You can't really boil unclean harvest without destroying it back in the Bronze Age, because you haven't got the technology to build anything to cook it in. How are you going to do that?
I was thinking of a pot.
How is pasteurisation carried out today. I was under the impression that only a few things can be pasteurised, mostly liquids, rather than solid food, and that it was done on flat surfaces, rather than in any kind of pot. I think that maintaining any kind of technological know-how needed to do it would have been impossible before it was in fact invented in the 18th Century.
Again, its not an ad hominem when it is true.
If you want to ignore my points that's cool but just to see my words once more: An ad hominem is not a fallacy because it is true or false. It is a fallacy because the intelligence of a person has nothing to do with the truth of their claims.
Here is a handy way to think about it: as soon as you stop dealing with what has been posted, but instead deal with your opinion of who posted it, you argument is shit.
You can't really deal with someone's arguments when they are so illogical that they do not admit of dealing with them. A person's intelligence, or the lack thereof, speaks to their abilities to make an argument, and is therefore relevant. Now, if I said you were fat, or ugly, or fucked up, or if I questioned your ancestry, or recommended you do socially unacceptable things with your mother, or insulted the size of your private parts, then you would have a point. Because none of those things have a bearing on your ability to post an argument. But your intelligence does indeed have a bearing on that ability.
I expect they did, but to keep it at boiling temperature for 3/4 of a day? I think that would probably burn whatever they had beyond recognition. They didn't have the steel or the iron that we have. Bronze isn't a strong metal, you know that as well as I do. Yes, they might have been able to use it, but would they have? Metal had to be used for far more valuable things. Likes swords and shit.
Cool so you know nothing about pasteurization. Minimal pasteurization is achieved by raising some thing to 72C for 15 seconds. I hope you did not take my fictional bible passage as literal truth!
Obviously, I know that your so-called quote is not in the Bible, which I have read, and you obviously have not. But MINIMAL pasteurisation. What does that mean exactly? In order to make something safe to eat or drink, how pasteurised does it need to be? I am not so sure a campfire would do it.