APPENDICES


Appendix A: Timeline of Key Events

Cosmic and Geological

Date Event
13.8 billion years ago Big Bang; universe begins
13.6 billion years ago First stars form
4.5 billion years ago Earth forms
3.8 billion years ago First life (single-celled organisms)
2.4 billion years ago Great Oxygenation Event
600 million years ago Cambrian explosion; complex animals
66 million years ago Asteroid impact; dinosaur extinction
7 million years ago Hominin lineage diverges from other apes
2 million years ago Homo erectus; controlled fire
300,000 years ago Homo sapiens appears
70,000 years ago Cognitive revolution; art, symbolic thought

Ancient Near East

Date Event
c. 6500 BCE Ubaid period begins in Mesopotamia
c. 4000 BCE Uruk period; first cities
c. 3100 BCE First writing (Uruk)
c. 3000 BCE Proto-Elamite script (undeciphered)
c. 2900 BCE Writing becomes phonetic
c. 2600 BCE Indus Valley civilization flourishes
c. 2334 BCE Sargon of Akkad conquers Sumer
c. 2100 BCE Third Dynasty of Ur; Sumerian renaissance
c. 2000 BCE Sumerian ceases to be spoken natively
c. 1792 BCE Hammurabi’s reign begins
c. 1600 BCE Hittite Empire rises
c. 1450 BCE Linear A in use in Crete
c. 1200 BCE Bronze Age Collapse
c. 1000 BCE Traditional date of David’s kingdom
586 BCE Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem
539 BCE Cyrus conquers Babylon

Classical and Medieval

Date Event
c. 450 BCE Herodotus writes Histories
323 BCE Death of Alexander the Great
30 BCE Death of Cleopatra; Egypt becomes Roman
70 CE Roman destruction of Jerusalem’s Temple
c. 100 CE Last cuneiform texts
476 CE Fall of Western Roman Empire
c. 800 CE House of Wisdom, Baghdad
1450 CE Gutenberg’s printing press

Modern

Date Event
1822 Champollion deciphers Egyptian hieroglyphics
1857 Rawlinson and others decipher Akkadian cuneiform
1952 Ventris deciphers Linear B
1960 Wigner publishes “Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics”
1970 Conway invents the Game of Life
1990s World Wide Web emerges
2022 Large language models achieve widespread use

Appendix B: Sumerian Language Basics

The Writing System

Sumerian was written in cuneiform—wedge-shaped marks pressed into clay with a reed stylus. The system evolved from pictographs (pictures representing objects) to a mixed logographic-syllabic script (signs representing words and sounds).

A single cuneiform sign could function as: - A logogram (word sign): the sign for “god” (𒀭) could mean dingir (god) - A syllabogram (sound sign): the same sign could represent the syllable an - A determinative (category marker): placed before divine names to indicate “this is a god”

Basic Grammar

Sumerian is: - Agglutinative: morphemes (meaningful units) attach to roots in chains - Ergative-absolutive: subjects of intransitive verbs and objects of transitive verbs are marked the same (absolutive); agents of transitive verbs are marked differently (ergative) - SOV: basic word order is Subject-Object-Verb

Case System

Case Marker Function
Absolutive -Ø (zero) Subject of intransitive; object of transitive
Ergative -e Agent of transitive verb
Genitive -ak Possession (“of”)
Dative -ra Indirect object (“to, for”)
Locative -a Location (“in, at”)
Ablative -ta Motion from (“from”)
Terminative -šè Motion toward (“to, toward”)
Comitative -da Accompaniment (“with”)
Equative -gin Comparison (“like, as”)

Sample Vocabulary

Sumerian Meaning
dingir god
lugal king
é house, temple
a water
an sky, heaven
ki earth, place
nam abstract noun prefix
mu name; year
thing
ĝeš wood; tree

The Verbal Template

Sumerian verbs are complex chains of prefixes, a stem, and suffixes:

[Modal]-[Conjugation]-[Dimensional]-[STEM]-[Subject/Object]

Example: mu-na-ni-in-dù (“he built it in it for him”) - mu- : ventive (motion toward) - -na- : dative (“for him”) - -ni- : locative (“in it”) - -in- : ergative third person (“he” as agent) - dù : verb root (“to build”)


Appendix C: The Documentary Hypothesis

The Documentary Hypothesis proposes that the Torah (first five books of the Bible) was compiled from four originally separate source documents:

J (Jahwist/Yahwist) - Uses YHWH for God’s name - Anthropomorphic depiction of God (walks in garden, etc.) - Vivid, narrative style - Likely originated in Judah (southern kingdom) - Dated c. 950–850 BCE (traditional); may be later

E (Elohist) - Uses Elohim for God’s name - More distant deity (speaks through dreams, angels) - Less narrative detail than J - Likely originated in Israel (northern kingdom) - Dated c. 850–750 BCE (traditional)

