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05-25-2001, 01:46 PM | #21 |
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Nomad has ignored my earlier post on the bogus use of "embarrassment", but I keep looking for other evidence that anyone uses the "criterion of embarrassment" as a major research tool. I have found another source that trashes it:
Excerpt From Jesus of Nazareth: Millenarian Prophet by Dale C. Allison I think the problem is that Nomad thinks it's just so obvious and common sense. But "embarrassment" or surprize or statements against interest may increase the probability of something being true, but hardly to the extent that they constitute proof. For example, every day people walk into police stations and confess to crimes that they didn't commit. Under the criteria of embarrassment, this should be enough to convict them, but the police have enough experience to not accept these confessions at face value without other confirming information - knowledge of the crime scene that was not in the newspapers, etc. The motives of the confessor could well be the desire for publicity or some more serious mental aberration, rather than a need to confess. Or people have been know to confess to minor crimes or misdemeanors to avoid major charges. The value of embarrassment is so weak, it is of hardly any help in deciding what is true about ancient legends. |
05-25-2001, 02:47 PM | #22 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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I certainly am glad that you don’t have time for a lengthy debate Philip, or I might mistake your four page reply for something quick and dirty.
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Apparently plenty of sceptics on these boards would accept Jesus existed, but unfortunately people keep claiming that He is God. This is a red herring however, and demonstrates their willingness to apply a double standard to the existence of Jesus. Quote:
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Philip tells us that I think that Doherty is in league with Satan, so all is fair game. Further, he continues to link me with Holding, I suppose because this is a good red meat technique with the mouth breathers out there in the sceptic world. I am not certain. Now, from my point of view, I have no idea what Philip is talking about. I have NEVER thought of Doherty as being in league with Satan. Quite frankly, all I have ever thought about him is that his arguments are pure nonsense, and sophistry. No doubt it is more comforting to Philip to think that I will not take Doherty seriously because of some theological bias, but I would recommend that he stick to debating me, and not try to psychoanalyzing me. Quote:
As for Doherty wanting to only be involved in tightly regulated debates, this is quite true. What you failed to mention is that one of the regulations he demands be met is that any opponent that offends him in any way must be censored from the debate, and possibly banned. If you have not checked out how he is trying to remove the moderator of the Jesus Mystery Boards yet, you should. It is instructive in his methods, and will go a very long ways towards informing you as to why I insisted that the debate take place on the SecWeb. Quote:
The suggestion that you attempted to plant, that I somehow plotted to drive Doherty from the debate is disingenuous, and you know full well that you are merely attempting to assassinate my character and protect Doherty in the process. Personally, I don’t really care, I have grown accustomed to such techniques from you and others, and have been content merely to offer my arguments and evidence, and let the chips fall where they may. If my skin were even 1/10th as thin as Doherty’s I would never have come to discussion forums like this in the first place, and I am sure that he will feel much safer in his protected forum where he can intimidate (and if he gets his way, remove) the moderator and any opponents that may challenge him. Quote:
As for his rejection of the criterion of embarrassment, I will deal with that tonight in my reply to his post. Quote:
I hope you will have the decency to apologize. You have done this once before with me, so I know that you are capable of it. Quote:
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If we accept John’s existence on the basis of a single passage in Josphus, then we can do the same with Jesus. I will expand on this point more in my reply to Doherty, as I assume that he tried to rationalize why the two instances are not at all alike. Quote:
Doherty just wants us to think that the Church did a great sales job, spinning the event in such a manner that it was not embarrassing at all. Of course, this “spin” is apologetics at work, and Doherty buys it the same way Christians do, even if for totally opposite reasons. Quote:
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Quite simply, Doherty cannot have his cake and eat it too. If these scholars are trapped in their biases, and subject to unseen peer pressures (which Doherty never quite proves exist, I suppose his assertions of this “truth” should be sufficient for the people who have faith in him), then he should not be appealing to them to support him on the one or two occasions when their opinions conveniently line up with his own. Further, as I said in my own arguments, I don’t have to prove the historicity of Joseph of Arimathea to prove that Jesus existed, so the argument is irrelevant. See below. Quote:
I really do wonder at your sceptical credentials sometimes Philip. Quote:
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Thus, when Paul employs phrases and words that are common with the Gospels, but Doherty wants to pretend that Paul’s meaning is significantly different from that used by those Gospels, he is blowing smoke. Again, how credulous can you get to even grant Doherty the right to make such fallacious arguments? Quote:
By comparing the phrases to what we find in the Gospels (not to mention other epistles, like from Ignatius), we can see how faulty Doherty’s reasoning really is. Quote:
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At the same time, I will deal with Doherty again tonight, and who knows? Maybe he will have a rethink yet again, and return. Brian (Nomad) |
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05-25-2001, 04:01 PM | #23 |
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Would someone please point me to a link or two presenting a credible apologetic for the baptism? I've checked the JP debate and if it's there I couldn't find it. I've also checked Gleason Archer and took a spin through Tekton, all to no avail.
