Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
05-11-2001, 01:55 PM | #71 | |
Contributor
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
|
Quote:
I said that textual criticism was not a hard science, and you agreed. I said "I find little evidence of 'science' in your textual criticism, and a lot of politics." I stand by that. And on the Carrier review in the other thread, I challenged your clearly erroneous assertion that Carrier had not dealt with two issues that he had spent several paragraphs discussing, and your assertion that Dever had been mischaracterized in the book. If you can't even get these little details right, why should I trust anything you assert? |
|
05-11-2001, 02:47 PM | #72 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
Kinda like Paul, Joseph Smith claimed to be divinely inspired. If we are to believe the writers of the New Testament, we must give Joseph Smith the same leeway, shouldn't we? Mormons believe his translations of the bible not because he was an expert in the field, but because they believe God spoke through him. How in the world do credentials even come into the debate, then? Of course, Earl Doherty doesn't claim to be divinely inspired, but your use of Joseph Smith certainly can't apply to Earl Doherty in this instance. |
|
05-11-2001, 03:38 PM | #73 | |||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
Quote:
Given the fact that his translations are so radically different from that of every other expert in the field, and much of his own argument hangs on these idiosyncratic translations, then I think his next best option is to prove that everyone else has gotten it wrong, and he has gotten it right. Quote:
Of course, if he persists, and refuses to offer anything beyond his own readings, then I will demonstrate how unique his translation truly is, and leave it to the readers to decide if his translation is credible. Out of curiousity, how would you personally evaluate a translation of a language you neither read nor write? Brian (Nomad) |
|||
05-11-2001, 04:25 PM | #74 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Brian,
I am giving you the last word on the issue of bias in the debate on the historicity of Jesus, since I think we are going round i circles. Anyway, because we are already some way into the debate there is not much point further discussing if it is worth it or not. The other issue, about references and experts, is still open. Right now there is a point of contention in the form of the correct translation of a particular expression. Let me confess up front that I have at the moment no idea why this particular point matters - I hope you or ED can clarify this. However, I would like to throw in my 2 cents on how to establish what is reasonable. Both yourself and Ish seem to concentrate on showing how many Bible translators/translations go for one particular meaning. This comes close to the appeal to authority, because from such an argument we still don't understand why this meaning is to be preferred over another one. To shed light on that question, we may want to use analogs - investigate how the particular expression was used in other, roughly contemporaneous non-biblical documents. This would provide the necessary degree of independent control. If Earl could demonstrate that this Greek phrase is often translated in accordance to his view, he would have a case. If he cannot show this, or if you can show that a translation as you propose makes more sense in those other documents, his case would be weaker. The use of non-biblical documents removes the question from the thorny issue of (non)existing religious bias and dependance between different Bible readings/translations. Application of independent control would certainly carry a lot of weight in my book. fG |
05-11-2001, 05:02 PM | #75 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
|
|
05-11-2001, 08:40 PM | #76 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
Ish [This message has been edited by Ish (edited May 12, 2001).] |
|
05-12-2001, 12:06 AM | #77 | |||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Well, Brian, you certainly are a prolific writer. I would be worn down if I produced so much material so quickly.
But I think you would do well to slow the pace. I'll offer just a few examples. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Brian, I could go on for buffers with examples which make me feel you should slow your pace and think through things more carefully before posting. You've written thousands of words expressing your concerns over what might happen in this discussion. Now, maybe we can get going and address matters as they arise! I'll help out by submitting no further posts this weekend! Bill |
|||
05-12-2001, 07:12 AM | #78 | |||||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
This is an appeal to authority, the error is compounded by the fact that the scholars do not say what he claims, and further compounded by his assertion that a majority of them say it. These are serious problems, and give the appearance of much broader support for his ideas than actually exist. Quote:
Quote:
Go back to Earl's preamble and you will see that he first learned of the Jesus as myth theory from reading G.A. Wells. Since then, he has been very busy investigating the historical record, and the Bible, and has found that he has had to create his own special translations of the Greek, make very big arguments from silence, claim that huge conspiracies exist to silence potential free thinking scholars, and that the truth is out there. Of course, what he has missed in all of this is that the truth really is out there, there is no scholarly conspiracy to conceal it, and Jesus did actually exist. Even Wells admits this now. So I do not blame you for thinking that Earl did the research, then drew his conclusions, but I assure you, it is definitely the other way around. From the beginning Earl's theories have had to drive his research, or he would never have persisted in his claims that Jesus is a complete mythological construct. We will get into this in more detail as the debate progresses, of course, but watch for the number of times that Earl will have to resort to evidence that he alone has been able to uncover, and how often he will dismiss counter opinions with the wave of his hand (a good example was his treatment of Michael Grant, imagine if I had begun the debate with the same statement about Doherty's work as Earl does about Grants. the cries of protest would be quite deafening, no? ). Quote:
Quote:
Thanks for your thoughts Bill. Brian (Nomad) [This message has been edited by Brian Trafford (edited May 12, 2001).] |
|||||
05-12-2001, 10:03 AM | #79 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
It could be that the important point is lost in a hail to scholarly quotation, but that is easily avoided. The proof is in the pudding. Just look to if he's really doing it. I don't think he is. |
|
05-12-2001, 03:48 PM | #80 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
You rightly say that it is knowledge we are interested in. The way this is going, there seems far too much risk of subjectivity, politics and 'Stimmungmacherei' determining the direction of the debate, rather than level-headed presentation and discussion of the data. I am not really interested in who thinks what, and where they are coming from. I would like to go through the available data on the historicity of Jesus, and form an opinion by myself on how convincing it is, helped by those who have studied this more extensively. So far, I have seen very litte data but lots of side issues. fG [This message has been edited by faded_Glory (edited May 12, 2001).] |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|