FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 01-09-2009, 10:06 PM   #31
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: MidWest
Posts: 1,894
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by patcleaver View Post

There is not even one case that I know of ever that an ordinary man was mythicized into a God. Your idea that Jesus was an ordinary man that was mythicized into a God is ludicrous.
Has Haile Selassie been brought up in the thread?
Elijah is offline  
Old 01-09-2009, 10:12 PM   #32
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by patcleaver View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Casper View Post

Cmon man, George Washington and the cherry tree? Not to take the exclamation out of context but historical figures are indeed mythicised. Rasputin for instance? Tesla? Chuck Norris?
None of you're examples are ordinary men who were mythicized.

I do not know of any examples ever, but it is possible, however unlikely, that some ordinary men are mythicized.

I should have said:

There is not even one case that I know of ever that an ordinary man was mythicized into a God. Your idea that Jesus was an ordinary man that was mythicized into a God is ludicrous.
That's because Pat didn't read my post referring to Imhotep. As I said, Pat is making things up, creating artificial claims about reality.

In fact, Pat probably doesn't know the history of the origin of any of the ancient gods beside the best chronicled one. So take such pronouncements for what they're worth. (I don't have a smilie with empty pockets.)

ETA: you understand the Pat Cleaver approach here:

PC: No clowns have ever been deified.
XX: But Bozo the Clown was deified.
PC: What I meant to say was no Armenian clowns were deified.
XX: But Armin Melcunian was deified.
PC: Sorry, I didn't make myself clear here. No mediaeval Armenian clowns were ever crucified... umm, on mid-winter's eve.. ahh, wearing polka-dots.


spin
spin is offline  
Old 01-09-2009, 11:52 PM   #33
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by patcleaver View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ben C Smith View Post

Apollonius of Tyana.

(I think I already mentioned him. Did you miss it?)

Apollonius was not a king.
You are claiming that Apollonius or Tyana was mythicized into a God.

I never heard that before.

Please provide some citation or evedence that its true?
Dear Ben and Pat,

Additionally we have a reasonably secure large and generous inscription to Apollonius of Tyana, a translation of which is as follows:
Quote:
'This man, named after Apollo,
and shining forth Tyana,
extinguished the faults of men.
The tomb in Tyana (received) his body,
but in truth heaven received him
so that he might drive out the pains of men
(or:drive pains from among men) .'

--- Ancient inscription, translated C. P. Jones
Best wishes,


Pete
mountainman is offline  
Old 01-10-2009, 12:43 AM   #34
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: PNW USA
Posts: 216
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by patcleaver View Post
There are no ordinary people who have been mythicized into Gods.
Hitler - at least before he took Germany into calamity and subjugation. Priests actually proposed he replace Christ in their churches.
Analyst is offline  
Old 01-10-2009, 06:39 AM   #35
Contributor
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Casper View Post
Cmon man, George Washington and the cherry tree? Not to take the exclamation out of context but historical figures are indeed mythicised. Rasputin for instance? Tesla? Chuck Norris?
A story about George Washington with a cherry tree while he was alive, living on earth as human, does not in any whatsoever mythicise George Washington, the story of the cherry , whether true or not, may be used to show that George Washington was a person of history and was living at a certain time.

To mythicise any character, it must be shown that the character was never living as human, and that all records of their life on earth was fabricated or could not have been true.

The cherry tree story with George Washington did not try to disprove that George Washinton was human, or that he was living on earth in America, and did not try to show he was some kind of unnatural creature.


Good examples of characters that were presented as myths are Jesus of the NT and Homer's Achilles, both were the offsprings of some kind of Gods or Holy Ghosts.

Now, which writer ever claimed Chuck Norris was not human, was never on earth as human, and that all records of Chuck Norris as human are fiction?

If false information alone is the sole factor for determining myths, then it would then be possible for persons to make themselves myths while actually presenting false information about themselves.

Based on your argument or post, the president who said," I never had sex with that woman," made himself a myth, if he was lying.
aa5874 is offline  
Old 01-10-2009, 09:27 AM   #36
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: London UK
Posts: 16,024
Default

http://www.newscientist.com/article/...are-there.html

Quote:
Archie Campbell suggests that the true number is "an imaginary number with no real part" and Vilnis Vesma elaborates - whooshing over our mathematical head - that imaginarily numbered deities "would only interact with the real world if there were zero of them". Luther Blisset also challenges our identification of deities with integers. Should we not count them using either the unordered cardinal numbers (as in, "Daisy the cow, Ermintrude the cow") or the ordinals (as in "best cow, second-best cow, third...")? Theologians may argue over which we should use, but in either case the range is from zero to infinity and so, assuming our universe is typical, the expected number will be one-half infinity which is, er, infinite.
Quote:
Several readers, like Chris Brooking, challenged our assumption that the number of deities is whole - some, with Dai James, pointing out, "The Greek heroes were the result of couplings between gods and mortals, thus producing demi-gods." Over many generations this would produce hemi-demi-gods and so forth - beings whose deicity was a fraction with any whole number on the top and a number on the bottom that is a power of two: 2, 4, 8, 16 and so on. Those fractions would be what mathematicians call rational numbers, leading James to conclude: "The deities would thus be rational - a considerable relief as there are obvious dangers associated with an irrational god." He goes on to reach a startling conclusion: "Since no gods can be irrational, none of them can be transcendental."
Clivedurdle is offline  
Old 01-10-2009, 10:18 AM   #37
Banned
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Alaska
Posts: 9,159
Default

As a methodological issue, it is a fresh and exciting way to analyze literature, and one almost trembles at the kind of apopogetics it contrives for the "historical Jesus" crowd.

