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Old 09-24-2007, 08:20 AM   #111
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Shirley Knott ...If Genesis is just a late redaction of various Hebrew tall tales, then we have reason to dismiss it as a historical source. If it is not, then it demands a much higher status in scholarly circles.
Higher status than what, exactly?
What *is* your addiction to 'status', anyway?

The best possible, and only necessary, reason to dismiss Genesis as a historical source [in your sense of the term 'historical source'] is its failure to match up to the history we know. Where we know the facts, Genesis is, more often than not, entirely wrong. Where we do not yet know the facts, we are entitled to dismiss Genesis as valueless simply on its track record.

What more needs to be said?

no hugs for thugs,
Shirley Knott
Yes, there is the irony: scholarly understanding of Genesis is based on the superiority of archaeology - and the rest of science - over documentary evidence. The very opposite of what Dave claims is going on in the DH case.
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Old 09-24-2007, 08:21 AM   #112
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To summarize this point, the Documentary critics assumed that the patriarchal narratives were legendary, even mythical. But archaeology has shown this to be a naive view.
You stated this in reference to the Nuzi tablets. Overlooking the Akkadian and Hurrian-Babylonian scripts, it was chockablock of numerous stories, such as the Arrapha King, the slave in court, adoption and so forth. The trick is to align these to biblical accounts. Does McDowell do this, especially with the Nuzi finds?
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Old 09-24-2007, 08:21 AM   #113
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The DH is a purely textual theory, but one which makes no claim that textual analysis can trump (or even should be given higher priority than) archaeology.
I didn't say it claims this. I said that the Documentarians give priority to textual analysis and disregard archaeology. Do you disagree with this? If so, why?

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The DH makes no claims about whether or not there are supernatural elements in Israel's religion and history, only claims about when the texts describing the religion and history were written and compiled.
The Documentarians most certainly DO make such claims as I clearly showed.

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Whether or not there was writing in "Moses's time" (assuming he even existed) has no bearing on the DH.
How can you possibly believe this? Of course it has a bearing. It is central. What better motivation is there for hypothesizing a late redaction date than the assumption that these people didn't know how to write? Can you think of one?

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Whether or not the patriarchal narratives are legendary or truly historical accounts has no bearing on the DH. It is only concerned with when those narratives were written down and compiled.
Again ... of course it does. The central thesis of the DH is that it is a late redaction of oral traditions, many of them legendary or even mythical. If this is shown not to be the case, it calls into question the central thesis of the DH.

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Whether or not the stories about supernatural elements in the Torah stories are accurate has no bearing on the DH, which is only concerned with when those stories were written down and compiled.
Again, the DH proponents bias against supernaturalism are one of the key factors that cause them to view the Pentateuch as legendary, oral tradition with many made up elements. How is it possible not to get this most basic concept?

*******************************************

Dean, you have given an overview of the DH and that is well and good. But what I have done is given you a glimpse into the thinking of the DH proponents which gave rise to the new hypothesis in the first place. Many scholars now agree that the Documentarians would never have sold their theory if they had tried to do so 50 years later when the new archaeological finds were well known.

Also, I'm not throwing your theory completely out the window. There is one element of the DH which has survived scrutiny and is a good thing ... that is, that the Pentateuch is the result of multiple authors. I readily admit this as you recognize. But my initial focus on these presuppositions is very important.

More tomorrow.

(Still waiting for some evidence of the existence of J E D and P. Not the actual original docs. Gimme a break. EVIDENCE that they existed. Like some mention of them as discreet documents in some ancient text.)
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Old 09-24-2007, 08:22 AM   #114
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Well, I've got to go now, unfortunately. I may or may not get chance to log on again before tomorrow...
Would you object to anyone continuing to eviscerate Dave in your absence?
Eviscerate away. But I'm probably only going to respond to Dean ... unless it's really intelligent sounding.
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Old 09-24-2007, 08:25 AM   #115
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Many scholars now agree that the Documentarians would never have sold their theory if they had tried to do so 50 years later when the new archaeological finds were well known.
You keep referring to these "many scholars". I think you've mentioned one, so far, and I don't think that one was particularly persuasive to anyone here. Got any others?
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Old 09-24-2007, 08:29 AM   #116
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Dean, you have given an overview of the DH and that is well and good. But what I have done is given you a glimpse into the thinking of the DH proponents which gave rise to the new hypothesis in the first place. Many scholars now agree that the Documentarians would never have sold their theory if they had tried to do so 50 years later when the new archaeological finds were well known.
...Even though not a single shred of archaeological evidence exists which contradicts the Documentary Hypothesis, whereas archaeology has utterly falsified your preferred alternative?

What color is the sky in your world, Dave?
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Eviscerate away. But I'm probably only going to respond to Dean ... unless it's really intelligent sounding
YOU have yet to say anything "intelligent-sounding", Dave.
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Old 09-24-2007, 08:30 AM   #117
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Shirley Knott ...
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But I would very much like to hear what dave thinks he is up to with this thread. What is his point?
If Genesis is just a late redaction of various Hebrew tall tales, then we have reason to dismiss it as a historical source. If it is not, then it demands a much higher status in scholarly circles.
Well, that being the case (although it actually isn't), then perhaps you best get started with showing that the central tenet of the DH (that the Pentateuch is a compilation of various stories by various authors at various times) is incorrect. So far, you haven't even touched on that tenet, in much the same way that you've never dealt with radiocarbon calibration curves. Instead, you keep hammering at completely irrelevant trivia, such as whether Moses was literate or whether the DH ignores archaeological evidence, which has nothing to do with that central thesis.

