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Old 02-08-2010, 12:44 PM   #11
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But aren't you simply assuming that because something is a myth there can be no elements of fact to it? Take Herodotus' History. It involves a lot of mythological stories (like the story of a man who rode a dolphin to Corinth) but there is a core of facts in there that are probably relatively accurate.
I actually used to use Herodotus the same way (and actually owed it to an analogy made by Allison in the premier issue of the JSHJ). And never really came upon a decent response to the analogy (you can search the forums and see where I've used it). Herodotus is one of those figures that everybody has heard of, but few really engage, so he seems good on first blush, and you don't run across many people who can really tell you if it works or not.

So instead I happened upon the response myself. The short answer is that it doesn't work. The longer answer is that historians don't take much of anything Herodotus says at face value without corroboration.

The father of history was a very bad historian. The reason, for example, you find the beautifully written, edifying piece about Solon and Croesus (despite the fact that they lived decades apart), is that Herodotus didn't particularly care if it was true or not. Accuracy wasn't the point.
I actually think Herodotus was a great historian in one key aspect: where he doesn't know the real answer he provides several possible explanations. Thucydides pretends he knows the answers to everything and while he's less big on the supernatural, he has a very definite view point and bias. As for Herodotus, accuracy was important (Thucydides makes a lot about his "rigorous" methods but really we only have his word for that), but Herodotus realized not everything could be seen with accuracy.

As for his inaccuracies, they are mainly in the specifics (like the Persian army was no where near as big as Herodotus puts it, though it did heaviely outnumber the Greeks). The general story line is correct. I have to defend Herodotus somewhat because he gets a lot of bad press. Whether or not Cyrus the Great conquered Sardis by scaling the part of the wall where a protection ritual hadn't been done is irrelevant in deciding whether his general narrative is right. Cyrus did conquer Lydia and Croesus was definitely the king of Lydia. Darius I did try and fail to conquer Greece at marathon, the stand of the 300 (well really 1300 but no one remembers the Thespians) did really take place, and Greece did repel the second Persian invasion.

That there is corrobating evidence for Herodotus' work means that we should consider his work a reliable source, but if Herodotus was the only source we had talking about these events, historians would probably trust the general narrative anyways (partly out of necessity).
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Old 02-08-2010, 02:11 PM   #12
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I actually think Herodotus was a great historian in one key aspect: where he doesn't know the real answer he provides several possible explanations. Thucydides pretends he knows the answers to everything and while he's less big on the supernatural, he has a very definite view point and bias. As for Herodotus, accuracy was important (Thucydides makes a lot about his "rigorous" methods but really we only have his word for that), but Herodotus realized not everything could be seen with accuracy.
Herodotus didn't care if it could be seen with accuracy or not. He weaves a story around known facts, but that's fundamentally no different than modern historical fiction.

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As for his inaccuracies, they are mainly in the specifics (like the Persian army was no where near as big as Herodotus puts it, though it did heaviely outnumber the Greeks).
This is an apologetic, and doesn't get us around the problem noted above.

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The general story line is correct. I have to defend Herodotus somewhat because he gets a lot of bad press. Whether or not Cyrus the Great conquered Sardis by scaling the part of the wall where a protection ritual hadn't been done is irrelevant in deciding whether his general narrative is right. Cyrus did conquer Lydia and Croesus was definitely the king of Lydia. Darius I did try and fail to conquer Greece at marathon, the stand of the 300 (well really 1300 but no one remembers the Thespians) did really take place, and Greece did repel the second Persian invasion.
Does it seem likely to you that Solon and Croesus met? I'd call it all but certain that they didn't. Do you think the story could have existed outside of Herodotus' History? I'd call it all but certain he invented, rather than received it.

We can dress it up however we want, but the simple reality is that Herodotus made the story up, and then lied in trying to pass it off as history. It's a great story. It just isn't a true one.

To be sure, it serves as an example of what history was to the ancient mind. But to be equally fair, it's disingenuous to suggest that efforts hadn't improved between Herodotus and the NT. Certainly there is a world of difference between, for example, History and Tacitus' Annals. Consequently, the analogy is damaged on more fronts than one.

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That there is corrobating evidence for Herodotus' work means that we should consider his work a reliable source
No it doesn't. There's corroborating evidence for the Manson girls account of the events at the Spahn movie ranch. I don't think anyone would consider them reliable.

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but if Herodotus was the only source we had talking about these events, historians would probably trust the general narrative anyways (partly out of necessity).
No they wouldn't. The "general narrative" couldn't exist without corroborating evidence. And the simple reality is often there is evidence that says Herodotus was wrong.

But even beyond that, and even if your assertion about what historians would do is accurate, so what? That just means that historians would get it wrong. He still isn't working for you here.
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Old 02-08-2010, 02:26 PM   #13
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So instead I happened upon the response myself. The short answer is that it doesn't work. The longer answer is that historians don't take much of anything Herodotus says at face value without corroboration.

