‘scholar’:
The solstice was not observed but calculated thus rendering such an event redundant.
Citation needed. 😂
Of course, as already stated, it doesn’t actually matter whether the solstice for Nebuchadnezzar’s 37th year were observed or calculated because it is still wildly inaccurate for 588BCE but exactly correct for 568 BCE.
Poor old ‘scholar’ pounced on the first thing he could find that said solstices were sometimes calculated, and his chosen source is one that says Ptolemy did so. But VAT 4956 isn’t from Ptolemy, and ‘scholar’s’ assertion that the solstice in VAT 4956 was calculated rather than observed is entirely speculative. But if it were calculated, it wouldn’t be wildly inaccurate anyway. Intellectual dishonesty typical of ‘scholar’.
We shall wait to see ‘scholars’s’ evidence that the specific solstice mentioned in VAT 4956 was actually calculated rather than observed, and then we can watch him flounder as he tries to explain why it’s wrong for 588 BCE anyway but perfectly accurate for 568 BCE.