As a junior varsity sidekick I ventured out on my own to apply this ingenious strategy to the pericopes in PETER RABBIT. (Immitation is the sincerest form of flattery.)

It never pays to prioritize things such as who wrote it, when they wrote, who it was written for, and to what purpose - along with all the historical context & etc.

So....

Peter is a baby bunny along with other baby bunnies.... unquestionably reasonable.

Lives in hole under tree... reasonable

Eats from Mr. MacGregor's garden.... reasonable. Many MacGregor's own farms too

Talks....... unreasonable
Wears Clothes......... unreasonable


In sum, the historical rabbit underneath the mythological PETER is actually quite reasonable, and you'd have to be some kind of idiot to approach the problem from an understanding that it is taught by mothers to little children in order to convince them why they should listen to their mother.

There are a lot of pericopes that are difficult to categorize. For example, Flopsy, Mopsy, and Cotton-tail had bread and milk and blackberries for supper.

Some elements of this pericope are quite reasonable. The list of food items. Some of the details are a little questionable, like the mother going to the bakery to buy the bread. Rabbits are better known to nibble where they find food and not bring it back home in baskets covered by pretty checkered cloth.

But it is understandable that certain elements of the story would be exaggerated after having been passed orally from generation to generation. Historical Peters undoubtedly abound with fathers who were put into a pie. By farmers named MacGregor, even.

Anyone who uses the argument from best explanation in addressing why, how, where, when, and who Peter Rabbit was written for is a blind idealogue incapable of seeing the genius in apologetic historical rabbit research.

We need real science here, such as determining the proportion of elements in the story that could be possible.

That allows us to retain the faith that a real rabbit did exist in the distant past, and this rabbit was the linear progenitor to the PETER RABBIT story. Sadly, the exact rabbit happened too long ago and without sufficient documentation to convince those mean old skeptics of his historicity.

But clearly those skeptics aren't using any kind of scientific methodology to reach their silly conclusions. They are more like a religion, actually. And we all know how stupid religious superstitions are.

So we place our faith in science.

Without such faith, certain individuals would cry themselves to sleep even with their cuddly blanket clutched tightly to the breast.
rlogan is offline  
Old 01-10-2009, 11:31 AM   #38
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: London UK
Posts: 16,024
Default

Of course Peter Rabbit is true.

I have evidence.

I have several plates in our cupboard, some of which describe the incident of Mr McGregor's pie!

I have the archaeology!
Clivedurdle is offline  
Old 01-10-2009, 02:55 PM   #39
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: New York
Posts: 742
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by patcleaver View Post
There are kings that have been mythicized into Gods, but no ordinary men.
Ummm, Imhotep, the builder of the step pyramid of Djoser.

Do we accept stories such as how the one-armed Min became a god in Egypt? We have the story of Aesculapius as a man on the battlefield in Homer. Pat, you're just making things up. How traditions regarding gods develop is usually not accessible to us, so you can't make such generalizations.
spin
I read you post but I knew that Aesculapius was not an ordinary man and I had no wish to point out your error.

There is nothing wrong with backing down from a position without abandoning the field. I have never seen you abandon the field when it was pointed out to you that you were mistaken about some point. Poking fun at me for doing it just seems hypocritical.

What is your evidence that Aesculapius was a real man. In Homer''s fictional story, he was supposedly the son of Zeus. There is no reason to think that he was a real person. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asclepius

It is controversial whether Imhotep was a full God, but he was at least honored as a demigod. Imhotep was chancellor to the pharaoh and high priest of the sun god Ra at Heliopolis. He was also famous for being a healer and the architect - he designed the step pyramid. We have writing about hem in his lifetime and we have his tomb and his mummy. I will admit that he was a man that became a God.

Is a chancellor to the Pharaoh an ordinary man?
patcleaver is offline  
Old 01-10-2009, 03:06 PM   #40
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 3,058
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by patcleaver View Post
What is your evidence that Aesculapius was a real man. In Homer''s fictional story, he was supposedly the son of Zeus.
Really?

Please show me where Homer mentions in either the Iliad or the Odyssey who Asklepius's parents were, let alone that one or the other or both were divine.

And while you are at it, please show me that any source from the ancient world that does profess a belief that Ascelpius had a divine origin (i.e, Pindar, etc.) testifies to his being the son of Zeus.


Jeffrey
Jeffrey Gibson is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:46 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.