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04-26-2001, 09:24 PM | #31 | ||||
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As for everyone else, I only hope that they will continue to research this question, ask questions, offer their arguments and opinions, and be prepared to defend them. I cannot ask more than this of anyone, and will do this myself. Nomad |
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04-26-2001, 10:51 PM | #32 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Do you see a way out of this dilemna? Is there a means by which we could convince the committed myther that he is in error? Quote:
Allow me to give an example. Assume that you have met a man that tells you that he is the King of England, and that everyone in the world has conspired together to deprive him of his rightful crown. How would you convince him that he is in error, and that he is not really the king of England? With the Jesus Mythers, you will find the same difficulty. It will be my job to demonstrate how this happens, of course, and to identify the fundamental problem with the arguments and logic of the myther, but I assure you, and the same time, the myther's arguments will be internally consistent, and even compelling if examined in isolation. Quote:
That said, things in history can be proven to be more (or even overwhelmingly more) likely to have been historical. On the question of "Did Jesus exist?" we have this ability, and I will demonstrate that. Quote:
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BTW, this is not meant to be a personal attack. I know that for many here this is the first time that they have seriously examined the historicity of Jesus. I will assure you that the questions that will need to be asked and answered are no where nearly complex enough to require a university level education to understand. Perhaps as an analogy, you might appreciate how a scientist like Stephen Jay Gould disassembles the arguments of the Young Earth Creationists, and does it in a language that the rest of us can actually understand. That is what I hope to achieve here. (IOW, beware of overly complex and convoluted arguments! If we can't make our most basic beliefs comprehensible to others, we are in a great deal of trouble. ). Quote:
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Clearly, given this level of faith, I am not going to convince my pastor that the earth is very very old. At the same time, Doherty's professional reputation rests on his remaininga committed Jesus Myther. He literally cannot give it up and remain credible. Therefore I will not try to convince him that he is wrong. I can, however, demonstrate to others that he is very wrong. Therefore, like you, I hope that he will come here and present and defend his case. Quote:
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Allow me to offer one more quick example: In the 1800's it became very fashionable to claim that the Gospel of John was both gnostic, and was not written until the late 2nd Century (c. 180AD). Two things happened: First, we found a fragment (p52) that was from the Gospel of John, and if definitely dated to c. 125-150AD. The argument for the late date was obliterated, and dating was moved to 90-95AD (or earlier). Second, the Qumran find of the Dead Sea Scrolls showed that people that were wiped out in 68AD (and who wrote from 150BC to 50BC) held many of the same beliefs as did John in his gospel. Since the Essene community at Qumran is universally accepted as having been pre-gnostic, and non-gnostic, this argument also had to be rejected. Now, the arguments that Jesus is a mythical creations date back to this same period of time (first advanced about 1877), and have been debunked time and again by serious scholars of many languages and cultures, and beliefs. Christian, Jewish, agnostic and atheist scholars agree that Jesus existed. They may agree on little else (go figure, such is the nature of scholarly debate), but basic agreement that he lived and died are not seriously offered. There is good reason for this, and again, we will cover this off when the debate begins. Quote:
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Thank you. Brian (Nomad) |
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04-27-2001, 12:07 AM | #33 | ||||
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If you can prove that kata sarka has only one meaning in Koine Greek, that it always refers to physical flesh and never to some metaphorical flesh, you would undercut almost all of Doherty's thesis. If you can't do this, you leave open the possibility that Paul's references to Jesus were references to a spirit. And what rule of linguistics says that a phrase always has multiple meanings? Humpty Dumpty's rule? Did you pay your dictionary extra so words would mean what you want them to? That's how you debate? Quote:
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I suspect that you are 100% certain of Jesus' existence, because you have had some extra-historical experience with your religion. If it were not for this, what percentage probability would you assign to Jesus' existence? 51%? 95%? The evidence, after all, is not the sort of evidence that would stand up in a court of law. Quote:
[This message has been edited by Toto (edited April 27, 2001).] [This message has been edited by Toto (edited April 27, 2001).] |
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04-27-2001, 01:02 PM | #34 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Is there an easy way to reply without doing a lot of cutting, pasting, and deleted strange unwanted spaces in a case like this? Hitting the reply button simply gives me your last paragraph.
