No, they don't think the Bible was written by God.)

    --
    If you can't convince them, convict them.
  37. Hi there, I've published on the Dead Sea Scrolls by DSS11Q13 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I also have a Master's degree in New Testament and Early Christianity from Harvard where I spent a lot of time studying them as well. I thought I would just repost what I did last year when slashdot ran an almost identical story. The questions that seem to arise when something like this is posted are perennial so I hope this answers some of yours or clarifies some things, and, as before, feel free to ask any questions you might have and I'll do my best to give a scholarly answer:

    It's taken this long to publish partly for bureaucratic reasons, but mostly because there are thousands of fragments that are basically shredded wheat that had to be put back together, reconstructed, translated, categorized, edited, and published. This was also around the time the State of Israel was formed, and the cluster**** that was caused a lot of delays and red tape.They have not been kept secret, they have been steadily published in the DJD series (Discoveries in the Judaean Desert) for the last 50 years as this tremendous task has been accomplished. As someone said above, yes people were not very careful with them by today's standards, people smoked around them, drank coffee, and used the handiest invention that had just come out-"scotch tape"- to piece them together. All that said, with the exception of fragments in private collections, the last of the Dead Sea Scrolls were published in the early 90's.

    This is not publishing anything new, or secret. It is being scanned and put online for the public, who doesn't have a clue what to do with them, can look at them. Scholars have known how to look at them, in the DJD, and in a half a dozen other widely available publications that have been around for decades.

    Facts the dilettantes have said in these comments that have made me [face_palm]:
    The Dead Sea Scrolls (DSS hereafter) were composed in Qumran, not Jerusalem. (some of the stuff is clearly copies of other documents that circulated elsewhere however)
    The Qumran community responsible for the scrolls existed between the 2nd century BCE and ca 70CE during the Roman war.
    There is nothing in the DSS about Jesus
    There are, however, certain strong affinities between things we find in the DSS and the New Testament, including the method of scripture interpretation, some apocalyptic ideas, as well as the stuff you would expect people with the same basic religion, ethnicity and geography to share
    There is nothing damaging or threatening to the modern religions of Judaism and Christianity. To be sure, the DSS are of tremendous importance for contextualizing their origin and telling us what life was like back then, but this is not a conspiracy to keep them hidden.

  38. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by cold+fjord · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Mod parent up. If these fragments were truly the word of god, then surely they would contain useful information that would increase our knowledge of the world/universe and would remain true even today. Instead, we get re-worked fables plagiarized from other sources, tribal customs codified into law, doomsday prophecies, and rants against various enemies (all of which the old testament is full of).

    And what do you have on offer? Rants against the Bible, spurious theories already disproven, unsupported assertions, and nonsense. That isn't an improvement. . . . it isn't even competitive.

    Even a fool, when he keeps silent, is considered wise;
        When he closes his lips, he is considered prudent. -- Proverbs 17:28

    Let your foot rarely be in your neighbor’s house,
        Or he will become weary of you and hate you. -- Proverbs 25:17

    It is better to live in a corner of the roof
        Than in a house shared with a contentious woman. -- Proverbs 25:24

    Do not answer a fool according to his folly,
        Or you will also be like him. -- Proverbs 26:4

    Like an archer who wounds everyone,
        So is he who hires a fool or who hires those who pass by. -- Proverbs 26:10*

    A fool always loses his temper,
        But a wise man holds it back. -- Provers 29:11

    And He said to him, “Why are you asking Me about what is good? There is only One who is good; but if you wish to enter into life, keep the commandments.” 18Then he said to Him, “Which ones?” And Jesus said, “YOU SHALL NOT COMMIT MURDER; YOU SHALL NOT COMMIT ADULTERY; YOU SHALL NOT STEAL; YOU SHALL NOT BEAR FALSE WITNESS; 19HONOR YOUR FATHER AND MOTHER; and YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS YOURSELF.” -- Matthew 19:17-19

    * How far we have fallen - this seems contrary to the governing philosophy and practice of most corporate and government projects.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  39. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by SternisheFan · · Score: 2

    These were made of a combination material including metal. Sealed in clay pots.

  40. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by cold+fjord · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While we don't need religion to tell us that murder is wrong,

    Although arguments have been made regarding humanity's innate moral sense, I still have to ask, are you quite sure about that?

