Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
03-19-2001, 10:37 PM | #41 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
What I find most fascinating is how much the skeptics sound like Young Earth Creationists. They flippantly dismiss the experts in this field. They insist that the very existence of Jesus is still "disputed," when the overwhelming majority of the historical and New Testament studies departments laugh at such a position. They are willing to write off whole disciplines of accepted historical inquiry to justify their very Jesusexistedaphobia. They write off the leading experts in the field without having actually read much, if anything, by those experts. They fall back to the "we weren't there to really know what happened" line of argument which I have seen so many YECS use. The parrallels are stricking. |
|
03-20-2001, 12:05 AM | #42 |
Contributor
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
|
Layman - this thread was about the standards for historical evidence, not the existence of the historical Jesus. Why did you bring this up?
And since you have brought it up, do you have any better arguments than ridicule, or your claim that experts agree with you? It's not as if the "experts" are a disinterested group of scientists - most are committed Christians (although the study of the Bible has made atheists out of a few.) And it's not as if the historical evidence is overwhelming. It is quite reasonable to view the gospels as midrash, with very little if any fact mixed into a lot of fiction. And Paul never met Jesus. This leaves very little evidence for the historical Jesus. I am not prepared to argue that there was no historical Jesus, but I don't think that the argument is so utterly ridiculous, and I think Ed Doherty makes a reasonable case. |
03-20-2001, 04:58 AM | #43 | ||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
Quote:
OK… Time for you to fall on your own sword (metaphorically speaking, of course). Re-read my criteria again. In regards to embarrassment I said this, “The criterion of embarrassment relates to something Jesus said or did which would have been embarrassing to the early Christians. In other words, they would not have made up this information so its MOST LIKELY historical. An example of this is the gospels' mention of the fact that Jesus' family did not follow him during his lifetime (John 7:5, etc.).” In regards to dissimilarity I said this, “Dissimilarity is when something attributed to Jesus is considerably un-similar to the beliefs of the earliest Christians. It is MORE LIKELY to be historical because the Christians would not have invented it. For example, scholars think Jesus taught in parables because there is no evidence that the early Christians did such a thing.” Are you able to recognize the terms “more likely” and “most likely” ? Is it time for you to get a new eyeglass prescription? I noticed you conveniently avoided “multiple attestation” after my last post clearly demonstrated your ignorance on the matter. If you’ll go back and re-read my first post again, you’ll also see where I said, “Different scholars use and emphasize standards and methods to varying degrees.” This means they don’t just use one criteria to make their case. They see how each individual saying or deed fares when applying all of the relevant criteria and then make a determination as to its probability of being historical. It isn’t as if they say, “Well, this deed shows up in more than one source, therefore it must be true.” Multiple attestation, embarrassment, etc. are just measuring sticks used to increase or decrease the likelihood of a saying or deed being historical. This is why you are so very wrong when you claim that the same conclusion will always be reached. If you’d read more than one Jesus scholar, then you’d know this because they all reach different conclusions as to what Jesus said or did. You were making a “straw man” out my argument by claiming that if a saying or deed met one of the criteria, then it MUST automatically be TRUE. I never claimed such a thing. I was talking in terms of probability as is clear from terms like “more likely” and from the fact that I’ve been telling you on numerous occasions that scholars who use these criteria reach different conclusions all of the time. I’ve answered your question very clearly. Now its your turn to dance. Use your criteria with my examples and tell us why your criteria are better than those used by 95% of the historians and myself… This ought to be good !! Peace, Polycarp |
||
03-20-2001, 05:09 AM | #44 | ||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
Quote:
Let's give the fella a chance. We, and nearly every other Jesus scholar, might be wrong. He now has the spotlight to show us what he's got. Peace, Polycarp |
||
03-20-2001, 08:29 AM | #45 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
|
|
03-20-2001, 10:02 AM | #46 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
|
|
03-20-2001, 10:15 AM | #47 | ||||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
Quote:
Folks, observer here one of Layman's patented attack techniques. Even though I have never stated a position on the existence of Jesus, he says that I dispute the existence. He creates a strawman, and then expects me to (a) defend it or (b) even worry about it. And, as Toto mentioned, the historicity of Jesus isn't even the topic at hand. So what was the point in bringing it up anyhow? He used this same "attack by blundering confusion" technique this previously on this very thread, where he accused me of distorting the opponents position, when all I was admitting to doing was Quote:
He'll undoubtedly do this again. The problem is that Layman takes his self-appointed role as apologist too seriously. In his rush to defend the faith, he is so eager to jump in that he fails to read and understand the opponent's position. This leads him to create strawmen, or read hostile intent where none is present. This was cute the first few times. Now it's just wearisome. Quote:
1. verifiable data that we can argue about, data that was 2. extracted through the scientific method and 3. verified through multiple independent lines of science. Notice that none of the items 1-3 above apply to your arguments. So parallel? Not at all. The only thing that is striking here is your desperate confusion, Layman. [This message has been edited by Omnedon1 (edited March 20, 2001).] |
||||
03-20-2001, 10:18 AM | #48 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
|
|
03-20-2001, 10:29 AM | #49 | |||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
Quote:
As I said: the terms "most likely" and similar guarded terms are inconsistent with the strong claims for "proof" and "evidence". Which means that all these high-sounding claims for proof that you and other theists use should actually be substantially more muted. You have just illustrated my point here. Apologists such as yourselves try to use the tools of textual criticism to achieve a level of certitude and proof that is inappropriate given the limitations of those tools. You want the skeptics to believe you have proof which is of the same quality and caliber as scientific proof. But you don't have that. What you really, actually have is a bunch of "most likelys" and "reasonably sures" and "leads us to believe". Those types of guarded qualifications are inconsistent with the term "proof" and "evidence". It is the difference between saying, "Christ went to Jerusalem for Passover" and saying "Most of the evidence suggests Christ went to Jerusalem for Passover". A proper student of texts (ancient or otherwise) understands that the tools for such study are, by definition, not going to lead to the types of strong affirmative statements that are bandied around by theists in support of their faith, or in support of the claims of the bible. The next conclusion that we can draw from this is that when skeptics state that there is no evidence for XYZ from the bible, your only valid response can be: "Hard evidence? No, you're right. There is none. But we have secondary evidence that suggests that XYZ may be true." Anything stronger than that is unwarranted and demonstrates bias on the part of the theist. Quote:
[This message has been edited by Omnedon1 (edited March 20, 2001).] |
|||
03-20-2001, 10:36 AM | #50 | |||||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|||||
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|