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I agree this all sounds strange but a main part of Doherty's argument is that these sorts of beliefs existed at the time and that it is reasonable to suggest that early Christianity could have had somewhat similiar beliefs. If you accept that at least some followers of some religions had these kinds of beliefs, then it is fair to ask how we can distinguish between those that are discussing a truly earthly being and those that are discussing a 'lower spiritual earth-like' being. Again, these things sound silly to me but plenty of religions have strange beliefs that don't make much sense to me. Doherty does not simply point at a reference to 'human' characteristics and simply reject it. He attempts to provide precedence in other literature for these kinds of descriptions as not being truly 'human'. He further argues that his interpretation makes the most sense given the context, and sometimes, even claims that assuming Paul or however is referring to an actual human would make virtually no sense at all. So there is clearly a method for showing that the mythicist is in error. First, show that either the precedence for a 'fleshy-spiritual' being doesn't exist or is unlikely to have influenced Christianity. Secondly, show that a truly human Jesus makes more sense in the context of the verse that describes him as 'human'. Quote:
And on the subject of experiments, would you consider the many decades of failed ability to find magnetic monopoles (magnetic equivalent of electrons) good evidence that they don't exist? If they did exist, they would make Maxwell's theories beautifully symmetric. However, serious attempts to detect them have failed. Is it possible that they exist? Yes. Do most physicisists think they exist? I don't think so. I'm simply trying to suggest that 'arguments from silence' don't fit in the same category as 'special pleading' and 'circular reasoning'. Imagined phone conversation. Eve: Hi Bob, is Alice home? Bob: No, I just got home and she didn't answer my yell and I don't see her. Eve: Don't be silly Bob. This doesn't mean she isn't home. She could be hiding, or maybe she went deaf and you didn't look hard enough. It seems to me that declaring something as an 'argument from silence' doesn't say anything at all about the strength of the argument. Positive evidence is certainly preferable, but negative evidence is evidence, nonetheless, and negative evidence together with positive evidence is even better, and the two can complement each other and provide for an even stronger argument. This is what Doherty claims to provide. Quote:
I understand your point, though, and Doherty gives reasons for his claims, as you know, and the strength of those claims need to be examined. Quote:
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And in the last couple hundred years, when all the real interesting work on the Bible has been done, there has continually been scholars who have pointed out that everything does not seem to be the way that many have long thought it to be. This takes a variety of forms, some rejecting nearly everything except for just a little (Jesus Seminar), some accepting quite a bit (most Christians), and a few accepting virtually nothing at all from the Gospels, such as Doherty. When I asked Crossan at a talk recently what I thought about the idea that Jesus was a myth as discussed by Wells and Doherty, he rambled a little bit but basically was admitting that he can show that Jesus was not a myth. This was not the clear rejection of the idea that many of you claim scholars have of the Jesus-myth idea. I don't doubt that Crossan would have much more to say in disagreement with Doherty, but this wasn't the rejection that one would expect from an evolutionists answering a question about young-earth-creationist. Unfortunately, it was just one tantalizing little statment. About the bias from English speaking translators. I don't think I'm presenting my arguments very well, because your responses are obviously correct but don't address what I'm thinking of. Most of the world thinks in a manner that makes a faily clear distinction between the spiritual and the physical. This is not a conspiracy. It is simply the way it is, and no doubt cultural contact over thousands of years have led to similar thinking. However, this clear distinction was not always present in all cultures, and this distinction was not clear in some groups of people nearby in both time and space to the early Christians. Doherty discusses this a great deal and refers to the various mystery religions and Greek gods as evidence. So when translators (of any language) come across phrases that use the word flesh, they think 'not spiritual' so it must mean flesh. Doherty is suggesting that there is a third alternative, a lower 'flesh-like' spiritual layer. The question we need to address is whether this third alternative is reasonable. Quote:
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arguments. Let's keep in mind, though, that the debate will likely revolve around less dramatic pieces of evidence. Quote:
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-------- You don't need to respond in much detail. This could easily balloon into a huge discussion and let's defer until we know one way or the other whether a debate will occur with Doherty. Thanks for your response. |
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04-27-2001, 01:35 PM | #35 |
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Just a suggestion on the debate - would it be better to have it as a formal debate, instead of a thread on these boards? Could Bill help you with that?
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04-28-2001, 12:24 AM | #36 | |
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04-30-2001, 10:43 AM | #37 | |||||||||
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Since he cannot do this (except to assert that all who have translated the Greek in the past are involved in a vast consipiracy to give the expression a meaning it did not have at the time Paul used it), then all of his arguments based on this presupposition are built on a faulty premise and must be dismissed. Quote:
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At the same time, remember that we do have eyewitness accounts of UFO sightings. I assume you dismiss these. I am not asking you to believe the extraordinary claims about the life of Jesus of Nazareth, only the pretty mundane stuff. Why do you refuse to believe that Jesus lived, taught, died and was buried? What arguments would you use that these perfectly ordinary things actually occured? Quote:
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I have the same problem with Holocaust deniers and young earth creationsists, as well as any other conspiracy theorists (from JFK, the United Nations and UFO's to whatever other subject you wish to choose). What got me into this discussion was the fact that so many sceptics were posting links to Doherty's work, yet refusing to defend his opinions. My intent now is to have someone do exactly that, and with luck Doherty himself will step forward. When we are done, and we are able to see that his arguments do not hold up, then we can then move onto more productive discussions. Quote:
Nomad |
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04-30-2001, 01:18 PM | #38 |
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This is getting hard to cut and paste. . .
