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Old 06-04-2010, 12:27 PM   #121
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Yes. Do you have a source that refutes the argument or provides a better one? If not, then what is your basis for rejecting it?
:-) Well you havent presented or even linked to the argument, so its a little impossible to refute it.
this thread, 2 pages back

http://www.freeratio.org/showpost.ph...8&postcount=59
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Old 06-04-2010, 12:51 PM   #122
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There is so much that we just don't know, there are so many avenues of skepticism, that it is all but ridiculous to make historical conclusions behind the New Testament. That is a philosophical paradigm that is fundamentally different from the way that I think, and there is no way to argue anyone out of it. In my philosophical paradigm, the scarcity and uncertainty of the evidence does not negate the justification of judging some arguments as far better than other arguments, nor does it make all conclusions equal.

But, how can I hope to convince such a person that Galatians probably was referring to the literal brother of Jesus? Josephus and the gospels of Matthew and Mark say that he was the literal brother. But, those are Christian myths that were maybe based on the writings of Paul. But, wouldn't that mean that they are likely to have the same understanding of James as Paul did? But, maybe the religion changed enough so that they misinterpreted Paul. But, what is the evidence for that? What is the evidence for your theory? The Argument to the Best Explanation--my proposition has more explanatory scope, more explanatory power, more plausibility and fewer ad hoc suppositions than the other proposition. Each proposition is just as plausible and just as ad hoc, and that's all you can really say. No, no, no!

It seems like skepticism is really the end goal with a lot of people like us. It is not about probability. It is not about estimating relative likelihoods. It is about disbelief.
I think you're missing the point. Arguing about James the brother of the Lord when all we have to work with are heavily edited Christian texts is pretty much a dead end. Unless there are other materials to compare with, say a tomb of James, or an analysis of Christian beliefs written by a contemporary non-Christian (ie. a hostile witness), it's all just blowing smoke rings imo.

Skepticism is a tool, not a philosophy (yes there was a school of Hellenistic Skeptics but we're not talking about them). The point is to arrive at reliable facts, not to prove any particular theory. If the evidence supports an historical Jesus or James or Paul then so be it. We don't have that evidence yet, and may never.

We do know that ancient writers tended more to what we would call storytelling than history or journalism. That is a relevant fact in analyzing the NT and subsequent Christian literature.
Well, I did say that there are many avenues of skepticism. Galatians 1:19 may be an interpolation. But, do we not have corroboration in Matthew, Mark and Josephus. The Christians who interpolated Paul were the ones who believed the myths of the gospels. But, why would they interpolate such a thing? To prove that Jesus had a brother. But, the interpolation comes off as though Paul or whoever wrote it doesn't seem to care, as though he was just giving trivial details of his time in Jerusalem. The interpolators were clever.

It has also been argued that Galatians is a complete forgery, and Paul never actually wrote it. It has been argued that Paul was lying when he says that he met James. Each explanation has a bunch of faults. To me, what matters is consilience, which is the unified conclusion that follows from many diverse lines of evidence. It hardly matters if each piece of evidence has their speculated faults and uncertainties. If they seem to work together toward a single conclusion, then we should accept that conclusion. To the skeptics and Jesus-agnostics, consilience either doesn't matter because it may have been something like a big conspiracy, and/or it is putting blind trust in Christian texts. That is where the difference in fundamental paradigms comes back into play. If I use an argument that assumes a methodology that other people simply do not have, then I can not hope to change their minds. I can only hope to get them to understand the arguments and the philosophies.

You say skepticism is a tool and not a philosophy. Well, that is the way it should be, and that is how I thought of it before I came to the BC&H forum. What do you call the philosophy that prefers to rest on ambiguity, that is focused on tearing down theories rather than building a better theory? I used to call it postmodernism. But, they tend to call themselves skeptics. I am also a skeptic, so I called them "hyperskeptics" or "super-skeptics" or "ultra-skeptics." Toto takes that as insulting, because it implies that I have just the right amount of skepticism, but she does not have any word to replace it. I have recently used just, "skeptics" and "philosophy of skepticism," though I am uncomfortable with that, because it makes me look like a dogmatist or something. And, you don't like the way I use that phrase, either. OK, please suggest another word or phrase.
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Old 06-04-2010, 01:10 PM   #123
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.... To me, what matters is consilience, which is the unified conclusion that follows from many diverse lines of evidence. It hardly matters if each piece of evidence has their speculated faults and uncertainties. If they seem to work together toward a single conclusion, then we should accept that conclusion.
But that's where you really miss the point - there is no such consilience. There are a few thin pieces of evidence that are all problematic.

