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Old 03-04-2006, 04:52 PM   #191
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Originally Posted by Ben C Smith
Jesus having brothers just makes too much sense of the ensuing pile of data to ignore.
References to his brothers are not the only relevant data.

Given an assumption that he was real, his having brothers is the only parsimonious way to make sense of assertions that he had brothers. Without that assumption, however, there are plenty of other ways to make sense of the same assertions when those assertions are evaluated together with all the other data pertaining to Christianity's origins.
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Old 03-04-2006, 04:57 PM   #192
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The parallels should be such that it is clear that it isn't a result of playing games with ambiguity and the law of large numbers.
You refer to the law of large numbers a lot. Unfortunately, it doesn't apply here. When you are dealing with myths and basic storyline components, the number of variants doesn't come close to what is necessary for the law of large numbers to come into play. The parallels are obvious and easily ascribable to human nature, no appeal to coincidence is necessary. All that is required is to strip the narrative down to its basic components.

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Old 03-04-2006, 05:08 PM   #193
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Originally Posted by Ben C Smith
I do not think I have accepted anything uncritically or naively. Jesus having brothers just makes too much sense of the ensuing pile of data to ignore.
My comment was in response to what I consider to be a naive and uncritical dismissal of the clearly questionable, albeit ultimately successful, efforts made by Christians in the 2nd century and beyond to establish their version of the faith as "orthodox".
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Old 03-04-2006, 05:16 PM   #194
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Er, the power is within the structure of the developing Christian "orthodoxy".
The story from Eusebius is that they were just farmers, at least until after their appearance in front of the Emperor. The implication is that it is this appearance that stimulated their lionization by the Church. (Lionization? Isn't that what Domitian was threatening them with? Honestly, I kill myself)


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It is simply naive, IMO, to ignore the clear intentional efforts that were made by those would come to call themselves "orthodox" to establish the appearance of a continuation tradition back to Jesus, himself. It is naive to ignore it and foolish to accept it uncritically.
You wouldn't believe the hoops that some Christians go through to prove that Jesus had no siblings. They don't want anything to suggest that Mary ever had carnal relations. The Church, early and later, never particularly wanted to highlight Jesus's earthly kin. Eusebius's willingness to even report the story from Hegesippus is a credit to him. Did you know that he was briefly excommunicated for Arian sympathies? I think the plain evidence of Jesus's earthly nature was unavoidable in the documents, and that Eusebius was a brave scholar to have accepted that evidence.

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Paul's references are what is being discussed so it really makes no sense to suggest that they corroborate anything.
I'm suggesting that when Hegesippus/Eusebius is cited to corroborate Paul, you shift the debate to a radical, improvised denial of the new evidence. To be logical and rational, you should first evaluate the connection between Paul and Hegesippus/Eusebius.
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Old 03-04-2006, 06:42 PM   #195
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Originally Posted by Julian
You refer to the law of large numbers a lot. Unfortunately, it doesn't apply here. When you are dealing with myths and basic storyline components, the number of variants doesn't come close to what is necessary for the law of large numbers to come into play.
That depends. Notice that I mentioned ambiguity as well. One can make up for a lack of variants by not being too picky about what constitutes a parallel or a similarily among the variants.

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Originally Posted by Julian
The parallels are obvious and easily ascribable to human nature, no appeal to coincidence is necessary.
I would halfway agree. A lot of myths are about what people are interested in: love, hate, sex, death, power, food. (Not an exhaustive list!) There's a lot of ways to talk about those things, but still opportunities for sharing a story element or two.

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Originally Posted by Julian
All that is required is to strip the narrative down to its basic components.
The problem is that what really happen is not a stripping down of a narrative into an outline, but a force-fitting of an outline onto a story, a la Procrustes.
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Old 03-04-2006, 08:24 PM   #196
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I'm suggesting that when Hegesippus/Eusebius is cited to corroborate Paul, you shift the debate to a radical, improvised denial of the new evidence.
I question how closely you've been following the thread since this does not appear to describe the discussion or my participation at all. For one thing, you seem to be suffering from the misapprehension that I deny Jesus walked on earth. And I certainly don't need advice from you about logic or rational thought, thanks all the same. Neither Hegesippus nor Eusebius "corroborate" Paul. They had been offered as corroboration of a particular interpretation of a Pauline phrase and as corroboration of a particular conception of James.

There is nothing radical nor improvised about anything I said with regard to the 2nd century struggle to attain the status of "orthodoxy".
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Old 03-04-2006, 09:32 PM   #197
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
Neither Hegesippus nor Eusebius "corroborate" Paul. They had been offered as corroboration of a particular interpretation of a Pauline phrase and as corroboration of a particular conception of James.
What I'm saying is that you have one rather abstruse theory to explain away Paul's references to Jesus's kin, and then a completely different theory to explain away the references in Eusebius. Does it not strike you as strange that you need two completely separate and convoluted theories to explain something that requires no theory at all if we accept both sets of references at face value?
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Old 03-04-2006, 11:10 PM   #198
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What I'm saying is that you have one rather abstruse theory to explain away Paul's references to Jesus's kin, and then a completely different theory to explain away the references in Eusebius.
Your apparent lack of comprehension for what I've written notwithstanding, if Paul's references are not to Jesus' kin and Eusebius' references are based on faulty assumptions obtained from a story of unverified historicity, I would think that more than one explanation would necessarily be involved. You are, of course, free to embrace a more simplistic view.
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