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06-02-2011, 09:52 PM | #1 |
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The Incredible Shrinking Son of Man
I'm currently about a quarter of the way through The Incredible Shrinking Son of Man. I have a few comments, and I'd like to know if others agree or not.
I bought this book because I've been impressed by articles Price has written, and on the strength of reviews. Generally, there's a lot of interesting material in the book, so I'm glad I bought it. But I do have two big quibbles with it. (1) I find the paucity of footnotes irritating. A good example is Price's half-page discussion of solar mythology that begins with "As scholars have long noted", but doesn't name a single scholar or provide any citations. I really believe that a minority position needs to be defended rigorously. When it isn't, people are surely justified in writing it off as speculation. (2) He addresses apologists far too often for my liking. Apologists are too easy -- they're low-hanging fruit. I'd rather he spent that time addressing the mainstream, which would at least give the impression that he knows what more reasonable people are saying (I'm sure that he does, but he leaves himself open to this criticism). Does anybody feel similarly about Price's work? I've learned plenty from him, but reading this book feels like a guilty pleasure. |
06-02-2011, 10:14 PM | #2 |
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I don't think Robert Price would defend his ideas as any more than speculation, actually. His whole tack is to criticize the popular or the established ideas that are out there, not to offer up better alternative hypotheses, and he doesn't think that he needs any more than speculation to achieve that end. It may serve a rhetorical purpose for an audience made entirely of negative-oriented skeptics and critics of religion, but I think that a successful case is made by providing theories that are more probable, not just by picking apart the opposition. It is an approach that is somewhat unique to Robert Price. He doesn't seem to hide his postmodernist outlook (i.e. in the title of his other book, Deconstructing Jesus), which other historians and scholars would tend to find at least a little embarrassing.
I made a transcript sometime ago of an interview of Richard Carrier by the Infidel Guy, because I found it to be somewhat agreeable. Richard Carrier is asked by a caller about what he thinks of Robert M. Price. Q: Hi, Reggie, my name is Lennie. Hey, um, I have a question for Richard. Myself along with other people that are probably listening are a fan of Dr. Bob Price, but also Richard Carrier. My question is that I wanted to know what Richard thinks of Bob's work--because I know he is critical of some of it--what he thinks is untenable about his Christ myth theory and specifically what he has as a problem with as far as the Dutch Radical school of non-Pauline authorship is.Richard Carrier answers: A: Yeah, um, well, I, you know, I have mixed views on all that. I mean, to begin with, uh, Bob Price doesn't defend just one theory. I mean he basically advances like half a dozen to a dozen alternative theories and says, well, any one of these can be true and therefore we can't maintain historicity. That's the general argument of his career so far. I mean, if you take for example, his Pre-Nicene New Testament, which is a book he came out, which has basically all of the books of the Bible if no one discriminated about what gets in, and then he has commentary and he has a lot of introductory notes on that, and he has his footnotes as well which basically interject his interpretation of what's going on. And you'll have a lot of different contrary theories. There's another one, Jesus is Dead, which is a collection of essays, where you see him taking a lot of different positions that together they're contradictory, they can't all be be true, which he fully well knows, his point is, these different things can be true, he has one theory for example that John the Baptist is actually Jesus and that the gospels are sort of a parable about the sort of fictional resurrection of John the Baptist. He shows how the evidence can support that theory. He does that a lot. |
06-02-2011, 10:21 PM | #3 |
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I think that Price thinks that the apologists have captured the mainstream or at least forced it to accommodate their beliefs, so they are his main target.
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06-02-2011, 10:25 PM | #4 |
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The methodology that Carrier finds to be bankrupt is the criterion of embarrassment, which is what Abe uses.
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06-02-2011, 10:37 PM | #5 |
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I give a full explanation of my preferred historiographical methodology and its relationship with the criterion of embarrassment here:
http://www.freeratio.org/showthread....90#post6796990 |
06-02-2011, 11:21 PM | #6 | ||||||
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Abe, I got the impression elsewhere that you've read one of Price's books. Was it the same one as I'm reading?
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On the other hand, are you saying his work only serves a rhetorical purpose? Do you find none of it worthwhile? Quote:
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06-02-2011, 11:59 PM | #7 |
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I think Carrier finds the entire approach that the mainstream scholarship uses, with or without the embarrassment criterion, to be defective and that is why he is proposing the Bayesian way of evaluating evidence.
Back to the OP, Carrier doesn't want to run Bob the wrong way so he doesn't say it outright (compare that to how he calls R.J. Hoffman a *ick in his blog). But generally, Price is glib and commits several mistakes in his works. But he is still a walking encyclopaedia by all accounts. |
06-03-2011, 12:34 AM | #8 | ||||||
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06-03-2011, 01:09 AM | #9 | ||
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Then again, I don't really know what specifics you have in mind. Quote:
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06-03-2011, 05:06 AM | #10 | |||
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