Russia’s science and higher education ministry has dismissed the head of a prestigious genetics institute who sparked controversy by contending that humans once lived for centuries and that the shorter lives of modern humans are due to their ancestors’ sins, state news agency RIA-Novosti said Thursday.
Although the report did not give a reason for the firing of Alexander Kudryavtsev, the influential Russian Orthodox Church called it religious discrimination.
Kudryavtsev, who headed the Russian Academy of Science’s Vavilov Institute of General Genetics, made a presentation at a conference in 2023 in which he said people had lived for some 900 years prior to the era of the Biblical Flood and that “original, ancestral and personal sins” caused genetic diseases that shortened lifespans.
Can you give a reference please? Sounds like sermon quoting to me, they tend to have a ranting quality to them.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methuselah
There ya go, all the references, plus a family tree!
Isn’t there a genealogy with a timeline somewhere in Genesis? It’s like a whole chapter of who fucked who and how long they lived.
Yeah, there are entire books in the OT dedicated to lineage, and I’m pretty sure it’s all been debunked. It’s not a historical document in any way whatsoever.
Lol I mean how do you debunk something that wasn’t originally intended to be a scientific document. (I know that’s not the mindset among Christians)
Ok it has been debunked because the events described are often not only internally inconsistent they do not match up with what we now know. And before you start on “it’s an analogy” keep in mind it wasn’t for the people who wrote it and lived with it as well as the confusion of what it is an analogy for.
Genesis 6 through 9.
You’re asking me to provide a reference for the biblical flood story. When I say it’s in there… It’s in there.
I get that you don’t know me, but the second sentence of your post isn’t helpful.
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Doesn’t matter, it’s in there. Even feeble attempts to find it using a search engine surface that theory.
I’ve done it a few times today. Each with less than 2 minutes spent.