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Old 09-05-2005, 09:18 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
i must admit i am not seeing anything pop out at me. i am sorry that i'm not catching your point. there is mention of the chaldeans speaking in aramaic (presumably syriac) but that doesn't apply to daniel.
If one wonders why a person gets irate....

bfniii WTF does Dan 2:4 say?? You didn't even look. Typical. In part:

"The Chaldeans said to the king (in Aramaic):"

The text claims to be reporting what was said to the king, ie in Persian Chancelry Aramaic. That is the standard to judge by. That is the standard that is not met. We only get a hotchpotch euphemistically called biblical Aramaic.

You have shown yourself to be clueless in the area, as well as uninterested even in attempting to understand the problem.

You've failed on this effort, bfniii. And there's no point in going on, because you'd have a long learning curve before you and I'm not up to suffering that.


Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
are you suggesting that neither one of us use someone else's translation?
With a metaquestion, you are not dealing with the problem yet again. But then you've shown that you know nothing about the linguistics so let's not bother.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
have you never referenced someone else's work? we both have to be completely self taught?
When you are dealing with a subject, you need to show that you underestand what is involved, otherwise there is no point talking to you about it. You have shown that you don't understand.

Referencing other people's work only has value when you can understand what they are saying and know the importance of it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
for convenience, let's start with:

this
What has this got to do with the linguistic features of the text? Can you even answer that, bfniii?

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
Should we be impressed that you have learnt how to use an online bible dictionary? OK, I'm impressed.

From the references I glean from this article it was written relatively early in the 20th c. and is not a particularly up to date source. The use of the term "assouan papyri" is not found in works that deal with Aramaic analysis. In fact Aswan is where Elephantine was. The Persians had a Jewish garrison on the island of Elephantine.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
The sort of event involved was first historically noted in the imposition by Antiochus IV of the abomination of desolation in the Jerusalem temple.
which doesn't mean it couldn't have happened at an earlier time.
Unfortunately, as we have a precedent for the good treatment of deported peoples within the Babylonian empire, and a specific instance in history where the event intimated by Daniel can be found, one has to do a lot better than waffle the situation away. We can place such a situation in the time of Antiochus IV but not in that of Nebuchadrezzar, who was religiously a very devout king, given his inscriptions.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
while this may have been true on the whole, it certainly doesn't mean it didn't happen nor does it mean that nebuchadnezzar wasn't capable of such.
Waffling...

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
but what you haven't refuted is that the word could have been a title.
There were three kings called Darius. Your proffered translation is simpky false. The word is not Aramaic, but Persian. Yet still you continue. Impressive, yes.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
the word apparently meant lord which lends credence to the word being a title.
Let's have the ancient source for this conjecture. Your imagination or some internet source?

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
you even include the word "king" in your epigraphic source further lending support that he was referred to as king by at least someone,
Inventive...


Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
along with our knowledge that nabonidus left him in charge for a significant time.
So??

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
extra-biblical accounts that don't contradict the biblical account or specifically state that he wasn't called king doesn't mean someone didn't call him king.
Ha, ha, ha. He was called son of the king, yet that doesn't preclude that people called him king while Nabonidus was still king and the same epigraphy indicates this. That's an accusation of doublethink on your part, even when you've got nothing (yet again) to back up your conjecture.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
he was in charge of the land and a disinterested nabonidus was elsewhere.
Disinterested? How would you know?

