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10-18-2011, 05:49 PM | #881 | ||||||||||||||||
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But even if it were not meaningful, it would still be correct to say that it is not an accurate report of events that actually occurred. Obviously a meaningless statement is not an accurate report of events which actually occurred. Quote:
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However, being fictional is (at least sometimes) one of the ways of not being historically accurate. Quote:
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In fact, it looks to me a lot as if you are focussing on methodological issues. Methodology is important, but it shouldn't be confused with logic. Methodological priority is not the same thing as logical priority. Quote:
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10-19-2011, 03:05 PM | #882 | ||
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I'm saying "not- (x or y) but z". i.e., it's fiction, and we know it's fiction, therefore it's nonsense to say that it is an accurate report of anything (real), but it's also nonsense to say that it's not an accurate report of anything (real). How can fiction be not-accurate about the real world? It's not even ABOUT the real world in the first place. Quote:
What makes it that way is not choice of methodology but the way the world is. The world is either this way: "Jesus" is a fictional being with a human-sounding component (albeit likely a believed-in fiction, a fantasy superbeing). Or it's this way: "Jesus " is a man whose story got larded over with fantasy. Only if the world is the latter way, does your sentence ("Each of the four gospels makes some statements about Jesus which cannot possibly be historically true and some statements about Jesus which might or might not be historically true") make sense. If the world is the former way, the sentence ("Each of the four gospels makes some statements about Jesus which cannot possibly be historically true and some statements about Jesus which might or might not be historically true") is nonsense. Therefore, you must have already decided the world is the latter way (or perhaps granting that it's that way for the sake of an "if-then" argument). |
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10-19-2011, 05:44 PM | #883 | ||||||||
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Sometimes I get the impression that you think the affirmation 'this is not an accurate report of events in the real world' is equivalent to the affirmation 'this is an inaccurate report of events in the real world'. But you are not consistent about this. You effectively deny it every time you insist that some statement is neither of those things. Those implicit denials are correct. It is not the case that everything is either an accurate report of events in the real world or an inaccurate report of events in the real world; therefore, 'this is not an accurate report of events in the real world' is not equivalent to 'this is an inaccurate report of events in the real world'. In technical logical terms, the point about which you are confused is the scope of negation. Quote:
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10-19-2011, 05:48 PM | #884 | |
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There are at least TWO "real worlds" for Jesus. 1. The world of Myth. 2. The world of Belief. |
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10-19-2011, 05:50 PM | #885 | ||
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10-20-2011, 11:14 AM | #886 | |||
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A fictional text is not a not-accurate report because it fails to be accurate, it's a not-accurate report because it fails to be a report. Quote:
So either the referent of "Jesus" is like "Spiderman" (fictional on the basis of nothing real, albeit, unlike Spiderman, sincerely believed-in), or the referent of Jesus is like anything from "Popeye" (very vaguely based on somebody real) to something a bit like "Sabbatai Zevi" (in large part based on something real). In actual fact, I think the referent of "Jesus" is fictional like the normal Jewish concept of the "Messiah", only conceived of as having already been in the past, rather than to come in the future - i.e. a fictional mythical divine god-man (or god-king) hero, at least one of whose central tropes has been inverted. Quote:
But you didn't start off with statements in general, but statements ABOUT JESUS. Specifically about Jesus. You originally said (paraphrasing) "either it's an accurate report ABOUT JESUS or it's not an accurate report ABOUT JESUS". But if the statement is ABOUT JESUS then the nature of that "Jesus" changes the nature of the statement - because if that Jesus is part of the real world, then your logic holds, whereas if he's not part of the real world, then your logic doesn't hold (you're already on the "not accurate report about the real world" side of the equation) It's the "aboutness" that makes all the difference, as I've said from the beginning - the intentionality of the statements. A statement about Jesus that is not an accurate report must be not an accurate report about Jesus - i.e. it pertains specifically to Jesus, and presupposes that he's amenable to accurate or not accurate reports, i.e. presupposes that he's a real person. |
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10-20-2011, 11:23 AM | #887 | |
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People can KNOWINGLY make false statements about characters that they KNOW or accept do NOT exist at the very time the statement was uttered for the purpose of DECEPTION. |
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10-20-2011, 01:15 PM | #888 | ||||
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1. There are statements in the four canonical Gospels in which the word 'Jesus' is used. (Note that for this purpose I am taking no position on whether those statements are 'about' Jesus, or indeed whether they are 'about' anything, whatever 'about' may mean.) 2. Some of those statements cannot possibly be literally accurate reports of events that actually took place in the real world. (Note that for this purpose I am taking no position on what they are, only on what they cannot be.) 3. Others of those statements are such that they might or might not be literally accurate reports of events that actually took place in the real world. (Note that for this purpose I am taking no position on what they are, only indicating possible answers to a still-open question.) Out of 1, 2, and 3, which do you disagree with, and why? It can't be because of any issue of 'aboutness', since none of those three statements depends on 'aboutness'. |
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10-20-2011, 02:35 PM | #889 | ||
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10-20-2011, 04:39 PM | #890 | |
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All that appears is a greek version of the abbreviation 'J_S' where the underscore represents an over-bar. This is another reason a MJ is the more likely explanation, because Jesus was a Code Name and one not out in the open. What is even more suspicious is that the authors of the new testament claimed to have preserved this code name "J_S" from the hero of the LXX called 'Joshua'. This is the stuff of encrypted legends not real people. |
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