    Druids Committed Human Sacrifice, Cannibalism?
    Human sacrifices 'on the rise in Uganda' as witch doctors admit to rituals
    Four held for kidnapping kids for human sacrifice
    Nigeria: Prevalence of ritual murder and human sacrifice and reaction by government authorities (March 2000-July 2005)"
    Evidence found of human sacrifice in North America
    "Chilling" Child Sacrifices Found at Prehistoric Site

    Many in the West cannot conceive of things being different in any way if foundations of its morality and culture are destroyed, but that is an epic mistake. Things will change, and many of the possibilities make for something that may not be nice at all.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  41. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by belmolis · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is claimed that the Qur'an was written down as Muhammed recited it, but that this was done by quite a few different people, each recording some bits. The assembly of these various bits into a single text took place after Muhammed's death. In any case, we have idea whether this claim is true. There is no evidence outside of Muslim tradition for the existence of the Qur'an until more than 100 years after the death of Muhammed. Even the inscriptions on the Dome of the Rock, which are from the 690s and do not clearly exhibit Muslim theology, are over 50 years after his death. This issue is hotly debated, but there is so little evidence for either the Qur'an itself or more generally for Islam during the 7th century that respectable scholars have proposed that Islam was created as the ideology of Arab imperialism and that the biography of Muhammed and the Qur'an are essentially a back story.

  42. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by lucm · · Score: 3, Funny

    It seems that you have some form of belief in supernatural beings of some form or another, such as angels, demons and gods.

    Taking from my comment that I believe in God is like saying the ACLU is in favor of pedophilia because they defended NAMBLA. It's simplistic and wrong.

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  43. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by lucm · · Score: 2

    With the Bible, the things are even worse. Nobody knows who actually wrote the core part, the gospels.

    The other half of the NT, Paul's writings, which predate the gospels by a few decades, dont even mention that Jesus was somebody who actually existed outside of Paul's visions and theological concepts.

    How the gospels were written and how the new testament was put together is a fascinating subject. There is a scholar named Bart Ehrman who did tons of book about early Christianity, the historical elements of the gospels, etc. Unfortunately this topic is a very delicate matter because many people apparently don't see a difference between a genuine historical interest and religious fanatism and lose their sh*t when the word "bible" comes up, so talking about gospels on this forum is counter-productive, which really is too bad.

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  44. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by SleazyRidr · · Score: 2

    I thought your comment started out with people writing on especially expensive meat (given the comment you were replying to it made sense.)

    As I read your comment anyway I may as well reply. A good example is the pork/shellfish restrictions in the bible. It was very important for the people back then to not eat these as they quickly go bad in the desert and will make you very sick. These days we have refrigeration readily available so it's not so much of a concern. We should be preserving this knowledge and applying it to the way we choose to live our lives, but we should be doing that in the context of all the knowledge we've gained in the intervening millennia.

  45. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by jedidiah · · Score: 2

    You should tell that to the Pharoahs or any other dynasty. Clearly they did not get the message.

    Most "civilized people" really have no clue what is natural and what pure instinct will allow for. It would blow their uptight little minds.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  46. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by cold+fjord · · Score: 2

    It's occasionally helpful to pop a wiki page before ranting mindlessly

    Most scholars believe[26] that key concepts of Zoroastrian eschatology and demonology influenced the Abrahamic religions.

    i visited that Wiki page, and here is what I found. The phrase you quote is sourced (26) to:

      "ZOROASTRIANISM - JewishEncyclopedia.com". jewishencyclopedia.com. Retrieved 23 February 2012

    I then went to the page linked and found this:

    Most scholars, Jewish as well as non-Jewish, are of the opinion that Judaism was strongly influenced by Zoroastrianism in views relating to angelology and demonology, and probably also in the doctrine of the resurrection, as well as in eschatological ideas in general, and also that the monotheistic conception of Yhwh may have been quickened and strengthened by being opposed to the dualism or quasi-monotheism of the Persians. But, on the other hand, the late James Darmesteter advocated exactly the opposite view, maintaining that early Persian thought was strongly influenced by Jewish ideas. He insisted that the Avesta, as we have it, is of late origin and is much tinctured by foreign elements, especially those derived from Judaism, and also those taken from Neoplatonism through the writings of Philo Judæus.

    Now, here is the interesting thing: Note the source - The unedited full-text of the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia

    Here are the dates from the Bibliography: 1904, 1897, 1905, 1899, 1902, 1803, 1866, 1881, 1878, 1893, 1891, 1897, 1898, 1901, 1902, 1902, 1904, 1903.

    Radio carbon dating was invented in 1949. Computers for use in textual analysis probably weren't used until the 70s.

    The scholarship is about 110 years out of date, and was conducted without two of the key tools of modern investigation into the past, at least one of which would be almost certain to have a major impact on the work.

    Although there are no doubt people today who hold to that view, even at the time it was written the view expressed wasn't universal as you see in the fuller passage I quote above. I'm inclined to stick with more current scholarship on this question: ZOROASTRIANISM AND BIBLICAL RELIGION

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  47. Re:Are we any smarter than we were 2000 years ago? by Kergan · · Score: 2

    Although there are no doubt people today who hold to that view, even at the time it was written the view expressed wasn't universal as you see in the fuller passage I quote above. I'm inclined to stick with more current scholarship on this question: ZOROASTRIANISM AND BIBLICAL RELIGION

    Thanks for the reference. It was interesting. :-)