That's fine but they have not been in the majority in Europe, and the fact is that most European interpretations of the Bible have taken large swaths of the Bible as literal fact.
No it doesn't assume that literature need teach morals, it assumes that when literature is subjective that any morals it does teach are up to debate and thus the work's importance for issues of morality is moot. My central point was that the Bible is not useful as a tool for proscribing moral tales. I don't disagree that the Bible can tell us plenty about how the Hebrews viewed the world, but I think that is something entirely irrelevant when it comes to how we should live today. I stand by the point.
I say so what, we could get the same sense from any number of ancient writing. This is just a product of how humanity thinks, not of any special quality of the Bible. I also think both those points are entirely debatable, and we should not take them at face value.
Eh, I think that's the anthropic fallacy. The "evolutionary imperative" is just a product of evolution, nor is it universal or even justifying the proscriptive parts.
I would raise the same points if someone tried to use Shakespeare to justify trying to deny me the right to marry or adopt, or tried to justify putting me in jail. The Bible has been used for those things in the past. I would tell someone they're being quite ridiculous if they think there is something special about the ideas in Shakespeare.
It's not about its incapability to have common elements with us today, it's the idea that somehow these elements are profound or special, or that they can be justifications for telling others how they can live.




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