Sujet : Re: "A diagram of C23 basic types"
De : jameskuyper (at) *nospam* alumni.caltech.edu (James Kuyper)
Groupes : comp.lang.cDate : 15. Apr 2025, 15:06:55
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vtlp5v$3nrio$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 4/15/25 00:11, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
On Mon, 14 Apr 2025 23:25:26 -0400, James Kuyper wrote:
On 4/14/25 19:41, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
>
On Mon, 14 Apr 2025 15:56:56 -0700, Keith Thompson wrote:
...
That would not be practical or useful. The timing of the Big Bang is
not known with great precision ...
>
Neither is that of some fictional religious entity.
>
Not true. While his divinity is fictional, there might have been a
person who was the inspiration for those stories. Whether or not he was
real, the stories of his life are only consistent with a very specific
time period ...
Unfortunately, whoever threw in references to historical details to try to
make the stories seem more plausible didn’t try very hard to keep them
consistent.
That's why there's a range of possible dates, rather than one specific
date. Note that such inconsistencies can be expected, even if he's real.
Most historical figures of his era who were not of high rank had poorly
recorded births.
Remember that there was no “Year 1”. It was a few centuries before
somebody decided something like “let’s call this year 615 A.D., and number
backwards and forwards from there”.
No, Dionysius Exiguus didn't just randomly decide which year it was, he
did his best to determine how many years it had been since the birth of
Christ. The method he used to reach that conclusion are unknown, and are
inconsistent with the range of dates currently considered reasonable by
experts. If Jesus was a real person, the current best guess as to the
date of his birth is somewhere between 6 and 4 BCE. See
<
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_of_the_birth_of_Jesus> for more detail.
The point is, the uncertainty in the date of his birth, whether
fictional or real, is far less than the 59 million year uncertainty in
the date of the Big Bang. In order for it to be comparably uncertain, we
would have to be unsure whether he was incarnated in the Mesozoic or
Cenozoic eras.
Are you uncertain as to whether or not King Herod ruled during the
Cretaceous?