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03-23-2001, 11:35 AM | #141 | ||
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Peace, Polycarp |
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03-23-2001, 11:53 AM | #142 |
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Dismissing Crossan.
I was responding to your unequivocal rejection of what you mischaracterized as "Meier's" criteria. A point that you failed to respond to. Crossan employs many of the criteria I laid out. He doesn't dismiss them as only "Meier's" criteria. Moreover, your claims that Meier and Wright are nothing more than "horribly biased clergymen" is an assertion without evidence. Not having read anything by them, I'm curious how you conclude such a thing? They are both respected by their colleagues, secular as well as religious, and Meier in particular has a reputation for being unbiased. Although a Catholic, he concludes that Jesus was born in Nazareth, not Bethlehem. He also concludes that Mary was not a perpetual virgin, and that Jesus had many brothers and sisters. He has demonstrated his ability to apply the above-mentioned criteria dispassionately and without bias. And, I might add, he agrees with you that we cannot prove that Jesus performed miracles through history. According to Meier, the best we can do is demonstrate that Jesus, his followers, and his enemies believed that Jesus performed miracles. You also fail to mention E.P. Sanders, who applies the so-called "Meier" criteria. He agrees with you that miracles are impossible, but he employs the criteria often throughout his Jesus and Judaism and The Historical Figure of Jesus. As for Sai Baba and the Chinese Miracles. You are missing my point. I have said that we can't provide conclusive evidence that Jesus performed miracles, but I reject your notion that we have "no" evidence that he did. Those are two very different things. There is evidence that Jesus performed miracles. There is evidence that Sai Baba performed miracles. There is evidence that the Taoists performed miracles. Is it conclusive? No, but it exists. The fact that you think Baba's have been disproven doesn't mean there was no evidence to support his claims. Again, all you do is supply evidence that other miracles may have happened. You justify this by saying they can't both be right. Why? I retract the "more intelligent" comment as to you. I'm sure that they are more intelligent than me. But I don't know you well enough to say the same about you. As for methodological naturalism. I have no desire to invalidate it. It's just the employment of an assumption that is not proven by the discipline itself. If you are studying history through the lens of methodological naturalism, then you cannot claim that history demonstrates that no miracles have even happened. You are simply reiterating the assumption you began with. It is not a historical conclusion, it is a philosophical one. "Yes, using the assumption of methodological naturalism, which could be exploded by even a single genuine miracle, I have deduced that the miracles in the gospel are fictions. What's the problem with that? Even some Christians do that." No. You cannot deduce from methodological naturalism that the miracle stories in the New Testament are fiction. Using methodological naturalism, all you can do is assume that they are fiction. And I disagree with you that it would only take one genuine miracle to explode methodological naturalism. I think that is part of the camel's nose in the tent fear that drives so many skeptics to have contempt for Christians and other theists. If we always use methodological naturalism to study history, then history will never discover any "genuine miracle." Moreover, even if we did find one, or even a dozen, a commitment to methodological naturalism would still be appropriate for historians. By definition, miracles are unpredictable events. "Your criterion of dissimilarity is entirely subjective. After all, Sai is quite unique, nobody else in his milieu materializes miniature bibles and fotos of Jesus (nobody else would bother)." Perhaps I have mislead you as to the criterion of dissimilarity. It does not mean that Jesus' miracles were unlike ANY ever performed before him or after him. It means that they were dissimilar from his contemporaries. In Jesus' case it is possible to find double dissimilarity. Dissimilarity from Judaism and dissimilarity from early Christianity. And the criterion is actually not "entirely subjective." We have a good deal of historical data as to early Jewish and Christian belief. Comparing Jesus teachings on divorce, for example, to that of his Jewish contemporaries. Those contemporaries had somewhat liberal divorce laws for men, while Jesus expressly taught that men should not divorce their wives. What is subjective about that? I also asserted that Palestinian Jews were not known for claiming that their contemporaries were performing miracles. You responded with two points. First, that there were skeptics among the Chinese traditions. This