User:Inquisitor/Scientific errors in the Bible

This is a work in progress...

To its critics, the Holy Bible is a stew of scientific error, poor arithmetic, geographical inaccuracies and historical anachronisms all steeped in a broth of myth and folklore. To its fans, the Bible is the exact opposite. This article contains a list of the most common objections raised by critics along with a representative of apologist rebuttals.

Anatomy of insects
In Leviticus 11:20-23, the Bible admonishes the reader from eating certain types of flying insects stating "...all other flying creeping things, which have four feet, shall be an abomination unto you." Skeptics maintain that the Bible is implying that there are species of flying insects that are lacking the customary set of six legs. This is clearly an error as there are no known species of flying insect with only four legs. Defenders of biblical inerrancy typically attempt to explain away this error by quibbling over the definition of "feet" and "legs". Apologist J.P. Holding provides the following example:

The error with the proposed rebuttal above by J.P Holding is a double standard. To claim that birds or fowl by having wings have four legs, then the same is to be applied to insects giving them a total of eight legs, rebutting his own argument by internal inconsistency. It should be taken as a good example of a theist attempting to make an argument that appears intelligent, but in fact is poorly thought out and constructed.

Cud chewing rabbits
The rabbit, though it chews the cud, does not have a divided hoof; it is unclean for you.

Chewing cud is when an animal regurgitates semi-digested food back into its mouth to be chewed a second time. Such animals like cows, goats, sheep and so forth are known as ruminant animals. Rabbits are not presently, nor ever have been, ruminant animals. This is simply an error on the part of the biblical authors. Since the Bible tends to operate under the assumption that a blunder worth making once is worth repeating, the same claim is repeated again in Deuteronomy 14:7.

Despite being obviously factually inaccurate, this has not deterred biblicists from making quixotic attempts at defending non-existent cud chewing rabbits. Even the noted quote mining engineer and Conservapedia contributor Ken DeMyer has taken a swipe at this one. With predictably comical results. Even more respectable defenders of biblical inerrancy have struggled with an acceptable explanation. The well-regarded, conservative, and very much evangelical, Wycliffe Bible Encyclopedia bungled their entry on this one:

It is true that rabbits and hares may be said to "chew food previously swallowed". That is if you wish to define "swallowed" as having passed through the animal's entire gastrointestinal system, and "food" as fecal material. Rabbits are coprophagous. They eat their own poop. They don't rechew regurgitated food, unless of course you want to consider "regurgitate" and "defecate" to be synonymous. Sadly, folks like J.P. Holding try to do precisely that.

When pressed on the issue, some bible defenders will resort to an argument that can be boiled down to "Well, it looks like rabbits chew cud ." Which is a valid point. How was the bronze-aged author, alleged to be Moses, to know this wasn't the case? It's not like he had access to an omniscient being or anything.

Genetic inheritance
Then he placed the peeled branches in all the watering troughs, so that they would be directly in front of the flocks when they came to drink. When the flocks were in heat and came to drink, they mated in front of the branches. And they bore young that were streaked or speckled or spotted.

In the book of Genesis 30:25-42 the character of Jacob agrees to tend to another man's flock of sheep and goats for a price. That price being that Jacob be allowed to keep all of the spotted, speckled or striped young that were born. Not being fettered by honesty, Jacob cooks up a plan to increase his wages. He places a bunch of striped sticks in front of the mating animals, which causes them to conceive streaked, spotted, or speckled offspring. Now obviously, even a person with only a nodding acquaintance of animal husbandry would realize that this is patently absurd. In fact, Christian apologists don't even make a serious attempt at defending this passage. As exampled by:

Bat classification
And these are they which ye shall have in abomination among the fowls; they shall not be eaten, they are an abomination: the eagle, and the ossifrage, and the ospray, and the vulture, and the kite after his kind; every raven after his kind; and the owl, and the night hawk, and the cuckow, and the hawk after his kind, and the little owl, and the cormorant, and the great owl, and the swan, and the pelican, and the gier eagle, and the stork, the heron after her kind, and the lapwing, and the bat.

This is a favorite amongst biblical skeptics because it appears that the Bible classifies a bat as a bird, which it quite clearly is not. Interestingly enough, this also is a favorite amongst Christian apologists as well. Mostly because it's an easy one for them to knock out of the park. Apologists will extricate themselves from this one by appealing to Hebrew etymology, translation issues, or cultural differences. If the apologist is really good, they'll use all three:

In fairness, biblical Hebrew does have a relatively limited vocabulary and does indeed use the word owph as a catch-all term for any winged animal. At first glance this would appear to be an effective rebuttal. Score one for the apologists, right? Well, not so fast.

