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Old 06-18-2010, 06:04 AM   #51
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Thank you for your time and patience with me, Atheos. I noticed that you were a mod of BC&H after I made the post, and I felt like an idiot. :-P Sorry.
No worries

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I should have directly answered your question. I'll make you a list of items in the Christian myths that are historically corroborated. Yes, they are mostly people and places, but some are significant in that they were not necessarily well known throughout the ancient world. These are the things that are corroborated:
  • The town of Nazareth.
  • The Passover celebration in Jerusalem.
  • King Herod.
  • The Jewish sect of Pharisees.
  • The Jewish sect of Sadducees.
  • Pontius Pilate as ruler of Jerusalem.
  • John the Baptist as rural baptizing cult leader.
  • The apostle Paul.
  • James, the brother of Jesus.
  • The apostle Peter, also known as Cephas.
  • The apostle John.
  • The Samaritans.
You then spend some time on the Nazareth problem, which I've looked into myself over the years. I tend to disagree with your conclusion that the archaeological discoveries near modern Nazareth corroborate the existence of a town named Nazareth in the 1st century, but you know that already. You also know that Peter, Paul and John are not corroborated in any meaningful way.

That leaves us with a paucity of story-specific information no more substantive than would be necessary to prove to any reasonable person's satisfaction that Odysseus or King Arthur existed.


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Because of the scarcity of historical information, it is not good historical practice to disbelieve everything in the New Testament that does not have external corroboration.
Why not? If most of it is obviously made up why not just assume the whole thing was? I notice that you haven't mentioned Herod's slaughter of the innocents or Tiberius' census. These events would have left easily discoverable evidence in the historical record. Their blinding silence is a testament to the idea that the stories were fabrications that used some real world characters and situations.

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A very important historical criterion, which mythicists tend to scorn the most, is the criterion of dissimilarity, also known as the criterion of embarrassment. If a claim seems to closely align with the source's direct and obvious interests, then it is less likely that the claim is trustworthy. If a claim seems to oppose the source's direct and obvious interests, then it is more likely to be trustworthy. If a claim seems neutral to the interests of the sources, then it is given moderate support by the criterion of dissimilarity.
You are assuming the consequent again with this line of reasoning. First of all, you're assuming you know the "source's direct and obvious interest". This claim is absurd on the face. To begin with you have no idea how many different people constitute the source. And the idea that all of them had the same "obvious interest" is about as likely as the main protagonist rising from the dead and floating off into the sky.

As a skeptic my first tendency is to think that nobody went about creating these stories with a purposeful intent to deceive. More likely they started as campfire or bedtime stories. Children grew up hearing these stories and a few began believing them and perhaps redacting them using other cultural hero-myths of the time. Decades later the Jewish sect of Christianity began to coalesce. Various "gospels" were published. The ones that happened to fit more closely with Constantine's beliefs in the 4th century were branded "Orthodox" and the rest were branded heretical.

More to your point about criterion of dissimilarity, in the story Peter's bumbling mistakes were a plot device. Without Jimmy Olsen Superman wouldn't look as interesting either. How do you know the intent of the anonymous sources of these myths wasn't the most likely one imaginable: to create a story that was interesting.

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The superskeptics tend to discard the criterion of dissimilarity.
With good reason, as I've pointed out above. If I were attempting to create a story people would find compelling I'd need to provide characters who eventually became heroes in spite of their character flaws.

Look, I appreciate your viewpoints on this but so far all you've done is provide an opinion that is no better than the opinion of what you keep calling "superskeptics". My opinion is that the whole thing was probably made up, but if there turned up to be irrefutable evidence that some guy named Jesus in the right time-frame assembled a group of followers, pissed off the wrong people and got his ass crucified I'd be just fine with it.

The problem here is that there is so much about the story that doesn't make sense it's difficult for me to justify finding reason to believe any of it. Do you believe the Sanhedrin council convened a special session near midnight on Passover eve to deal with Jesus? C'mon.
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Old 06-18-2010, 08:14 AM   #52
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I notice that you haven't mentioned Herod's slaughter of the innocents or Tiberius' census. These events would have left easily discoverable evidence in the historical record. Their blinding silence is a testament to the idea that the stories were fabrications that used some real world characters and situations.
Tertullian (ca. 160 – ca. 220 A.D.) mentions the census.

