Badsidhe ~
B: "If it is not true, then it does not solve the difficulty."
Well, yeah, but here's the picture: the skeptic who posits a contradiction is simultaneously positing the non-existence of any resolution; otherwise we'd have just questions about apparent discrepancies, not claims of actual contradictions. The contradiction-claim is not "Solution A doesn't solve the problem," it's "There is no solution to the problem."
To draw an analogy: the objector's claim is not "This road does not lead to that city." His claim is "No road leads to that city." But if I can point to two, or three, or half a dozen roads, none of which the objector has explored, then logically his claim must be said to be unproven. And this is true even if I can point to an untraveled road with a fork in it: if one way is right, the other one must be wrong, but as long as the objector has not shown that neither way leads to the city, his objection is unproven, and the question of whether or not there is a road leading to the city remains open.
Meanwhile: it might be tangential to get into my reasons for thinking that Solomon got wiser (I think his dabbling into paganism for the sake of his wives served, in the end, as a sort of slingshot toward greater wisdom than before -- the kind of wisdom that comes from bad experiences), but, here's something else to consider: it doesn't seem unlikely that Solomon understood the "none like you" promise as applying not to human beings in general, but to /kings/ in charge of the government of the land of Israel. First Kings 3:13 and the parallel in II Chronicles 1:11-12 suggest this, and the formula employed in First Kings 3:12 (the "none before or after" stuff) is used elsewhere to describe kings; in such a context the term "arise" seems to signify a rise to power, not mere birth.
Yours in Christ,
Waterrock
B: "If it is not true, then it does not solve the difficulty."
Well, yeah, but here's the picture: the skeptic who posits a contradiction is simultaneously positing the non-existence of any resolution; otherwise we'd have just questions about apparent discrepancies, not claims of actual contradictions. The contradiction-claim is not "Solution A doesn't solve the problem," it's "There is no solution to the problem."
To draw an analogy: the objector's claim is not "This road does not lead to that city." His claim is "No road leads to that city." But if I can point to two, or three, or half a dozen roads, none of which the objector has explored, then logically his claim must be said to be unproven. And this is true even if I can point to an untraveled road with a fork in it: if one way is right, the other one must be wrong, but as long as the objector has not shown that neither way leads to the city, his objection is unproven, and the question of whether or not there is a road leading to the city remains open.
Meanwhile: it might be tangential to get into my reasons for thinking that Solomon got wiser (I think his dabbling into paganism for the sake of his wives served, in the end, as a sort of slingshot toward greater wisdom than before -- the kind of wisdom that comes from bad experiences), but, here's something else to consider: it doesn't seem unlikely that Solomon understood the "none like you" promise as applying not to human beings in general, but to /kings/ in charge of the government of the land of Israel. First Kings 3:13 and the parallel in II Chronicles 1:11-12 suggest this, and the formula employed in First Kings 3:12 (the "none before or after" stuff) is used elsewhere to describe kings; in such a context the term "arise" seems to signify a rise to power, not mere birth.
Yours in Christ,
Waterrock