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To the skeptics and Jesus-agnostics, consilience either doesn't matter because it may have been something like a big conspiracy, and/or it is putting blind trust in Christian texts.
No - it is just that the evidence is all weak, and your conclusions put too much trust in Christian texts.

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That is where the difference in fundamental paradigms comes back into play. If I use an argument that assumes a methodology that other people simply do not have, then I can not hope to change their minds. I can only hope to get them to understand the arguments and the philosophies.
You don't actually have a methodology that can be identified. You haven't identified a philosophical or other basis for insisting on drawing your conclusions.

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You ... What do you call the philosophy that prefers to rest on ambiguity, that is focused on tearing down theories rather than building a better theory? I used to call it postmodernism.
How about recognizing the reality of the paucity of the evidence?
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Old 06-04-2010, 01:37 PM   #124
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Nothing new here.


The non-titular κυριος for Jesus is only securely used in 1 Corinthians. We know for sure that at least one instance of the non-titular κυριος for Jesus is an interpolation in 1 Cor because of the manuscript tradition.

Paul has no problem using both θεος and the non-titular κυριος for god. One expects that he does it. The problem arises when the non-titular κυριος is used for Jesus in 1 Cor because if it were original to Paul there would be no way of knowing when Paul refers to Jesus or to god when he uses it.
spin
Really ? What about Rom 14:6 ? : He who observes the day, observes it in honor of the Lord. He also who eats, eats in honor of the Lord, since he gives thanks to God;

What about 2 Cr 8:5 ? ...and this, not as we expected, but first they gave themselves to the Lord and to us by the will of God.

There is also a number of other passages outside of 1 Cor where the non-titular Lord is securely deployed as clear reference to JC (e.g. Paul's co-workers who are ἐν κυρίῳ in Rom 16, 1 Th 4:16-17) etc.

Jiri

Lordy lordy!

Connections may be assumed to be there because of later theological beliefs - but assuming lord=jesus is dangerous.

There are an awful lot of assumptions - like Jesus in a mosaic with Roman gods in the 350's.
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Old 06-04-2010, 02:01 PM   #125
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The philosophical position you're describing sounds closer to the idea that nothing is knowable, and I don't agree with this. I don't consider myself a post-modernist or deconstructionist, though I haven't studied these systems. Skepticism as an attitude is as old as humanity I would guess.

The story in the NT is fairly consistent within itself if we accept the premises of the Catholic editors, ie the historical reality of Jesus, Paul et al. Clearly the early organizers of this material made an effort to harmonize the texts as much as they could, within the constraints of the supernatural religious perspective they held. They probably also wanted to retain difficult bits simply because they were old (or believed to be).

I'm not a Christian, so I feel no compulsion to "clean up the loose ends" or whatever. If the answers to my questions about Christian origins come 20 or 50 or 200 years from now I can live with that. I have some guesses about what happened, but nothing that can be verified.

I'm not sure you're considering all the possibilities. For instance, it's not at all clear how much gnosticism and christianity influenced each other, and how much of either should be traced to Jewish sources. In the 2nd C the apologists started to craft what became Catholic orthodoxy in the face of various sects later branded heretical. One can go through Acts and identify various characters as contemporary competitors to catholicism, making the book a kind of satire of heresy. Thus James could represent some kind of Jewish-Christian sect in conflict with the gentile-centred Paul (who could really be a whitewashed Marcion).

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Well, I did say that there are many avenues of skepticism. Galatians 1:19 may be an interpolation. But, do we not have corroboration in Matthew, Mark and Josephus. The Christians who interpolated Paul were the ones who believed the myths of the gospels. But, why would they interpolate such a thing? To prove that Jesus had a brother. But, the interpolation comes off as though Paul or whoever wrote it doesn't seem to care, as though he was just giving trivial details of his time in Jerusalem. The interpolators were clever.

