noguru
Well-known member
You better have someone who knows math check your work.
I thought you did not trust math. :think: Or is that only when it is done by people who do not believe what you believe?
You better have someone who knows math check your work.
I thought you did not trust math. :think: Or is that only when it is done by people who do not believe what you believe?
I do not trust mathematical models that have not been checked against reality.
Please correct me if I am wrong, but is not the "reality" you speak of here your interpretation of Genesis?
You better have someone who knows math check your work’
The sons are needed to impregnate the women. Then they die. I kept only the children that were born.
It should have been obvious that one more generation was necessary. I thought it unnecessary to point that out. The 400 years had not been used up.
No. I used 8, 4 of which were females.
It is normal for woman without birth control to become pregnant every year. I used a lower number of children per woman to take care of deaths before puberty.
Says you. You only look at current data in which women choose not to have children.
No era has ever had zero infant mortality.Depends on what era being discussed.
That assumption was made only to show that the population would grow rapidly even if that were the case. Obviously that would not happen in practice.
Neither. The problem seems to be that you are in denial that a population could grow so quickly under favorable circumstances.
Okay my 11 year old daughter was in the top 20 at the state math meet this year so she knows math. She used the formula I gave you and for generation one the answer is 24, generation two is 72, generation three is 168, etc…… Guess what, that’s exactly the same numbers you came up with using your enumeration of your “feasibility study”. You just did it the hard way.
This is why I know you are not an engineer. You don’t understand simple algebra.
If they had died in your “study”, you would have had to subtracted them out at some point. There is nowhere you did that.
You made the statement. I just used your numbers.
You state at the top of your “feasibility study” that you are “assuming four children per couple”. So which is it, 4 or 8?
You get funnier every time you say something. Up until about 60 years ago there was no birth control and the fertility age of a woman was about 14 to 45. That’s about 30 years. You want people to believe the normal size of a family was 30. LOL
No I was using data from the countries you gave as countries with the highest population growth rates. I’m using your numbers, and you are now saying I’m not looking at the correct data.
No era has ever had zero infant mortality.
Well if it doesn’t happen, why are you using it as evidence?
The Bible gives no such population growth. In fact it gives the opposite. Noah didn’t even have children till he was 500 years old. And then he had only 3 sons in 150 years. It appears he either had an appalling lack of interest in sex or the age of the ancients in the Bible are somewhat embellished. If he had the same amount of daughters which you would expect and if his family was typical, that would have been 6 children over 900 years or a growth rate of 0.15%. Based on that growth rate, there would have only been 12 people to build the tower of Babel even after 240 years. Maybe they were just more efficient at building in those days. lol
Okay my 11 year old daughter was in the top 20 at the state math meet this year so she knows math. She used the formula I gave you and for generation one the answer is 24, generation two is 72, generation three is 168, etc…… Guess what, that’s exactly the same numbers you came up with using your enumeration of your “feasibility study”. You just did it the hard way.
This is why I know you are not an engineer. You don’t understand simple algebra.
If they had died in your “study”, you would have had to subtracted them out at some point. There is nowhere you did that.
You made the statement. I just used your numbers.
You state at the top of your “feasibility study” that you are “assuming four children per couple”. So which is it, 4 or 8?
You get funnier every time you say something. Up until about 60 years ago there was no birth control and the fertility age of a woman was about 14 to 45. That’s about 30 years. You want people to believe the normal size of a family was 30. LOL
No I was using data from the countries you gave as countries with the highest population growth rates. I’m using your numbers, and you are now saying I’m not looking at the correct data.
No era has ever had zero infant mortality.
Well if it doesn’t happen, why are you using it as evidence?
The Bible gives no such population growth. In fact it gives the opposite. Noah didn’t even have children till he was 500 years old. And then he had only 3 sons in 150 years. It appears he either had an appalling lack of interest in sex or the age of the ancients in the Bible are somewhat embellished. If he had the same amount of daughters which you would expect and if his family was typical, that would have been 6 children over 900 years or a growth rate of 0.15%. Based on that growth rate, there would have only been 12 people to build the tower of Babel even after 240 years. Maybe they were just more efficient at building in those days. lol
I gave three different enumeration examples, 12, 8 and 4.
It is nice that your daughter can use a formula. Some people can't, so I used enumeration examples that everyone could understand.
The Bible does not mention other sons and daughters of Noah, but this is common in the geneologies that precede him, where only the sons that are discussed later are mentioned. Unlike you, I assume that Noah had children other than Shem, Ham and Japheth, but only these three and their wives are specifically mentioned as being on the Ark with Noah and his wife.
If you wish to be absurd then do so. It's a free country (although it's getting less so with the passage of time and more laws).
I gave three different enumeration examples, 12, 8 and 4.
You seem to be terribly confused. I suggest you read my posts more carefully and
respond to what I actually posted instead of what you *think* I posted.
The first example I gave was in post#5 of this thread. It assumed that the average
number of children born to each couple was 12, six boys and six girls. The example
was to show that the 12 sons could have, over 400 years, produced the number of
Israelites stated in scripture, 600,000 men. In fact I started the example with 3
sons instead of 12 and did not include the wives and children which the Bible says
they brought with them into Egypt. I also assumed that the average generation time
was 30 years. In the sixth generation. 279,936. Finally I stated that : “The major
parameter influencing the result is simply the average number of children born of
each woman!”
Since only 180 years had passed in the example it should have been obvious that the
statement in the Bible about Israelites growing to 600,000 men in 400 years was
feasible and not a myth.
