Coming back to this, I like the dispute template idea. I'm not sure how I should put that together. Would you be able to help with that?
I have been thinking about the structure for this page. I think it would be appropriate to generalize the Abrahamic religions together, as they accept the Old Testament and books like Genesis. It would not be necessary to talk about each of them individually. The ideological differences between the Abrahamic religions are unrelated to this subject matter, since they accept the source content. At a high level we can group them by Abrahamic and Non-Abrahamic. It would only be necessary to go into detail into some detail on the Non-Abrahamic religions. Here is an rough draft which shows the overview that I am thinking about for this:
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[Brief overview here - summary draft] The Flat Earth has persisted in human culture for thousands of years...[expand]
The Earth was flat in the first cultures and religions of the world...[expand] The Ancient Greeks [link to Ancient Greeks wiki page] were the first to contradict the prevailing belief and adopt an alternative model...[expand]
Below are possible interpretations for religion, under a Flat Earth context.
Abrahamic Religions
Abrahamic Religions are a group of religions who mostly accept the events of the Old Testament. 'Abrahamic' is in reference to an Old Testament event that God revealed himself to Abraham, descendant of Noah. Many of the well-known religions are Abrahamic religions, including the Judiac, Christian, and Islamic religions. Differences between the Abrahamic religions generally involve differing philosophies of the divine, or the acceptance or interpretation of the New Testament and other later texts.
- [Link to a page with various Old Testament verses on Flat Earth]
- [Information on the Book of Enoch - An apocalyptic book detailing the experiences of Noah's great grandfather, supposedly rejected by later-age biblical authorities for focusing too much on the Flat Earth]
World Religions
Non-Abrahamic religions also depict a Flat Earth. The xx and xx religions believed...[expand]
- [Link to a page which collects various interpretations of the Flat Earth in Non-Abrahamic religions (Ie. Buddhism, Native American, Sumerian religions)]
Early Zetetic Movement
Between the mid-1800's to the early-1900's many members of the early Zetetic movements viewed the Flat Earth investigation as a possible reconciliation of science and scripture. It was held that if the scriptures were based in truth, as some believe, then it stands that there should be physical evidence for it in the way that the world is described.
- [Links to the thoughts of early zeteticists on religion - ie. Blount, Rowbotham]
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The Flat Earth references you see floating around mostly come from the Old Testament. There may be some from the later books, but I am under the impression that those are minority, and any of those, if found, could be disclaimed at the end of the Old Testament verse page, or put onto a separate page.