NOMAD: You have misunderstood the point. Doherty's entire argument rests on the assumption that kata sarka MUST refer to a being in that exists on the spiritual plane. . . . Toto: I think that Doherty’s argument is only that kata sarka in Paul’s writing refers to a lower spiritual realm, not that it always meant that. But I will let him defend it. *** Toto: Humpty Dumpty's rule? Did you pay your dictionary extra so words would mean what you want them to? That's how you debate? Nomad: What are you talking about here Toto? Toto: If you haven’t read Alice in Wonderland, how do you expect to understand the modern world? * * * Nomad: I am not asking you to believe the extraordinary claims about the life of Jesus of Nazareth, only the pretty mundane stuff. Why do you refuse to believe that Jesus lived, taught, died and was buried? What arguments would you use that these perfectly ordinary things actually occured? Toto: I don’t refuse to believe, I just find that the evidence is weak. Those “ordinary” things are tied in with a number of unbelievable things that reduce the credibility of the whole. It’s like someone is trying to get you to invest in his new company, and explains a new technology that seems possible. But then he tells you that he got his ideas from space aliens, and a 20,000 year old channeled being from alpha centauri is his test engineer. Suddenly the whole scheme seems less likely, and you put away your checkbook. (snip all arguments previously hashed to death on other threads) *** Toto: I am not sure why you are so intent on this. Nomad: This is a very good point. Normally I am not spend time on this subject, as I have found debates with Jesus Mythers to be very tiresome, and frustrated by the fact that they do not have a null hypothesis. At the end of the discussion there is no means to falsify any of their claims, and on this basis they typically leave the discussion telling us that since we cannot be certain that they are wrong, maybe, just maybe, they are right. Toto: You throw around terms that you apparently do not understand. The “null hypothesis” is that the Jesus character in the Gospels did not exist. The skeptic examines the evidence, and finds it not sufficient to overcome the null hypothesis, or not. (Not all atheistic heretics think that Jesus was a myth. Skeptics can evaluate the evidence differently.) If you cannot “falsify” any of their claims, it is because you do not have any hard evidence. The evidence that you have only shows that there is some justification for believing the Jesus of the Gospels existed (i.e., that if you start with a different null hypothesis - that Jesus was not a myth - that that hypothesis cannot necessarily be rejected.) Nomad: I have the same problem with Holocaust deniers and young earth creationsists, as well as any other conspiracy theorists…. Toto: I wish you would lay off the gratuitous insults. Holocaust deniers ignore recent historical evidence, including eyewitnesses, documents, and hard evidence on the ground, because of their anti-Semitic ideology. YEC’s ignore hard physical evidence because of their ideological belief in an inerrant King James Bible. Jesus mythers merely interpret the evidence differently from you. If you are going to play the game on this board, you have to take their arguments seriously. If you can’t do that, you will not be very effective in debating Doherty. * * * I look forward to the debate, and thank Physics Guy for his work in setting it up. |
04-30-2001, 02:52 PM | #39 | |||||||||
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Goy. Last post to Toto unless he (she?) says something new and interesting.
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I would hope that you would see the logical inconsistency of your position, or admit that we don't know if any particular person ever lived in antiquity. Quote:
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It is alright to admit that Jesus really lived Toto. You will still be allowed to be an atheist, agnostic, pagan, or whatever. But denying that He lived is the equivalent of claiming that the earth came into existence a few thousand years ago. Quote:
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Nomad |
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04-30-2001, 06:50 PM | #40 | |||||||
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Yes, you're probably wasting your typing, Nomad.
Okay, it was Through the Looking Glass. Humpty Dumpty paid words extra to mean what he wanted them to. You think you have paid a few phrases extra (special pleading, null hypothesis) so they mean what you want. Quote:
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And if you are going to throw around terms like "null hypothesis", learn what they mean: http://www.animatedsoftware.com/statglos/sgnullhy.htm Quote:
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Toto the Cat ps - do you assume I might be a she because I don't swear at you? |
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