I'm still not persuaded you even know what the DH is, Dave.
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Old 09-24-2007, 08:33 AM   #118
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Are you at some point going to present evidence that the Pentateuch has a single author? Because if you can't do that, you have nothing to show that the DH is wrong.
Actually, doing that would demonstrate his own theory to be wrong as much as it would demonstrate the DH to be wrong.

Dave does believe that there are multiple authors, just like the DH. He agrees that the Torah can be split up into the sections written by different authors, just like the DH.

However, he disagrees where these splits should be.

The Wiseman theory that Dave promotes places the splits each time there is a "Toledoth" ("These are the generations of...") and claims that each section was written by the person mentioned in the Toledoth.

So the first part of Genesis was written by Adam, the next part by Noah, and so on.

So Dave is not arguing against the concept of the Torah having multiple authors. He is merely arguing that those authors were the Biblical characters themselves, with the unstated inference that therefore Adam and Noah and so on must have really existed, and therefore YEC is true.

What he has singularly failed to do so far is to explain why splitting the Torah the way the DH does is consilient with the changes of style and of writing age and of theme; whereas the splitting of the Torah the way Wiseman does it is not consilient with any of these...
Well, this would make perfect sense, if Dave ever made any sense. But Dave is on record as asserting that Moses wrote the entire Pentateuch. And believe me, knowing Dave as I have for the past year and a half, there would be nothing unusual in Dave citing a source which completely disagrees with Dave's own thesis. This would be far from the first time it's happened.
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Old 09-24-2007, 08:34 AM   #119
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The DH is a purely textual theory, but one which makes no claim that textual analysis can trump (or even should be given higher priority than) archaeology.
I didn't say it claims this. I said that the Documentarians give priority to textual analysis and disregard archaeology. Do you disagree with this? If so, why?
Because no scholar makes this claim. Certainly not about the DH.

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The Documentarians most certainly DO make such claims as I clearly showed.
You did not show this - you presented no evidence that the DH folk claim that archaeology needs to be ignored in favor of text.

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How can you possibly believe this? Of course it has a bearing. It is central. What better motivation is there for hypothesizing a late redaction date than the assumption that these people didn't know how to write? Can you think of one?
The redaction is not based on lack of ability to write. This is a complete red-herring. Non DH scholar makes the claim that the DH is based on strictly oral traditions.

You need to make some attempt to know something about a subject before you embarrass yourself over it, Dave.

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Again ... of course it does. The central thesis of the DH is that it is a late redaction of oral traditions, many of them legendary or even mythical. If this is shown not to be the case, it calls into question the central thesis of the DH.
No, actually it's not. The central thesis of the DH is that the Torah is a redaction that can be described along certain lines. Those lines do not match the fictional history Genesis presents, but that is not relevant.

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Whether or not the stories about supernatural elements in the Torah stories are accurate has no bearing on the DH, which is only concerned with when those stories were written down and compiled.
Again, the DH proponents bias against supernaturalism are one of the key factors that cause them to view the Pentateuch as legendary, oral tradition with many made up elements. How is it possible not to get this most basic concept?[/quote]No, it does not. You have presented no evidence that any lack of supernatural evidence is required.

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Dean, you have given an overview of the DH and that is well and good. But what I have done is given you a glimpse into the thinking of the DH proponents which gave rise to the new hypothesis in the first place.
Actually, you have not. All of your claims about the DH - taken from McDowell - are incorrect, as Dean pointed out. You have done nothing to establish the truth of your claims.
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Many scholars now agree that the Documentarians would never have sold their theory if they had tried to do so 50 years later when the new archaeological finds were well known.
A handful of scholars who are demonstrably wrong about most other things.

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Also, I'm not throwing your theory completely out the window. There is one element of the DH which has survived scrutiny and is a good thing ... that is, that the Pentateuch is the result of multiple authors. I readily admit this as you recognize. But my initial focus on these presuppositions is very important.
Your initial focus on these 'presuppositions' is merely a red-herring, since they are both wrong and irrelevant.


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More tomorrow.

(Still waiting for some evidence of the existence of J E D and P. Not the actual original docs. Gimme a break. EVIDENCE that they existed. Like some mention of them as discreet documents in some ancient text.)
You claimed that you were going to provide positive evidence of the existence of the Torah tablets.

We're still waiting. We'll still be waiting when you've died of old age.
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Old 09-24-2007, 08:36 AM   #120
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Would you object to anyone continuing to eviscerate Dave in your absence?
Eviscerate away. But I'm probably only going to respond to Dean ... unless it's really intelligent sounding.
We accept that you are unable to support your assertions. Acknowledged.

We will continue to eviscerate your nonsensical claims with or without your participation; it is a useful exercise for the lurkers, who might otherwise get the mistaken impression that you were actually making a point.
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