The authors of the Bible had the annoying habit of telling the same stories twice, and so it is in this case as well. The list of unclean birds appears again in Deuteronomy 14:11-18. Yet again our pal the bat is included amongst his feathered friends. Unfortunately for apologists the word owph wasn't used to group them this time. Instead the word tsippowr  is used. Which specifically is the Hebrew word for bird.

Errors in basic addition
And this is the number of them: thirty platters of gold, a thousand platters of silver, nine and twenty knives, thirty bowls of gold, silver bowls of a second sort four hundred and ten, and other vessels a thousand. All the vessels of gold and of silver were five thousand and four hundred.

Skeptics often note the errors in basic arithmetic that appear throughout the Bible. In the above example the items listed total 2,499, not 5,400. There are numerous other cases of the Bible incorrectly totaling the number of persons or items listed. So how do Christians react when presented with such obvious mistakes? One way they have dealt with such inconvenient inconsistencies is to go back and change the text of the Bible itself. The editors of the Revised Standard Version simply changed the numbers in their inerrant scripture to match the actual sum.

However, most Christians meet such accusations with an apathetic yawn. Pointing out that the skeptic is being needlessly "nitpicky", or that the biblical authors were fond of using "round numbers", or it simply is a translation/scribal error. This may be an adequate response to some, but does nothing to allay the underlying criticism which is: if the Bible can not be trusted on such trivial matters as basic counting, why should it be trusted on any other matters?

The value of π (pi)
Then he made the molten sea; it was round, ten cubits from brim to brim, and five cubits high. A line of thirty cubits would encircle it completely.

This is one the most common errors cited by Bible skeptics. The mathematical number π is the ratio of a circle's diameter to its circumference. The value of π truncated at 10 digits is 3.141592653. The bible itself gives us a different value of π in

In 1 Kings 7:23 and again in 2 Chronicles 4:2, the Bible describes a round object with a diameter of 10 units and a circumference of 30 units. From this skeptics infer that the Bible is stating that pi is 3.0, which of course is an incorrect value. Apologists have attempted to come up with many novel solutions to this problem. One tactic is to use the "close enough" defense, as illustrated by Robert H. Mounce in his book Answers to Questions About the Bible:

It goes without saying that critics find this to be a less than compelling argument. Partially because more accurate approximations of pi were known to both the ancient Egyptian and Babylonian civilizations at the time. And largely because the precise value of pi would have definitely been known to an allegedly omniscient being. The very same being who inspired and co-authored said passages.

In the end the utility of pointing out this error is limited, since the apologist has many plausible excuses at their disposal. Common explanations are to claim that the vessel wasn't perfectly round, that the brim was larger than the body, or that the cubit isn't a precise unit of measurement. Zondervan's Encyclopedia of Bible Difficulties trots this one out for the reader's consideration:

Hear that skeptics? You've just been burned. Everyone knows that when you want to know the circumference of an object you measure it from the inside, duh!

Firmament
The "firmament" is claimed to be a solid "roof" over the world. This is obviously untrue, unless all those satellites in orbit are a hoax. Considering the views of flat earthers, someone, somewhere probably thinks this is true.

Illumination
In Genesis, the moon is referred to as a "light" ("lesser light" actually). The moon is merely a reflector of the sun's light, and produces no visible light, although it does shine in different wavelengths not perceivable to the human eye, such as the infrareds. Of course, when talking to tribal nomads and other desert-dwellers, the concept of referring to the moon as a light was commonplace.

Stars
The Bible makes it clear that stars are tiny objects in the sky that will fall down when Jesus comes back: ""

However, other verses in the book of Revelation clearly use "stars" in a figurative sense (for example, see Rev. 9:1 and Rev. 12:3, 4), so it is possible that the writer did not intend to make a statement about literal celestial bodies in 8:10 either. Indeed, given the highly allegorical and symbolic nature of apocalyptic literature in general, any literal understanding of Revelation is generally ill-advised until taking into consideration the idea that this is supposedly divine inspiration to which laws, societies and lives are proposed to be based upon.

Planetary formation
But they deliberately forget that long ago by God’s word the heavens came into being and the earth was formed out of water and by water.