response misses my point. You seem to concede that there were large numbers of Chinese, even committed disciplines such as Taoism, who were reporting miracles. This seems to mean that the miracle accounts were coming from communities who reported many miracles. The presence of skeptics outside of those communities is irrelevant to this point. The reports of the miracles were coming from people who commonly reported miracles. (As I said, I'm uninformed about Chinese history, so please correct me if I am wrong). Second, you seem to say that I am just wrong, that the Jews of that time were known for reporting miracles like those Jesus performed. You first rely on the Bablyonian Talmud traditions of Hanina and Akiba. Even if these traditions are traceable back to Jesus' contemporaries, their "miracles" are actually quite distinct from Jesus' and were not reported by his contemporaries. One of my projects is to update the Jesus, Miracle-Worker post to incorporate these distinctions. The most analogous of Jesus' contemporaries were the other "messiah" types who attempted to rally supporters to their cause by claiming that they would perform miracles. There is no record that any of them actually performed any miracles, and when they were executed by the authorities, their followers dissipated. No miracle stories arose regarding them. You also raise the fact that Jews believed in the miracles of the Old Testament. Again, you are confusing the presence of skeptics with dissimilarity. Not the same thing. Although Jews no doubt believed that God could perform miracles, there is a scarcity of miracle reports among the Jewish contemporaries of Jesus. Believing that he could and believing that he was are two different things. A point highlighted by the examples of executed messiah types who claimed they could do miracles. Despite their belief in a coming messiah and in miracles, no Jew ever reported that these other executed messiahs, in fact, delivered. As to the presence of persecution, you stated, "LOTS of people report the extraordinary despite suffering abuse and ridicule, in every society: UFOs, ghosts...." I'm not aware of many people being tortured or put to death for reporting UFO's and ghosts. And I think you are just trying to avoid an admission. People that suffer for the claim that they are making are more credible than those that prosper because of the claim that they are making. You close by saying that the evidence for Jesus performing miracles is about as good as any other miracle reports of antiquity. I disagree with that, especially considering the confirmed expectations of the Jews who actually reported his miracles. In many ways, it would be as if the skeptics in ancient China suddenly reversed themselves and started reporting miracles too. |
03-23-2001, 12:03 PM | #143 |
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"Huh? Where did you hear that the criteria used here were used inappropriately? The criteria are not at fault; we simply have a new skull to deal with."
You don't even bother to address my point. Even legitimate criteria may be misapplied or applied correctly and be wrong. "2. And the only ones around here saying that history cannot be investigated are you and Pollyfish - remember? "We can't study one-time events in history"? It's the skeptics who are saying that such events can be scientifically studied." Actually, no, I don't remember saying that because it is the exact opposite of what I actually said. Polycarp and I have both maintained that history can be studied and investigated. I have maintained from the beginning that we have the ability to investigate history. I actually agreed with you that archeology had an important part to play in the study of history. I actually referred you to several posts by myself and Nomad where we discussed latest archeological finds and their implications for New Testament history. You may be confused by my statement that there are limitations on what archeology can tell us about history. My point was that an event such as the resurrection of Jesus wouldn't leave much archeological evidence. It is you who have completely rejected the commonly used tools that the scholarly community relies on to investigate the New Testament. |
03-23-2001, 01:07 PM | #144 |
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umm it seems pretty obvious that you can't prove J did miracles given your methods: the best you can do is say it's highly probable that they made claims to the effect. so umm why ought you worship him? Why ought anyone trust such claims? How do you know you're not being hoodwinked by admittedly Christian (biased) sources on this matter? You already admitted that your criteria can't really get to a solid error - so how do you know? Further, how do you know that J isn't in violation of Deut 13 as the pharisees obviously thought (given J's perceived blasphemies)? etc..etc... BTW - you also said something to the effect that Jews attested to J's miracles: umm which non-Christian Jewish sources attest to J's miracles? Do they also attest to his perceived blasphemies and why they rejected him? |