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But there is historical proof that at this very time a census had been taken in Judaea by Sentius Saturni-nus, which might have satisfied their inquiry respecting the family and descent of Christ.

http://www.earlychristianwritings.co...ullian124.html

IIRC, when any territory first came under the direct control of Rome, a census was taken primarily for tax purposes. There is alleged archaeological records which may support Tertullian's statement regarding the census.

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" A Latin inscription found in 1764 about one-half mile south of the ancient villa of Quintilius Varus (at Tivoli, 20 miles east of Rome) states that the subject of the inscription had twice been governor of Syria. This can only refer to Quintilius Varus, who was Syrian governor at two different times. Numismatic evidence shows he ruled Syria from 6 to 4 B.C., and other historical evidence indicates that Varus was again governor from 2 B.C. to A.D. I. Between his two governorships was Sentius Saturninus, whose tenure lasted from 4 to 2 B.C. Significantly, Tertullian (third century) said the imperial records showed that censuses were conducted in Judea during the time of Sentius Saturninus. (Against Marcion 4:7). Tertullian also placed the birth of Jesus in 3 or 2 B.C. This is precisely when Saturninus would have been governor according to my new interpretation. That the Gospel of Luke says Quirinius was governor of Syria when the census was taken is resolved by Justin Martyr's statement (second century) that Quirinius was only a procurator (not governor) of the province (Apology 1:34). In other words, he was simply an assistant to Saturninus, who was the actual governor as Tertullian stated."

http://www.earlychristianwritings.co...ullian124.html
As far as the slaughter of the innocents what kind of "easily discoverable evidence in the historical record" would you expect?
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Old 06-18-2010, 08:44 AM   #53
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I value reason and the truth.
I'm sorry Abe, but it seems you've ignored all the argument and advice people here have given you in good faith. You haven't demonstrated to me that you really understand basic logic and the rules of evidence. You politely acknowledge comments and then just carry on with whatever crusade it is you're following.

I don't expect you to become an atheist/mythicist/whatever, but to simply repeat over and over your reliance on the canonical texts (in English translation!) is fruitless imo. We have a tremendous advantage over earlier scholars in the existence and analysis of extra-canonical texts like the DSS & Nag Hammadi books, and the ongoing work on previously known material like Stephan Huller's research in the Samaritan tradition.
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Old 06-18-2010, 09:28 AM   #54
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I value reason and the truth.
I'm sorry Abe, but it seems you've ignored all the argument and advice people here have given you in good faith. You haven't demonstrated to me that you really understand basic logic and the rules of evidence. You politely acknowledge comments and then just carry on with whatever crusade it is you're following.

I don't expect you to become an atheist/mythicist/whatever, but to simply repeat over and over your reliance on the canonical texts (in English translation!) is fruitless imo. We have a tremendous advantage over earlier scholars in the existence and analysis of extra-canonical texts like the DSS & Nag Hammadi books, and the ongoing work on previously known material like Stephan Huller's research in the Samaritan tradition.
I have ignored ALL the argument and advice? Seriously? Jesus! To be honest, I feel very worn out, I thought, because I am doing too much of the opposite.
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Old 06-18-2010, 09:42 AM   #55
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[...]
To rely on the New Testament is to rely on the best evidence available. You may not judge the New Testament to be good enough evidence to make conclusions of any sort, and I think Toto and Robert Price and R. Joseph Hoffman may agree with you, but, if we are talking about the way normal history is done, then it is done using the best evidence available, which means relying on the contents of the New Testament.
I've already told you how normal history is done. Relying solely on the NT is a bias that is a result of 1,500 years of orthodoxy - that is not how history is done. No NT scholar that I've read ever admits to this bias. Why is Acts of the Apostles used as a historical source in NT studies yet the Acts of Thomas is not? Oh that's right - one is "orthodox" and one is "heterodox". And by definition (otherwise known as an unjustified assumption), gnosticism cannot be "true" as it is "too late" to have historical value. And therefore - also by definition - Acts of the Apostles must be "early" even though the only arguments for its priority are apologetics.

