I don't think Doyle ever explicitly claims to author fiction or non-fiction within the books

But there are works which are definitely fiction but purport to be historical eg The Silmarillion, so such a claim within a work is not dispositive

I think much of the Bible likely corresponds in a very rough way to actual history and/or psychology (eg the filling of the Mediterranean Basin as a global flood, see also Atlantis) but I think you would be foolish to accept it as literal historical truth (pi is not 3, Adam was not around to witness the first 6 days of creation, I very much doubt that man coexisted with dinosaurs, etc)

Moreover I doubt the moral worth as well, which perhaps introduces a certain bias regarding the claims of historicity. Judaism is almost unique in positing a creation in which man is neither one with nature nor God(s)

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