D (Deuteronomist) - Distinctive sermonic style - Emphasis on centralized worship - Core of the book of Deuteronomy - Connected to reforms of King Josiah (c. 621 BCE)

P (Priestly) - Concerned with genealogies, rituals, purity laws - Precise dates and measurements - More transcendent deity - Dated to exilic or post-exilic period (c. 550–450 BCE)

Current Status

The Documentary Hypothesis dominated scholarship for over a century but is now contested. Some scholars: - Defend modified versions (fewer sources, different dates) - Prefer “supplementary” models (one base document with additions) - Emphasize the final form rather than hypothetical sources - Question whether distinct documents can be recovered

No consensus currently exists on the composition of the Torah.


Appendix D: The Bronze Age Collapse

What Collapsed (c. 1200–1150 BCE)

Civilization Outcome
Hittite Empire Complete collapse; capital Hattusa destroyed and abandoned
Mycenaean Greece Palaces destroyed; population decline; writing lost for 300+ years
Ugarit Destroyed c. 1185 BCE; never rebuilt
Cyprus Major cities destroyed; some recovery
Egypt (New Kingdom) Survived but weakened; fought off “Sea Peoples”
Kassite Babylon Fell to Elamite invasion c. 1155 BCE
Assyria Contracted but survived
Canaan Widespread destruction; new peoples emerge

Proposed Causes

  1. Sea Peoples: Migrating/raiding groups attacked coastal civilizations. Identity debated; possibly displaced populations from Aegean, Anatolia, or elsewhere.

  2. Climate change: Paleoclimate data suggests prolonged drought c. 1200–900 BCE.

  3. Earthquakes: The eastern Mediterranean is seismically active; several sites show earthquake damage.

  4. Internal rebellion: Palace economies were exploitative; collapse may have involved social upheaval.

  5. Systems collapse: Interconnected economies failed together; each failure triggered others.

Most likely: Multiple causes interacting. No single factor explains all evidence.


Appendix E: The Fine-Tuning Constants

Selected Physical Constants and Their Sensitivity

Constant Description Sensitivity
Strong nuclear force Holds atomic nuclei together ±2% change prevents complex chemistry
Electromagnetic force Governs chemistry and light Small changes prevent stable atoms
Gravitational constant (G) Strength of gravity Much stronger: stars burn out too fast; much weaker: no stars form
Cosmological constant (Λ) Universe’s expansion rate 10^120 times larger prevents galaxy formation
Electron mass Mass of electrons Heavier: atoms collapse; lighter: no chemistry
Proton-neutron mass difference Affects nuclear stability Different values prevent stable atoms
Carbon resonance level Allows carbon production in stars Without it, carbon would be rare

Interpretations

  1. Coincidence: The constants happen to have these values by chance.

  2. Necessity: A deeper theory will show these values are mathematically required.

  3. Multiverse: All possible values are realized somewhere; we observe life-permitting values because we exist.

  4. Design: The values were chosen to permit complexity and life.

No interpretation is proven. The fine-tuning remains a significant open question in physics and philosophy.


Appendix F: Glossary

Agglutinative: A language type where words are formed by stringing together morphemes, each with a distinct meaning.

Anthropocentrism: The assumption that humans are the central or most important element of existence.

Axiom: A proposition accepted as true without proof, serving as a starting point for further reasoning.

Cuneiform: A writing system using wedge-shaped marks pressed into clay, developed in ancient Mesopotamia.

Cumulative culture: The accumulation of knowledge and skills across generations, where each generation builds on the previous.

Emergent/Emergence: Properties or behaviors that arise from complex systems but are not present in (or predictable from) individual components.

Ergative-absolutive: A grammatical alignment where the subject of an intransitive verb is treated like the object of a transitive verb.

Fine-tuning: The observation that physical constants appear precisely calibrated to permit complex structures and life.

Great Filter: A hypothetical barrier that prevents intelligent life from becoming widespread in the universe.

Hard problem of consciousness: The question of why and how physical processes give rise to subjective experience.

Logos: Greek term meaning word, reason, or rational principle; in theology, the divine reason underlying the cosmos.

Panpsychism: The view that consciousness is a fundamental feature of reality, present in some form throughout nature.

Privation: Absence or lack; in theology, the view that evil is the absence of good rather than a positive entity.

Ratchet effect: The mechanism by which cultural knowledge accumulates without slipping backward.

Sexagesimal: A number system based on 60, used by the Sumerians.

Substrate-independent: Not dependent on a particular physical medium; applicable to any system with the relevant functional properties.

Theodicy: An attempt to justify God’s goodness in the face of evil and suffering.

Theophoric: Containing a divine name; said of personal names like “Daniel” (God is my judge).