I've been looking into the compilation of the Bible and I've recently been informed there are a bunch of different texts left out. It got me wondering how people came to decide which would stay in and which would be discarded. Does anyone have any references or recommendations looking into how the Bible was compiled? — GTTRPNK
Keep in mind that the idea of the "Bible" as a codex containing all canonical books of the Bible, and nothing else is a post-Reformation invention. Monks used to only copy some books, while also including non-cannonical epistles and the writings of early church father's in "Bibles." — Count Timothy von Icarus
The Books of Enoch are considered canonical by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and Ethiopian Jews.
Those contain a much more detailed story of the Flood, and of the Nephlim, fallen angels. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The Book of Enoch is interesting because it speaks of angels coming from heaven and having sex with human women — Hanover
Was there a Yelp review of the experience? Did the women like it? Did human women merit the angelic effort? How did human women give birth to the giants--narrow birth canal and all that? Maybe the tale originated in barely remembered ancient matings of Neaderthals and Homo sapiens? — Bitter Crank
How did human women give birth to the giants--narrow birth canal and all that? — Bitter Crank
You must've met neoteny at some point in your life. — TheMadFool
Actually I just met her the other day. We didn't get along; probably won't repeat it. Too larval. — Bitter Crank
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.