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
not that the ancestral designation is suggesting such.
Belshazzar, the son of Nabonidus can't be of the male line from Nebuchadrezzar. The claim that Belshazzar was the son of Nebuchadrezzar is specifically such a claim.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
even if the younger of herodutus' "Labynetos" is nabonidus, that still makes belshazzar related to nebuchandezzar in a pertinent way.
Herodotus is confused. Babylon wasn't his cup of tea. He hasn't even heard of Nebuchadrezzar. His Persian sources didn't supply him that.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
i haven't seen an account that has belshazzar married to a daughter of nebuchadnezzar. herodotus has nitocris as the mother or grandmother of belshazzar.
No, he doesn't. He has Nitocris as the mother of a younger Labynetos, a name that isn't related to anything in the Babylonian onomasticon.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
since strong's is a concordance, i'm not sure why you accuse me of using it for translation.
I'll let you live with that.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
it's funny that you suggest that study on my part is going to resolve belshazzar's relation to nebuchadnezzar, something that's been debated for quite some time.
So that seems toi ndicate that you can contribute nothing here on the subject.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
not that any of this suggests that belshazzar wasn't referred to as king.
Only the king could perform the New Year ceremony, which was not performed while Nabonidus was in Teima. Belshazzar wasn't able to perform it because he wasn't king.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
nabonidus returning does not necessarily mean he relieved belshazzar of his duties or demoted him.
Diehard. Belshazzar was never king. All the evidence pointys to this fact. There was no reason for Nabonidus to demote his son. He was after all the son of the king and that's all he is called in the epigraphy. You cannot show your claims and ignore the evidence that shows the real situation regarding Belshazzar.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
great. so we seem to still be at the point that daniel mentions instruments that were in vogue during the 5th century bc.
This is a meaningless response, stimulated by nothing I said and based on no evidence. Impressive.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
this is all beside the point. you asked for something tangible. i pointed out that daniel mentions people who were around during that time (in addition to the other elements of the book that appear to be from that time).
This is getting embarrassing. I've just shown you that mentioning names is not a tangible indication because anyone can do it whether they were from the period or not, so you repeat that it is something tangible.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
i'm not sure how you arrived at your numbers but the messiah being cut off is 33ad.
Let me repeat, as you seem to be hard of reading:
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
32ad is a false calculation to start with. Cyrus, who made the proclamation of the return, died in 530 BCE. 490 years (70 weeks of years) after that is 40 BCE.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
they were. but that sure doesn't make onias the one daniel referred to.
No, you need to consider what Daniel tells happened after Onias was dethroned and later murdered. in each of the different visions that deal with it. We are covering events from the time of Antiochus IV which include the overthrow of Onias III, the persecution of the Jerusalemites, the pollution of the temple, the stoppage of sacrifices, and various other events to be found in the history of the time.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
clearly you are taking the critical position which is neither irrefutable nor without peer; those being the dispensational or traditional positions.
As I indicated the 490 year calendar doesn't favour your insistence on 33ad as you put it, so the traditional doesn't cover any of the facts. The dispensational... you wanna make the case??

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
prior to that statement, you claimed the author knew little about the 6th century; so clearly i was taking the comments in context. since you criticize the book, i'm asking you what you are expecting the author to have written.
Actually, I was talking about why modern commentators don't do justice to Daniel. You did not respond to my statement but to something else, something which I had already indicated response to.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
as i said, since stong's is not a translation but a concordance, this accusation doesn't seem to be pertinent.
Let's face it your hokey transliterations and appalling knowledge of original language indications derive from somewhere and that somewhere exactly matches the information provided by Strong's Concordance Numbers. You are without a doubt using that information, whether you know it or not.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
you make this accusation without even bothering to find out what source(s) i'm using for translations.
Let's just give the examples you've already given:

"Dar@yavesh" from my Strongs in software -- #1868 Dar@yavesh
"N@buwkadnetstsar" from my Strongs in software -- #5020 N@buwkadnetstsar

Strong's Numbers are ubiquitous on the internet, so, if you are not directly using Strong's literature, when you do your research at the site you usually use, look more closely and you'll find the Strong's association.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
you seem to be convinced that the critical position is irrefutable fact. if you're honest, then you'll not only accurately represent the disadvantages of that stance, but be willing to discuss them as i am discussing the dispensational/traditional view. somehow i don't see that happening. until more information is available, the critical position is not superior.
The plain fact is, that you have neither looked at any scholarly material on Daniel, nor are you interested in anything other than your religiously motivated presuppositions. You therefore have no idea whether the position I have touted is superior or not.

I know that it deals with much more of the information and has far fewer assumptions than the confusion you are peddling.

The traditional view doesn't have a clue about why the little horn supplanted three others in chapter 7. History explains it.

The traditional view doesn't explain why the fourth, the unnamed, creature is an elephant. Philology and history can.

The traditional view doesn't know that all four visions in Dan 7-11 are dealing with exactly the same material.

The traditional view cannot tell you who each of the kings of the north and the kings of the south are. History can.

The traditional view cannot explain what the ships of the kittim are doing in Dan 11:30 and what they represent. History can.

I don't expect you to take any notice of history. You aren't interested in history. You are merely apologizing for Daniel. As such I can't expect you to be critical, only to throw up ridiculous claims in defence of something you are prevented from understanding, because of your prior commitments.


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Old 09-06-2005, 08:42 AM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Incidentally, bfniii, how come Jeremiah can get the name Nebuchadrezzar right (eg 21:2,7), when Daniel couldn't?
right according to what?
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Old 09-06-2005, 08:48 AM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Here's the fall of Babylon according to the Chronicles of Chaldaean Kings, p204, ANE, Pritchard, Princeton 1958:

Note that the protagonists are Cyrus, Nabonidus and Ugbaru. The "crown prince" Belshazzar is inconsequential, as he was only acting for Nabonidus, so naturally not mentioned.

An inscription by Cyrus reads,

Again, no Belshazzar. But in both cases Nabonidus was in Babylon.
this is merely an argument from silence. the accounts give no contradictory information to daniel nor do you show how they must have mentioned belshazzar if he did exist.
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Old 09-06-2005, 11:01 AM   #14
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
right according to what?
According to what the original name was in transliteration.