The father of history was a very bad historian. The reason, for example, you find the beautifully written, edifying piece about Solon and Croesus (despite the fact that they lived decades apart), is that Herodotus didn't particularly care if it was true or not. Accuracy wasn't the point.
Herodotus worked largely on the basis of oral readition.

This causes major problems for his accounts of events before say 550 BCE.

His accounts of later events such as the actual Persian Wars with Greece are more reliable.

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Old 02-08-2010, 02:45 PM   #14
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Does it seem likely to you that Solon and Croesus met? I'd call it all but certain that they didn't. Do you think the story could have existed outside of Herodotus' History? I'd call it all but certain he invented, rather than received it.
I agree that the account is not historical. But it may not be sheer invention by Herodotus. According to wiki-Croesus
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A.E. Raubitschek argued (in Classical Philology 58 (1963:167f) that the story of Croesus' encounter with Solon arose from a tradition of his quoting Solon on his funeral pyre.
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Old 02-08-2010, 03:24 PM   #15
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Does questioning the existence of Socrates rain down as much instant dismissal?
It hasn't happened yet, but I imagine that a group of skeptics who argue against a historical Socrates would get roughly the same treatment from those who study the subject for a living.
Abe is shooting from the hip again and missing.

The question of a historical Socrates is treated as it should be. There is slightly more evidence that Socrates was historical than there is that he was merely a fictional character in Plato's narrative. But no one gets upset at Socrates Mythicists or compares them to pseudoscientists.
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Old 02-08-2010, 03:35 PM   #16
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Herodotus worked largely on the basis of oral readition.

This causes major problems for his accounts of events before say 550 BCE.

His accounts of later events such as the actual Persian Wars with Greece are more reliable.

Andrew Criddle
But this shouldn't be surprising. Events that were more recent (and more widely known) are of course going to be presented more accurately, even if he's writing history only ostensibly. It's harder to call fiction history if your audience knows better.

I don't mean to suggest that Herodotus had no intention of recording any sort of accurate record, perhaps I worded that badly. It might be more apt to suggest that, in the absence of reliable information, he had no qualms about making it up, which leads to difficulty in telling what's real and what isn't.
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Old 02-08-2010, 03:49 PM   #17
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It hasn't happened yet, but I imagine that a group of skeptics who argue against a historical Socrates would get roughly the same treatment from those who study the subject for a living.
Abe is shooting from the hip again and missing.

The question of a historical Socrates is treated as it should be. There is slightly more evidence that Socrates was historical than there is that he was merely a fictional character in Plato's narrative. But no one gets upset at Socrates Mythicists or compares them to pseudoscientists.
Do you mean to imply that there are or were a group of skeptics who believed that Socrates never existed?
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Old 02-08-2010, 04:08 PM   #18
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I agree that the account is not historical. But it may not be sheer invention by Herodotus. According to wiki-Croesus
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A.E. Raubitschek argued (in Classical Philology 58 (1963:167f) that the story of Croesus' encounter with Solon arose from a tradition of his quoting Solon on his funeral pyre.
I'll have to check the paper and see what Raubitschek has to say, but it seems to me that while we may suggest that Herodotus didn't make up the meeting, the details of the narrative have all the hallmarks of being his.
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Old 02-08-2010, 04:35 PM   #19
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Abe is shooting from the hip again and missing.

The question of a historical Socrates is treated as it should be. There is slightly more evidence that Socrates was historical than there is that he was merely a fictional character in Plato's narrative. But no one gets upset at Socrates Mythicists or compares them to pseudoscientists.
Do you mean to imply that there are or were a group of skeptics who believed that Socrates never existed?
There's no reason for such skeptics to band together. The idea is not especially threatening to anyone.

Did Socrates really exist?
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There has been some question about whether Socrates really existed or was only ever a creation of Plato. Just about everyone agrees that the Socrates in the later dialogues is a creation, but what about the earlier ones? The differences between the two figures is one reason to think that a real Socrates existed, There are also a few references made by other authors. If Socrates didn’t exist, however, that wouldn’t affect the ideas attributed to him.
Why not treat Jesus the same way?
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Old 02-08-2010, 06:54 PM   #20
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Do you mean to imply that there are or were a group of skeptics who believed that Socrates never existed?
There's no reason for such skeptics to band together. The idea is not especially threatening to anyone.

Did Socrates really exist?
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There has been some question about whether Socrates really existed or was only ever a creation of Plato. Just about everyone agrees that the Socrates in the later dialogues is a creation, but what about the earlier ones? The differences between the two figures is one reason to think that a real Socrates existed, There are also a few references made by other authors. If Socrates didn’t exist, however, that wouldn’t affect the ideas attributed to him.
Why not treat Jesus the same way?
OK, thanks, I would love to know how historians of the archaic period have treated the skepticism about the existence of Socrates. I guess it does make sense that there would be a few atheists on the Internet who would call into question the existence of Socrates, since the evidence of his existence is just a little better to that of Jesus. I imagine that such historians react only with a facepalm, though I could be wrong.
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