An FYI that does not address the substance of Eliezer’s post:
This woman was telling you the Norse creation myth, which is definitely one of the stranger ones I’ve heard: http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/creation.html. As a story, it lacks the rudimentary narrative cohesiveness most of us expect, having been exposed since childhood to the Christian “first there was light” story, which proceeds in a rather more linear manner. On the other hand, Norse myth is the basis of Tolkien’s Middle Earth, whereas the Christian myth has been responsible mainly for lots of paintings of Adam and Eve looking coyly at each other.
An FYI that does not address the substance of Eliezer’s post:
This woman was telling you the Norse creation myth, which is definitely one of the stranger ones I’ve heard: http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/creation.html. As a story, it lacks the rudimentary narrative cohesiveness most of us expect, having been exposed since childhood to the Christian “first there was light” story, which proceeds in a rather more linear manner. On the other hand, Norse myth is the basis of Tolkien’s Middle Earth, whereas the Christian myth has been responsible mainly for lots of paintings of Adam and Eve looking coyly at each other.
Also Paradise Lost