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Old 09-06-2005, 12:01 PM   #15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
this is merely an argument from silence.
No, it's an argument about interest and importance, ie what is of interest and importance both to Cyrus and to the Babylonian writer of the chronicle.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bfniii
the accounts give no contradictory information to daniel nor do you show how they must have mentioned belshazzar if he did exist.
Point missed. Nabonidus was where the interest lay, as he was king of Babylon. They show no interest in Belshazzar, the son of the king, because he was relatively inconsequential, not being king. No-one is disputing about his existence, but about the apparently erroneous claims in Daniel that Belshazzar was king -- if one insists on reading Daniel as history.

But, if one insists, read the text (5:30-6:1):

That very night Belshazzar, king of the Chaldeans, was slain, 31 and Darius the Mede took over the kingdom, at the age of sixty-two.

It pleased Darius to appoint 120 satraps to rule throughout the kingdom, with three administrators over them, one of whom was Daniel.


Plainly, this "Darius" is presented in Daniel as king who could "appoint 120 satraps to rule throughout the kingdom" and plainly this Darius was neither called "Darius" (yes, a name despite your butchery), nor was he a king, being Cyrus's governor (ie satrap) of Gutium, Ugbaru.

6:7
So the administrators and the satraps went as a group to the king and said: "O King Darius, live forever!

Ugbaru, I mean "Darius", is being called "King Darius" by all the realm's administration according to Daniel. Where is the real king, Cyrus? Perhaps he's taken a leaf out of Nabonidus's book and hiked off to Teima, so that you can claim that Ugbaru could act as king of the entire realm. Maybe the satrapy which included Babylon had its internal satraps, sort of like Russian dolls.

Here's what you've been doing:

1. inventing paternal connections through hypothesized female connections,
2. making kings, people who weren't kings (both Belshazzar and Ugbaru); and
3. dabbling in linguistic error to redefine the name Darius.

I do appreciate the contortions you are prepared to go through in your misguided defence of a non-historical text.

You are blissfully unaware of any scholarship on the book of Daniel and rely on internet pages that are almost as blissfully unaware, going on the bibliography one finds on the website you cited as something of value.

So why do you feel driven to go out of your way to come here to a non-christian site in order to supply plainly silly apologetics for the book of Daniel, as though it should be read as history??


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Old 09-07-2005, 05:10 PM   #16
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Some previous threads on Daniel

Daniel in early canons?

Daniel, Date Problems and assession year issues

Dating the Book of Daniel

Daniel 9:24-27 (Jim Larmore debate)

Accuracy of Daniel and Revelation (Jim Larmore)

Authenticity of the Book of Daniel

Dating the Book of Daniel
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Old 09-07-2005, 08:06 PM   #17
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Can FEMA spare a few members for a search crew to find the 'guts' of bfniii's argument? It appears to have been completely gutted.
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Old 09-08-2005, 10:05 AM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gregor
Can FEMA spare a few members for a search crew to find the 'guts' of bfniii's argument? It appears to have been completely gutted.
Umm, even the people participating in the original thread failed to find the "guts" of his argument. You decide why this could be the case...
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Old 09-08-2005, 04:33 PM   #19
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Something else that I recently found interesting regarding this topic is the sudden growth of the personal Angel in the 2nd century BCE.

As canonical writings go, Daniel introduced us to the concept of the archangels Gabriel and Michael. The thing that is new (angel-wise) is that he gave them names. Until Daniel, they are nameless creatures who did the bidding of God. Actually, until the 2nd century (I think), the idea of a personal angel with a name is not found in Jewish writings.

It turns out, that the 2nd century BCE was a bonanza of angelic inclusion in religious writing. It was a time of angelic evolution. In Christian lore, there are 3 archangels: Gabriel, Michael (from Daniel) and Raphael (from Tobit). Then, we have some other angels in Christian lore who were also given personal names. All of these are contained in the Book of Enoc.

Both Tobit and Enoc were written early in the 2nd century BCE!

Daniel and Tobit are the source for the names of the 3 archangels. Here's another strange similarity- They were both found in cave 4 at Qumran together. Tobit, like Daniel, was written in a strange mix of Aramaic and Hebrew.

I've recently purchased the book "Biblical Interpretation at Qumran" by Matthias Henze. It supposed to deal with the mystical topics in the other non-canonical books found at Qumran. I haven't read it yet (just got it). Topics like angels, the Son of Man, etc. This places Daniel's subject matter in the heart of the ideas of the 2nd century BCE.
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Old 09-09-2005, 01:53 AM   #20
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Is there are any reference at all in Babylonian history to any of the fantastic events portrayed in the first 5 chapters of Daniel? Is there any reference to Daniel or his friends, who were supposedly highly placed in the Babylonian bureaucracy? If not, this would seem to me to be a pretty strong argument against the historicity and early dating of Daniel.
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