It has also been argued that Galatians is a complete forgery, and Paul never actually wrote it. It has been argued that Paul was lying when he says that he met James. Each explanation has a bunch of faults. To me, what matters is consilience, which is the unified conclusion that follows from many diverse lines of evidence. It hardly matters if each piece of evidence has their speculated faults and uncertainties. If they seem to work together toward a single conclusion, then we should accept that conclusion. To the skeptics and Jesus-agnostics, consilience either doesn't matter because it may have been something like a big conspiracy, and/or it is putting blind trust in Christian texts. That is where the difference in fundamental paradigms comes back into play. If I use an argument that assumes a methodology that other people simply do not have, then I can not hope to change their minds. I can only hope to get them to understand the arguments and the philosophies.

You say skepticism is a tool and not a philosophy. Well, that is the way it should be, and that is how I thought of it before I came to the BC&H forum. What do you call the philosophy that prefers to rest on ambiguity, that is focused on tearing down theories rather than building a better theory? I used to call it postmodernism. But, they tend to call themselves skeptics. I am also a skeptic, so I called them "hyperskeptics" or "super-skeptics" or "ultra-skeptics." Toto takes that as insulting, because it implies that I have just the right amount of skepticism, but she does not have any word to replace it. I have recently used just, "skeptics" and "philosophy of skepticism," though I am uncomfortable with that, because it makes me look like a dogmatist or something. And, you don't like the way I use that phrase, either. OK, please suggest another word or phrase.
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Old 06-04-2010, 02:58 PM   #126
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:-) Well you havent presented or even linked to the argument, so its a little impossible to refute it.
this thread, 2 pages back

http://www.freeratio.org/showpost.ph...8&postcount=59
Ok that was Spin not Solo. :-)

Secondly you cant say what is the "right" translation, and Spin cant say that brother (meaning sibling) is not the right translation.
He is doing his best to speculate, but until he goes and deals with each case where Paul does in fact refer to Jesus as kurios then he has not, really, got very much.
But Spin wont do this. All he does is handwave them aside.
So yes, here, in a forum that is mainly friendly towards his speculations he doesn't get pulled up.
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Old 06-04-2010, 03:37 PM   #127
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Ok that was Spin not Solo. :-)

Secondly you cant say what is the "right" translation, and Spin cant say that brother (meaning sibling) is not the right translation.
You can deliberately misrepresent what you read as much as you like. All you do is ignore the fact that, while Paul uses "brother", in almost all examples he means a fellow believer. You don't like it so you ignore it.

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He is doing his best to speculate, but until he goes and deals with each case where Paul does in fact refer to Jesus as kurios then he has not, really, got very much.
So you won't look at them yourself.

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But Spin wont do this.
You're the one not doing the relevant job. Why don't you get off your a and do some analysis rather than this predictably reactionary sniping?

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All he does is handwave them aside.
Have you read my analyses in order to make this bogus claim? No. Talk about handwaving.

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So yes, here, in a forum that is mainly friendly towards his speculations he doesn't get pulled up.
Case in point on handwaving.

oao :wave:


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Old 06-04-2010, 03:55 PM   #128
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.... Well, I did say that there are many avenues of skepticism. Galatians 1:19 may be an interpolation. But, do we not have corroboration in Matthew, Mark and Josephus. The Christians who interpolated Paul were the ones who believed the myths of the gospels. But, why would they interpolate such a thing? To prove that Jesus had a brother. But, the interpolation comes off as though Paul or whoever wrote it doesn't seem to care, as though he was just giving trivial details of his time in Jerusalem. The interpolators were clever.
As I have pointed out BEFORE in order to show that Galatians 1.19 can even be true or is relevant both the LORD, and the apostle called James MUST be POSITIVELY identified.

Did they exist?

The same gMatthew that you say support that the Lord had a brother ALSO claimed in Matt.1.18 that the Lord Jesus was the CHILD of the HOLY Ghost.

The same gMark that you say support that the LORD had a brother also show that the LORD JESUS was walking on water like a SPIRIT and was transfigured.

The same Josephus that you say support that the LORD had a brother is the same Josephus that contains passages about Jesus called Christ that were forged.

And in the very same Galatians 1.1 the LORD Jesus was raised from the dead.