Frankly, I think the odds are about zero that there's an apologetic acceptable to contemporary Christians that would not also have been a plausible rationalization for the Gospel writers, but I'd rather read the apologetic before making a judgment. BTW, Nomad, the notion (as you suggest in the JP debate) that only believers may use apologetics in an embarrassment analysis is absurd. The question is how the author whose statement is being tested could have or should have perceived the point. |
05-25-2001, 04:45 PM | #24 |
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I have to respond to a few of last Nomad's comments.
**** NOMAD: I certainly am glad that you don't have time for a lengthy debate Philip, or I might mistake your four page reply for something quick and dirty. EARL: I said in the other thread that I don't have time now for a "serious" debate (such as one on the mystery traditions), as in one where I would have to run all over the place to do research. NOMAD: Actually, yes, I did quote from two scholars in particular, Michael Grand and Donald Akenson, both atheists, who accept the historicity of the event, and by extension, of Jesus, EARL: But their use of the criterion of embarrassment presupposes Jesus' existence, and therefore can be used only to show that given Jesus' existence he was baptized by John. Show me where a scholar uses the criterion and explicitly says "therefore Jesus probably existed" as opposed "therefore given that Jesus existed he did such and such." NOMAD: OH!!! I see. You were attacking my tone, and calling my TONE arrogant, abusive, sloppy, dishonest (the real meaning of misrepresentation), but you certainly were not calling ME arrogant, abusive, sloppy, and dishonest. Thank you for the correction Philip. I withdraw my charge. Obviously you were not attacking me. EARL: I was attacking the tone of the arguments that you wrote. My comments were directed at the arguments not the person making them irrespective of the arguments. NOMAD: LOL! Philip, I withdrew my charge, but your continued insistence that attacking someone's "tone" is not an attack on the person is noted. I'm going to keep that in mind for future discussions. [SNIP] EARL: You call that a withdrawal? Sounded pretty sarcastic to me. NOMAD: Don't be stupid or dense Philip. By now you know full well that I am willing to debate with all kinds of people, including non-Christians, atheists, and agnostics. I have told you often enough that I do not judge these people as "going to hell", and the fact that you have repeated this lie here and now is disgraceful. I hope you will have the decency to apologize. You have done this once before with me, so I know that you are capable of it. [SNIP] EARL: I didn't say you believe that Doherty is necessarily going to hell. I'm aware of your beliefs regarding hell, freewill, sufficient knowledge, religious experience, and so forth. I said that you must believe--assuming you believe that Satan exists--that Doherty whether he knows it or not is doing Satan's work, turning people away from Christ in a way more audacious than non-mythicist skeptics. Do you believe that Satan exists? If so, then it's reasonable to believe that that is indeed a factor in the abusive tone you use towards Doherty. I'm sure you also believe that Doherty's arguments are untenable, and that's a non-confessional factor in your response to him. But it's possible to have mixed motivations, isn't it? If you don't believe that Satan exists, then my claim has no basis in fact and I apologize. EARL: Then Nomad goes ahead and admits that after all Jesus' burial is indeed "controversial in the scholarly community," and states that that's the reason he didn't bring in Joseph to prove that Jesus existed. NOMAD: Nice little misrepresentation of my argument. Very sneaky Philip. I'm glad you did not elaborate on this lie, so I will leave it alone. EARL: Yes, Nomad had another reason why he didn't want to introduce Joseph, because he thought it would bog down the debate in irrelevant matters. Otherwise my statement was perfectly accurate. Here is Nomad's comment in its entirety from the debate: "There are a couple of reasons that I did not bring up this