I'm getting a little out of my depth here, but I'll try to answer some of your points/questions.
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Secondly, there are only two viable candidates for its destroyers: Egypt and Israel, and there is no rational basis for believing that Egypt did the dirty deed.
Why did it have to be destroyed by neighboring countries? It could just have easily been an earthquake, mud slide, other geological problems, or even bad engineering. There could be simpler explanations.
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And when you say that writing fictional stories after the fact to fit the situation that previously occurred was a "pretty common method used at the time by historians", could you be more specific? I am not aware of that practice, nor of any historians at all from that time, outside of the Biblical writers.
Many if not most, of the earliest historians we know the name of and can attribute works to incorporated all kinds of mythology in their works to match the style of the time. If these guys are doing it, then you know the sources of Exodus would have been doing it too. Who gets the credit for writing Exodus? Is it Moses?
- Herodotus is neither a mere gatherer of data nor a simple teller of tales he is both. While Herodotus is certainly concerned with giving accurate accounts of events, this does not preclude for him the insertion of powerful mythological elements into his narrative, elements which will aid him in expressing the truth of matters under his study. Thus to understand what Herodotus is doing in the Histories, we must not impose strict demarcations between the man as mythologist and the man as historian, or between the work as myth and the work as history. As James Romm has written, Herodotus worked under a common ancient Greek cultural assumption that the way events are remembered and retold (e.g. in myths or legends) produces a valid kind of understanding, even when this retelling is not entirely factual. For Herodotus, then, it takes both myth and history to produce truthful understanding.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herodotus
- In labelling Persians as centaurs through the mouth of Cyrus, Xenophon plays upon the popular post-Persian-war propagandistic paradigm of using mythological imagery to represent the Greco-Persian conflict.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xenophon
- In India, a country he never visited, Strabo described small flying reptiles that were long with a snake-like body and bat-like wings, winged scorpions, and other mythical creatures along with those that were factual. Other historians, such as Herodotus, Aristotle, and Flavius Josephus, mentioned similar creatures. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strabo
- Many more
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Also, how do you know that we haven't found evidence of their travels?
Because then there would no question and no point of your research.
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A million people traveling together might leave an unmistakeable swath. But then again, perhaps not
I've always assumed a million people traveling a distance like that would bring with them maybe 2-3 times their numbers of beast of burden and domesticated livestock. 4 million animals leave Egypt needing to bring food, water, etc. for their travels.
A million Jews leave Egypt, how many arrive at their destination? 2-3 times the initial number on the low end, plus the population growth of their animals. On the low end, 12 million animals traveled together towards the end and we never noticed it?
Me including writings in my list was dumb, didn't think it through.
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There are lots of indications that the Israelites carried the bones of their dead with them for burial in Canaan.
They carried the bones of their dead? After 40 years of travel I could easily be carrying the skeletons of 4 grandparents, two parents, a sibling or two, and multiple children that unfortunately died young. That's maybe 12 skeletons, 2400 individual bones. How am I carrying all that? Is my donkey carrying that, including all the bones of his own ancestors, also including the bones of the animals I ate for 40 years. Multiply that out for the entire population. They have got to be the most ecologically
conscious humans ever, or we passed the line of believability a while ago.
I established I'm generally a skeptic, but the size of the traveling party you are talking about being unnoticed seems ridiculous to me. I'd believe a couple thousand.