03-23-2001, 02:26 PM | #145 |
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Polycarp:
You did not answer my question. What are your standards for identifying gods/sons of gods/etc. If you met someone who claimed he was Jesus--THE Jesus, how would you know he was Jesus? |
03-23-2001, 02:57 PM | #146 | |
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The Jewish sources: Josephus, who refers to Jesus as the "so-called" Christ. The Bablyonian Talmud, which refers to Jesus as a sorcerer and blasphemer. And, I believe Celsus, but I need to do some more research on him. I'm not sure someone can "know" that they are not being "hood winked." I don't believe that I am. How about you? Why do you worship Jesus? |
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03-23-2001, 03:05 PM | #147 | ||
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I was responding to isa457 who was asking for empirical verification of a non-empirical truth claim by asking to see Jesus on earth today. It’s a category mistake. Before you ask why god wouldn’t want to prove himself to us by bowing to our command, let me make it clear that the Christian god does not take orders from us mere humans. Isa457 brought up the issue of the resurrection of Jesus. Why don’t you ask him how it could be proven that Jesus was the one knocking on his door? I’ve already stated that EMPRICAL verification will not occur until after I die. At this point I’m believing on the basis of probability in the same way most people believe their spouse loves them, that it will rain today, or that we will some day have a manned mission to Mars. I’ll get back to you after I’m dead – what number will you be at ? You want to start an entirely new topic. This is not in any way related to the issue of the this thread (historical method) which somehow has been ignored of late by you and Omnedon. Hmmm… I wonder why that is? Peace, Polycarp |
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03-23-2001, 03:08 PM | #148 | |
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Bob and I want to know how you would know if it was Jesus who showed up at your door. Peace, Polycarp |
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03-23-2001, 09:32 PM | #149 | |||||
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So I ask you again: what evidence do you have that the new discoveries about the Lucy skeleton came about as a result of misapplied criteria? As opposed to merely being the result of new evidence having recently come to light? Or is this just another example of you not understanding the material? And thus trying to condemn science on grounds of criteria - - when neither the criteria, nor the application of the criteria, can be faulted for the recent shake-up of the evolutionary tree? Quote:
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I am not impressed by appeals to authority, especially when the so-called authority is a small circle of bible scholars who want the principle of methodological naturalism suspended just for them. As SingleDad said about your busted criterion of embarrassment: Quote:
And you can add "coherence" to the list of bullshit historical criteria, for reasons of extreme subjectivity and unfalsifiability. So, yes, I reject your six criteria, because:[list=1][*]they are flawed (as I, turtonm, and SingleDad have pointed out);[*]you have whined and wailed loudly, with much gnashing of teeth, yet you have still not addressed or remedied the flaws;[*]your entire argument is appeal to authority - but if you cannot defend your own criteria well enough without saying, "just go read such-and-such", then apparently you do not understand the arguments well enough to defend them[/list=a] [This message has been edited by Omnedon1 (edited March 23, 2001).] [This message has been edited by Omnedon1 (edited March 23, 2001).] |
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03-23-2001, 09:54 PM | #150 | |||||
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As to replying to your recent post - I'm still waiting for you to show the probability math for your 90% and 95% claims. A 95% claim is a strong claim for solid proof. Again: Quote:
a. provide the data b. modify the claim c. retract the claim Quote:
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As turtonm says: Quote:
We don't believe in the miracles. But we are using your own "six criteria" here to beat you. By giving you an example that satisfies your busted six criteria, you and deLayman have a decision to make. You must concede that the case is much stronger for Sai Baba, than for Christ. If you fail to do so, then the inescapable fact is that both of you are hypocrites. That would be evidence that you do not, in fact, arrive at your conclusions based upon an examination of the evidence, and consistent application of your own criteria. Instead, you reverse-engineer your faith. So what's it gonna be? |
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