particular incident in my "proofs" of the life of Jesus. First, I did not want to present any that are in any way controversial in the scholarly community, no matter how restricted that controversy might be. I happen to agree with Raymond Brown (Death of the Messiah), Robin Lane Fox (The Unauthorized Version), Michael Grant and other historians and scholars that consider Joseph of Arimathea to be probably historical, but I do not have to prove it in order to establish the historicity of Jesus of Nazareth. Respected scholars disagree on this particular issue, and I did not see any reason to bog down the discussion on such points, and this was the second reason I elected not to introduce it into the discussion. We already have plenty to talk about in this debate. There is no point bringing in even more just yet. At the same time, for those more interested in why I consider this person to have been historical, I refer you to another conversation I had with another Earl on these boards found at the thread Jesus Christ: Worth Burying in a Tomb?" |
05-25-2001, 06:53 PM | #25 |
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Wow! I'm gone 36 hours and the board explodes.
From the commentary on the Gospel of the Hebrews at the Early Gospels s site: The earliest followers of Yahshua believed that Yahshua was empowered by the Holy Spirit at his immersion, not at his birth (thus they did not include the later birth narratives in their gospel). Since apparently at least some of the earliest Christians believe baptism was not only not embarrassing, but necessary, it follows that Nomad's application of the embarrassment criterion in the JBaptist case would fail even in its own terms. Michael |
05-25-2001, 07:11 PM | #26 | |
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I am truly amazed at how quickly you accept that the Gospel of the Hebrews has some historical value as to what the earliest Christians believed but are so skeptical about gospels that were written so many years earlier. One what basis do you claim that the author of the Gospel of the Hebrews was one of the "earliest Christians?" I was under the impression that it was written well into the second century at the earliest? |
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05-25-2001, 11:30 PM | #27 |
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I had previously posted an indication that the Ebionites also saw the baptism as the anointing of Jesus, the point at which God adopted him as his son. So the baptism could not be considered embarrassing.
It is one thing to use a text as evidence of what people believed when it was written, and quite another to use it as reported history. But you knew that, right? Mike's quote is from an offsite link. (The earlygospels.net site will never win an award for good web design.) Try this: http://home.talkcity.com/ParadiseDr/nkuehl/Hebrews.html |
05-26-2001, 01:24 AM | #28 |
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FYI, Layman, I decided to take a look at Early Gospels just for giggles. The link is there. You just have to scroll down the left-hand navigation window.
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05-26-2001, 05:30 AM | #29 | |
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Once again, since some early Christians, as two of us noted, considered baptism a necessity, Nomad's application of the embarrassment criterion fails in its own terms (never mind in its presupposition, as Earl and I have both pointed out, that the gospels are recording actual events). Michael [This message has been edited by turtonm (edited May 26, 2001).] |
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05-26-2001, 06:19 AM | #30 | |
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Here' all that you have to do in order to demonstrate that the event was not embarrassing to the evangelists: Show that 1st Century Jews expected the Messiah to be baptized or to be subject to anyone besides God. Do that, and then you will have made your case. Try not to be so credulous about what 3rd Century sources like the Ebonionites thought (or 21st Century ones for that matter) please. Nomad |
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