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It is almost never appropriate to throw up your hands and claim that all analysis and all conclusions are useless. That may be appropriate when we genuinely have no relevant knowledge of a particular topic. In this case, we do have relevant knowledge. We have detailed Christian myths and letters of Paul from the first and second centuries. It is not the evidence we would really like, maybe not what you would call "primary evidence." But, it is the best evidence, and it is our duty to make the best sense of it. That is the way history is done.
This all just amounts to "it's better to make up a cool sounding story than stick with the evidence that we have". If it's inconclusive whether a person was murdered by their spouse, should we throw the spouse in prison just because we have to make up a story? Of course not. Maybe NT historians should be honest with the type of data that they have instead of inventing narratives. But they would never do this because the primary people that want those narratives are the religious, and the religious are the ones who pay their salaries.

Jesus has been the dominant cultural icon in the West for almost 2,000 years. It doesn't pay the bills to say that there's nothing we can know about him, or that he might not have even existed. Which is probably why, as Hector Avalos pointed out, that Biblical Studies as it is currently practiced should end.
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Old 06-18-2010, 10:15 AM   #56
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Thank you for your time and patience with me, Atheos. I noticed that you were a mod of BC&H after I made the post, and I felt like an idiot. :-P Sorry.
No worries


You then spend some time on the Nazareth problem, which I've looked into myself over the years. I tend to disagree with your conclusion that the archaeological discoveries near modern Nazareth corroborate the existence of a town named Nazareth in the 1st century, but you know that already. You also know that Peter, Paul and John are not corroborated in any meaningful way.

That leaves us with a paucity of story-specific information no more substantive than would be necessary to prove to any reasonable person's satisfaction that Odysseus or King Arthur existed.



Why not? If most of it is obviously made up why not just assume the whole thing was? I notice that you haven't mentioned Herod's slaughter of the innocents or Tiberius' census. These events would have left easily discoverable evidence in the historical record. Their blinding silence is a testament to the idea that the stories were fabrications that used some real world characters and situations.

You are assuming the consequent again with this line of reasoning. First of all, you're assuming you know the "source's direct and obvious interest". This claim is absurd on the face. To begin with you have no idea how many different people constitute the source. And the idea that all of them had the same "obvious interest" is about as likely as the main protagonist rising from the dead and floating off into the sky.

As a skeptic my first tendency is to think that nobody went about creating these stories with a purposeful intent to deceive. More likely they started as campfire or bedtime stories. Children grew up hearing these stories and a few began believing them and perhaps redacting them using other cultural hero-myths of the time. Decades later the Jewish sect of Christianity began to coalesce. Various "gospels" were published. The ones that happened to fit more closely with Constantine's beliefs in the 4th century were branded "Orthodox" and the rest were branded heretical.

More to your point about criterion of dissimilarity, in the story Peter's bumbling mistakes were a plot device. Without Jimmy Olsen Superman wouldn't look as interesting either. How do you know the intent of the anonymous sources of these myths wasn't the most likely one imaginable: to create a story that was interesting.

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The superskeptics tend to discard the criterion of dissimilarity.
With good reason, as I've pointed out above. If I were attempting to create a story people would find compelling I'd need to provide characters who eventually became heroes in spite of their character flaws.

Look, I appreciate your viewpoints on this but so far all you've done is provide an opinion that is no better than the opinion of what you keep calling "superskeptics". My opinion is that the whole thing was probably made up, but if there turned up to be irrefutable evidence that some guy named Jesus in the right time-frame assembled a group of followers, pissed off the wrong people and got his ass crucified I'd be just fine with it.

The problem here is that there is so much about the story that doesn't make sense it's difficult for me to justify finding reason to believe any of it. Do you believe the Sanhedrin council convened a special session near midnight on Passover eve to deal with Jesus? C'mon.
You then spend some time on the Nazareth problem, which I've looked into myself over the years. I tend to disagree with your conclusion that the archaeological discoveries near modern Nazareth corroborate the existence of a town named Nazareth in the 1st century, but you know that already.

I'll keep coming back to the Argument to the Best Explanation. Is that something you would agree with, by the way? I don't want to use it if you don't share agreement with it.

It is an issue, because the underlying philosophy of the people I call superskeptics, people such as Toto and Robert Price, is that the "best explanation" really doesn't often count for much so often in New Testament studies, because the evidence is so questionable. If the evidence is as doubtful as it is, then even the best explanation counts for very little.

