thegreatnobody wrote...
Can you imagine an apple? Of course. Can you imagine a chuwakumabra? I bet you don't even have an understanding on what the hell I just spouted. And even that word I just invented is based on words I already heard. Language is also a proof you can't just invent something out of nothing because without a point of comparison, the human brain would not be able to understand.
And in what part of the bible tell you to speak in rhymes? Heck, you can understand Shakespeare but you can't understand the straight-to-the-point words from the Bible? I don't think you are stupid to not understand but you are just no willing to understand it.
First of all, points of comparison do nothing to make something less original. Something is original if it is different from everything else in any one way whatsoever, it doesn't have to be 100% incomparable. Also, your invention of the word chuwakumabra, derivative though it may be from chupakabra, was original in that it was a new word, and the form I imagined for it was also original, despite being fueled by previous images of different animals. You don't seem to understand originality.
As for my rhyming comment, I wasn't saying the bible told people to speak in rhymes, I was making a ridiculous scenario to show you the fallacious nature of your assumption that because the Bible has historical facts it is somehow more valid as a source of moral teaching, which is laughable.
Also, I just noticed your statement "Every culture has a God or can at least testify to a higher being. Come up with whatever, may it be aliens, intergalactic warlords or whatnot." Which, aside from being completely factually incorrect, would be totally irrelevant to the truth of the beliefs, so please stop including useless misinformation in your posts.
PS: Straight-to-the-point? Yeah, I'm sure that's why there's so many differing interpretations of the teachings in it, and so many variant forms of christianity. I was once offered $300 by my father to read the bible cover to cover, and I honestly got to about page 120 before I became unhealthily disappointed in humanity for believing the swill it contained. It was so contradictory and wrapped up in its own falsehood, that I could not even continue to read it.