Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
11-28-2008, 04:55 AM | #11 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: N/A
Posts: 4,370
|
Quote:
I would suggest that anyone interested in this purchase a copy of Betty Radice's excellent translation of Pliny's Letters (or via: amazon.co.uk), and read it informally a couple of times, over time. This is partly because it is well worth the reading, but also because it gives us so much about those times. What I would suggest is that they then ask yourself how much of that information we would have, if we merely wrote a version "based initially on materials from the era, coins, epigraphy and inscriptions, statuary, and anything else in the archaeological record." I imagine the result would fill half a page of paper at most. What part of the conduct of Regulus is recorded in such sources? Or the table talk of Nerva? If they are uncertain, let them compare the early volumes of the Cambridge Ancient History where the information is almost entirely archaeological, and so tentative, against the later ones. Archaeology is incredibly valuable; but also incredibly limited, as I remarked earlier. As I remarked earlier, scholars differ on where the balance should be; but the limitations of archaeology as a source for writing history tend to become obvious when you try to do so. All the best, Roger Pearse |
||
11-28-2008, 06:01 AM | #12 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Bordeaux France
Posts: 2,796
|
Nitpick : I have seen some of them with the motto "Gott mit uns". They are not mute. They speak to me of a colour (vert-de-gris), and of an epoch (1939-1945).
A gothic belt-buckle found in a burial-place next to a skeleton is an important element when the archeologist wants to date the burial-place. You could change your example. |
11-28-2008, 07:46 AM | #13 | ||
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
|
Quote:
But your comment indicates to me that we aren't communicating. Quote:
Archaeology is not necessarily the source for writing history. It is the major source of validation of narratives. How can you decide if an ancient text is dealing with real events? There are vast problems with the Augustan History and we are lucky to be able to validate or repudiate some of the content in that work because there is enough connection between the narrative contained in it and events that can be checked. So, how can you decide if an ancient text is dealing with real events? It doesn't matter how much narrative you've got, if it is untestable. The meager results from archaeology are far better than a tome of unattached narrative. spin |
||
11-28-2008, 09:01 AM | #14 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Edmonton
Posts: 5,679
|
Quote:
However, respect for the primacy of texts, and texts written in at least two 'dead' languages requiring a lengthy period of linguistic and cultural immersion before they can be 'read' at even the most straightforward level, has tended to inhibit any Gadarene rush towards modernity, let alone postmodernity, of local or global interpretation in this field of historiography. Ancient historians have even been relatively slow to deploy systematically the 'ancillary' disciplines of archaeology, epigraphy and numismatics to eke out or contextualize their preferred literary sources, let alone indulge in the consensual interdisciplinarity and and comparativism rightly desiderated below by Jairus Banaji (Chapter 6), across the whole range of thematic and material issues confronting them in their potentially highly heterogeneous area and period.--"Introduction: The Anxiety of Ambiguity" / Paul Cartledge. In Companion to Historiography / Michael Bentley (Taylor & Francis, 2002), p. 2-3.Cartledge notes three exceptions to the general rule: Arnaldo Momigliano (paging Dr. Mountainman), Moses Finley and Geoffrey de Ste Croix. Now, this is all well and good, but none of it leads Cartledge to think that Christ's historicity is in question any more than is that of Alexander the Great. He asserts in his biography of Alexander (p. 268) that, "[i]t has been well said that the search for the historical Alexander is something like the search for the historical Jesus." He elaborates: Yet no contemporary narrative account of [Alexander the Great's] career exists, and what is generally reckoned to be the most persuasive of those that do survive was written by Arrian, a Greek from Asia Minor, well over four centuries after Alexander's premature death, aged thirty-two, at Babylon in 323 BC. This situation makes the search for the 'real' Alexander almost impossibly difficult. |
|
11-28-2008, 09:23 AM | #15 | |||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: N/A
Posts: 4,370
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
But I note that you have ignored everything I said. If you read what I said, and follow my suggestions, you will learn why I demur at the position you have decided to repeat. All the best, Roger Pearse |
|||||
11-28-2008, 11:33 AM | #16 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: N/A
Posts: 4,370
|
Quote:
Quote:
Lumps of otherwise unknown archaeology provoke head-scratching. (In my experience they are usually assigned as "religious items", if no-one on the dig can think of any better explanation). I feel that attempts are being made to maneouvre me into a position that I don't hold and have already disagreed with -- that archaeology is worthless -- to advance the proposition that ancient texts are fundamentally unreliable and secondary. Yet I've already said different, and will repeat in summary (don't you hate it when people ignore your nuanced comments, and then jump on a brief summary?). Archaeology is inestimably valuable, because it allows us direct factual access to the past. The difficulty is the limited nature of what it actually *says*. Nearly always we have to draw deductions from it, to get anything historical out. This is why artefacts, however lovely, without an archaeological context are so infuriating to us all. Thus we really have to work to get information out of these things; and, however hard we work, we won't get nearly the sort of information that an scurrilous anecdote of a paragraph from a writer will give us, however inaccurate, biased, or whatever, simply by virtue of being a human pair of eyes looking at the scene with the attitudes of the era. Quote:
Of course to some extent you can see it the other way as well! I'm not taking a position either way, and the wars between the historians and the archaeologists are not for me to get involved in! But I don't feel that we're in any danger of dismissing archaeology; rather the opposite, of overvaluing it. But I was really serious about reading history written almost solely from archaeology -- the early volumes of the Cambridge Ancient History are really pretty unreadable in consequence. All the best, Roger Pearse |
|||
11-28-2008, 12:55 PM | #17 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: London, UK
Posts: 3,210
|
Quote:
But actually both a belt buckle and a text are in need of interpretation, they are logically on a footing, only one has more symbols on its face - and the interpretation that a text is an eyewitness testimony (for example ) is as much an interpretation (i.e. a punt, a hypothesis) as that the belt buckle was a product of the apparel factories of Nazi Germany. |
|
11-28-2008, 01:10 PM | #18 | |||||
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
|
Quote:
See below. Quote:
Quote:
Back to this: Quote:
I think you are just lean too much towards nice traditional literary sources. spin |
|||||
11-28-2008, 05:45 PM | #19 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Latin America
Posts: 4,066
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
||
11-28-2008, 07:01 PM | #20 | ||
Junior Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: London
Posts: 39
|
Quote:
I can see the sense is well informed information as apposed to merely contemporary information. However, how do we establish that they are well informed? I guess we can look to see how accurate they are about things we do know (things we have multiple sources on) such as the geographic area, local customs of the area the write about, etc. If they make mistakes here then perhaps it indicates that they are not informed, or are not concerned with being accurate, which would seem to cast doubt about content entirely, right? |
||
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|