Toto and others sometimes claim that is the way normal history is done, and I would love to see good evidence for that. To me, the best explanation, even if it is based on doubtful evidence, still counts for plenty, simply because it is the best. Tell me if you agree with Toto or if you agree with me on this point, or if you fall somewhere in between. Toto's philosophy, which I sometimes call deconstructionism (agnosticism of all explanations based on textual evidence) is a philosophy that is very difficult for me to fight. It is like fighting dogma, only it isn't a dogma; it is a reverse-dogma, a somewhat a priori refusal to form conclusions of any sort.

If you agree with ABE and you are willing to argue about what is the best explanation, then we can talk about first-century Nazareth.
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Old 06-18-2010, 12:59 PM   #57
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Tertullian (ca. 160 – ca. 220 A.D.) mentions the census.
Does he mention a census that required everyone to go back to the home of their ancestors?

Nobody doubts that census's occurred. Hell, the bible claims that Yahweh once whipped king David's ass for conducting one. The absurdity of a census that required everyone go back where their ancestors lived 800 years ago shouldn't have to be described.

However, I hate to have to point out the freaking obvious: Tertullian mentioning this in 160 C.E. is no different from me talking about a conspiracy between John Wilkes Booth and several key members of the Republican Party to have Lincoln assassinated. If no evidence of any such conspiracy is to be found anywhere between the time it happened and the time I mention it would reasonable historians hundreds of years later assume my comments were of any real value?

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I'll keep coming back to the Argument to the Best Explanation. Is that something you would agree with, by the way? I don't want to use it if you don't share agreement with it.
The "best explanation" means squat as far as I'm concerned if there are other equally plausible explanations to be had.

However, and let me be clear on this, the story is a myth. We know that. People don't get born of a virgin impregnated by a god. People don't turn water into wine, heal blindness, leprosy, paralysis or raise people from the dead. People don't walk on water, resurrect from the dead, magically appear and vanish in locked rooms or float off into the sky. These are the elements of a myth.

The way I approach a myth is to assume that everything about it is fictional unless there is good reason to believe otherwise. Yes there were Jews. Yes there was Rome, crucifixions, Pontius Pilate, Samaritans, John the Baptist and other effects from the story. Even if there was Nazareth and other obscure details later confirmed to be actual it still doesn't mean the story is of any real historical value. To me the better explanation of those sorts of details is that one of the originators of the oral traditions that led up to the homologated myth came from the village of Nazareth and gave his homies some love in the storyline. Simple, elegant and it perfectly satisfies where these details came from.

In other words I'm consistent. I treat the stories of "Jesus the Magic Jew" the same way I treat the stories of "Moroni the Magic Messenger to Joseph Smith". It didn't really happen.
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Old 06-18-2010, 04:14 PM   #58
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Tertullian (ca. 160 – ca. 220 A.D.) mentions the census.
Does he mention a census that required everyone to go back to the home of their ancestors?
Details. . .

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A papyrus from Egypt dated 104 CE requiring people to return to their homes for a census has sometimes been cited as evidence of a requirement to travel;[83] however, this refers only to migrant workers returning to their family home, not their ancestral home.[84] However, Raymond E. Brown suggested that “One cannot rule out the possibility that, since Romans often adapted their administration to local circumstances, a census conducted in Judea would respect the strong attachment of Jewish tribal and ancestral relationships.”[85]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Census_of_Quirinius
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Old 06-18-2010, 04:23 PM   #59
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Does he mention a census that required everyone to go back to the home of their ancestors?
Details. . .

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A papyrus from Egypt dated 104 CE requiring people to return to their homes for a census has sometimes been cited as evidence of a requirement to travel;[83] however, this refers only to migrant workers returning to their family home, not their ancestral home.[84] However, Raymond E. Brown suggested that “One cannot rule out the possibility that, since Romans often adapted their administration to local circumstances, a census conducted in Judea would respect the strong attachment of Jewish tribal and ancestral relationships.”[85]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Census_of_Quirinius
Imagine the huge clusterfuck that would happen if hundreds of thousands of Jews had to return to the home of their ancestors just for a census. It would be a logistical nightmare. Return home? Yes. Return to the home of your ancestors? Not so much.
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Old 06-18-2010, 05:35 PM   #60
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Details. . .
Imagine the huge clusterfuck that would happen if hundreds of thousands of Jews had to return to the home of their ancestors just for a census. It would be a logistical nightmare. Return home? Yes. Return to the home of your ancestors? Not so much.
It would also appear to be a logistical nightmare for all of the jews to arrive at Jerusalem to celebrate passover year after year. But many jews seemed to manage.
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