Once the LORD Jesus was the CHILD of a Ghost of God and walked on water like a Spirit, transfigured and was RAISED from the DEAD in the VERY SAME NT Canon where it is claimed the LORD had a brother then Galatians 1.19 resolves nothing.

The Lord Jesus was a Ghost of God and Paul met James the Lord's brother.

But, Papias claimed James the apostle was not the son of Mary the .supposed mother of Jesus, the son of the Ghost of God

It must be obvious that even if James and the LORD had the same mother that they had a DIFFERENT FATHER.

ONE FATHER was the GHOST OF GOD. James' father too? It does not matter.

JAMES was the brother of a GHOST of God, the LORD.

I think I found another Ghost. Let's call him James, the LORD's brother..
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Old 06-04-2010, 11:24 PM   #129
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The philosophical position you're describing sounds closer to the idea that nothing is knowable, and I don't agree with this. I don't consider myself a post-modernist or deconstructionist, though I haven't studied these systems. Skepticism as an attitude is as old as humanity I would guess.

The story in the NT is fairly consistent within itself if we accept the premises of the Catholic editors, ie the historical reality of Jesus, Paul et al. Clearly the early organizers of this material made an effort to harmonize the texts as much as they could, within the constraints of the supernatural religious perspective they held. They probably also wanted to retain difficult bits simply because they were old (or believed to be).

I'm not a Christian, so I feel no compulsion to "clean up the loose ends" or whatever. If the answers to my questions about Christian origins come 20 or 50 or 200 years from now I can live with that. I have some guesses about what happened, but nothing that can be verified.

I'm not sure you're considering all the possibilities. For instance, it's not at all clear how much gnosticism and christianity influenced each other, and how much of either should be traced to Jewish sources. In the 2nd C the apologists started to craft what became Catholic orthodoxy in the face of various sects later branded heretical. One can go through Acts and identify various characters as contemporary competitors to catholicism, making the book a kind of satire of heresy. Thus James could represent some kind of Jewish-Christian sect in conflict with the gentile-centred Paul (who could really be a whitewashed Marcion).
Thank you for putting so much thought into what I am saying, bacht, with so much tolerance and patience to boot. I appreciate it.

You used the word, "deconstructionist," which is a useful word for describing people who accept (or refuse to dismiss) multiple interpretations of written text. It may be the most appropriate word available for people like Toto, Spin, Robert Price and R. Joseph Hoffman. But, it would still be misleading, because they tend to limit the application of such a philosophy to the early Christian texts. So, I think I will coin and use the word, "Christo-deconstructionism," meaning the way of being so skeptical of all interpretations of early Christian texts that no knowledge can be gained about the founding of Christianity.

The question of whether or not the texts were too drastically changed throughout the early church may be a good way to justify Christo-deconstructionism. It is not a theory I accept, and I think I may have explained why days ago--once a Christian myth is put in writing, it tends to be treated as a sacred tradition or the word of God. I would make a better judgment if I could access and study so many of the ancient Christian texts, but I am just some guy on the Internet. I know that Ehrman made a lot of hay over the thousands of variations in the canonical texts. He also made the point that, by far, most of them were small, seemingly intended for greater clarity or a more "sensible" reading, or they were purely mistakes. But, of course there were some changes that were indeed drastic, such as the extended ending to the gospel of Mark and the story of the adulterous woman in the gospel of John, and still more changes intended to match a sectarian point of view.

I figure that such patterns of changes can be tracked and modeled using the hundreds of manuscripts that we have. If so, then we may be able to roughly extrapolate backward from our earliest copies what degree of changes took place before our earliest copies until the first hypothesized composition. If a theory demands a greater degree of change than the model predicts, then an explanation and evidence is necessary. Maybe this already been done, I don't know.
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Old 06-05-2010, 06:41 AM   #130
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It hardly matters if each piece of evidence has their speculated faults and uncertainties. If they seem to work together toward a single conclusion, then we should accept that conclusion. To the skeptics and Jesus-agnostics, consilience either doesn't matter because it may have been something like a big conspiracy, and/or it is putting blind trust in Christian texts.
I beg your pardon. Some of us ahistoricists believe (rightly or wrongly) that consilience is on our side. I for one have no use for any conspiracy theory, and anyone who thinks that a great many Christian texts have been doctored by redactors and interpolators is hardly putting any blind trust in them.
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