In post#12 it was stated: “Nice try, but Bob and I are referring to fertility rates
across entire countries”. Of course that would be true of current statistics for
entire countries, but only partially true for the example of Joseph and his
brothers, especially since we started with low numbers and considering that the ages
of people at death in those days was claimed by the Bible to be high compared to
both today and after New Testament times.
In post#18 I presented the enumeration example of 8 children per couple and also
reduced the time for each generation to 25 years. I also said (referring to the
totals after only 175 years) : “If all adults died immediately after the birthing
period the total would still be 385,216. This demonstrates the "magic" of compound
interest. The Bible says that 400 years after the brothers moved to Egypt their
descendants had grown to 600,000 men, not counting women and children.” Obviously
this second example also falls into the category of “feasible”.
In post#20 I presented the enumeration example of 6 children per couple and also
reduced the time for each generation to 22 years. I also said that : “Total
population after 176 years and 8 generations = 236,184. If all adults died
immediately after the birthing period the total would still be 157,464. This
demonstrates the "magic" of compound interest.The Bible says that 400 years after
the brothers moved to Egypt their descendants had grown to 600,000 men, not counting
women and children. With 224 more years (10 more generations) to reach 600,000 men,
I think it obvious that the Bible account is well within the range of feasibility,
even if one assumes that the growth rate typically slows down as the population size
increases.”
In post#34 I presented the enumeration example of 4 children per couple and also
reduced the time for each generation to 20 years. I also said that : “Total
population after 300 years and 15 generations = 1,564,840. If all adults died
immediately after the birthing period the total would still be 786,432. This
demonstrates the "magic" of compound interest. The Bible says that 400 years after
the brothers moved to Egypt their descendants had grown to 600,000 men, not counting
women and children.
In post #57 I erroneously agreed with when I shouldn’t have.
Hank Quote:
“The Bible records how many sons each person had. Where are you coming up with all
these children? “
To which I answered (in error):
“Good point, but you need to remember that females are born too, although only
rarely mentioned in the Bible.”
Gen 5:28And Lamech lived an hundred eighty and two years, and begat a son: 29And he
called his name Noah, saying, This same shall comfort us concerning our work and
toil of our hands, because of the ground which the LORD hath cursed. 30And Lamech
lived after he begat Noah five hundred ninety and five years, and begat sons and
daughters: 31And all the days of Lamech were seven hundred seventy and seven years:
and he died. 32And Noah was five hundred years old: and Noah begat Shem, Ham, and
Japheth.
Gen 11:10These are the generations of Shem: Shem was an hundred years old, and begat
Arphaxad two years after the flood: 11And Shem lived after he begat Arphaxad five
hundred years, and begat sons and daughters. 12And Arphaxad lived five and thirty
years, and begat Salah: 13And Arphaxad lived after he begat Salah four hundred and
three years, and begat sons and daughters. 14And Salah lived thirty years, and begat
Eber: 15And Salah lived after he begat Eber four hundred and three years, and begat
sons and daughters. 16And Eber lived four and thirty years, and begat Peleg: 17And
Eber lived after he begat Peleg four hundred and thirty years, and begat sons and
daughters. 18And Peleg lived thirty years, and begat Reu: 19And Peleg lived after he
begat Reu two hundred and nine years, and begat sons and daughters. 20And Reu lived
two and thirty years, and begat Serug: 21And Reu lived after he begat Serug two
hundred and seven years, and begat sons and daughters. 22And Serug lived thirty
years, and begat Nahor: 23And Serug lived after he begat Nahor two hundred years,
and begat sons and daughters.
BTW, when I suggested that someone should check your math I was referring to the
fact that you had switched the subject from Joseph and his brothers growth rate to
the growth rate after the Flood until the tower of Babel. In this case God
specifically told them to multiply and refill the Earth. At that point the ages were
still lengthly compared to the ages at the time of Joseph, meaning that the number
of children born of each women could have been quite high, far beyond the numbers I
had used for my example of Joseph and his brothers. Also note that the number of
sons and daughters is not specified, only that they begat sons and daughters.
Also, regardless of what you may have seen on other websites, I showed using
scripture that the time of Babel could have been as much as 239 years after the
Flood. If the population had been small it would have been silly for scripture to
talk about cities and nations. Obviously the populations were large, and considering
the factors I have just mentioned there is no reason to doubt the validity of the
scriptural accounts.
You all realize the black death killed off half of Europe? Anyone think it was the first epidemic.
Latest "Economist" has a story on population projection in Japan. In most civilized countries the birth rate in now less than that required to maintain population. The average age is rising. The problem will be sufficient working population to suport the old people.
All interesting, but irrelevent to the subject of whether there was sufficient time for Joseph and his brothers to grow a nation of 600,000 men in 400 years or even for the 8 human survivors of the Flood to grow a population large enough to start to build the Tower of Babel in as little as 239 years.
I have shown that both stories are feasible.
Which of course was why I started this thread in the first place.
The only think you have shown is that if women had enough children and none of them died before having the same amount of children, then the numbers would be large. There is certainly no evidence of that ever happening in real life and common sense would tell anyone that many children die in infancy. You stated that “The most important factor is the number of children born by each female, which according to the UN is amazingly high in subSahara Africa.” and then don’t use the growth rates of the data you say is “amazingly high”. You show that you don’t understand what the population formula when you state “You don't seem to realize that an exponential curve is not appropriate until the population numbers grow higher.” when you are using an exponential curve to calculate birth rates with zero infant mortality. As well as the fact that you don’t have a clue as to why anyone would think Peleg built the tower of Babel.