FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 02-22-2007, 06:54 PM   #81
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 2,293
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sauron
You're attempting to poison the well by making Richard Carrier out to be a close-minded dogmatist. Having corresponded with Richard I can tell you that your characterization of him is wrong.
Sauron, greetings.

Imho you are mixing a couple of issues. We saw on the LXX thread that Richard can be a gentleman as he accepted well a correction that I offered him on the LXX article (that he had used the 'weakest link' for the opposing view). And he took up the gauntlet to begin the correction process. No comment here on the major issue there, it was just too messy, but on the auxiliary issue he responded well.

Yet a person can be open-minded and yet still write their articles with lots of baggage and presumptions that really have problems. I ran into the two above only because we were discussing Beyer (I noticed other stuff in the Nativity article that looked good and most of the article I simply have not read). Judge and I see quotes like the two above as astounding, how could he write that ? That does not mean that either he or I paint Richard as a full-orbed "close-minded dogmatist" or that we are trying to "poison the well". We are simply pointing out a real scholarly concern.

Perhaps I am speaking too generally for Judge, and if so my apologies. However I see Judge's concern as contextual, that in certain elements, certain arguments, Richard lacks some of the objectivity and clarity that he seeks to bring to the table as an aspiring professional historian.

Shalom,
Steven Avery
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Messianic_Apologetic
Steven Avery is offline  
Old 02-22-2007, 06:57 PM   #82
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

Well, now that I've read about 4 different versions of this, I do not understand praxeus' complaint. Richard Carrier and spin seem to agree that Beyer did not identify the manuscripts he examined by the necessary criteria to judge his work.

praxeus does not seem to understand what Carrier says. He misinterprets Carrier's confidence in his research for dogmatism. When Carrier says ""Even allowing such an inconceivable error on the part of Josephus" praxeus seems not to notice that Carrier goes on to examine the case where Josephus is assumed to have made that error.

So what is the problem here?

:huh:
Toto is offline  
Old 02-22-2007, 07:06 PM   #83
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by judge View Post
So we have a registration without taxation.
What makes you think that? What exactly is an apografh for?

Quote:
Originally Posted by judge
You didn't answer my question though.

Here it is again...Who, do you imagine, would have been retranslating a Latin text back into ancient greek?
Who retranslated the Hebrew back to the Greek version?


spin
spin is offline  
Old 02-22-2007, 07:26 PM   #84
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Bli Bli
Posts: 3,135
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sauron View Post
You're attempting to poison the well by making Richard Carrier out to be a close-minded dogmatist. Having corresponded with Richard I can tell you that your characterization of him is wrong.

Moreover, a cursory glance through his writing will show that he entertains the contrary arguments to his position - something he would not do, if he were as dogmatic as you're desperately trying to make him out to be. In fact, you can't even get through the first page of his essay, without seeing him demonstrate that he is willing to entertain the idea that he might be wrong:
The reliabilty of Josephus is crucial for Richard Carrier, it is inconceivable Josephus may be wrong.

From the errancywiki article

Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard Carrier
Because this contradiction is so clear and certain and strongly backed by evidence...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard Carrier
Consequently, the primary importance of this contradiction is that it is one of the clearest and most irrefutable examples of historical error in the Bible...
Richard Carrier hangs a lot on this dispute. I mean here is a guy who has devoted years of his life to this stuff. he even claims he might have studied it more than anyone.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard Carrier
I have examined and researched these efforts in thorough detail, perhaps more than anyone.

So what if Josephus cannot be relied upon? What if Josephus is not 100% relaible?

What might this mean for someone who has devoted themselves this?

He has a lot invested in this and this can lead to unconscious bias.

It seems reasonable to question Richard's ideas about the reliablity of Josephus, for example.
judge is offline  
Old 02-22-2007, 07:30 PM   #85
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 2,293
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto
Well, now that I've read about 4 different versions of this, I do not understand praxeus' complaint. Richard Carrier and spin seem to agree that Beyer did not identify the manuscripts he examined by the necessary criteria to judge his work.
Hi Toto, thanks for pursuing this. The confusion arose when I walked in with spin saying "Beyer does not cite the texts". I took this to mean cite what texts have the reading he indicates (ie. Beyer says he checked 20+ texts at the library without saying which ones, an issue that comes up in the Carrier reading of Finnegan, which Carrier clarified by going to the Beyer text). However spin was apparently referring to something other than citing whether the Josephus number was 20 or 22 in each particular named manuscript. Exactly what spin wants Beyer to cite he does not say. Perhaps the full section of every manuscript he looked at ? Who knows. Leading to the difficulty. I agree that if spin was talking about something else (eventually he might say what) he is not disagreeing with Carrier.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto
praxeus does not seem to understand what Carrier says. He misinterprets Carrier's confidence in his research for dogmatism.
If the confidence is based on simply glibly stating that any contrary Greek mansucripts would have had to be reverse translations, without giving evidence that this is considered common practice in Josephus manuscripts, plus how it applies to the specific manuscripts at issue, then the confidence is based on circular reasoning.

Interestingly, Richard does not indicate how many Greek manuscripts were involved, making his confidence that much more questionable, as if he were keeping that information away from the paper.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto
When Carrier says ""Even allowing such an inconceivable error on the part of Josephus" praxeus seems not to notice that Carrier goes on to examine the case where Josephus is assumed to have made that error.
Fine, but what exactly about such a possible Josephus number is "inconceivable" ? What precisely is the potential error that is being called "inconceivable" ? And what is the base of truth that would make the error inconceivable ? (Ie. is there an external base that definitely disqualifies one number or the other from being truth ?.. if not, both numbers are very conceivable.)

To follow up another angle, if all the Josephus manuscripts with 22 have crass and obvious numerical internal miscalculations there could be a base for such a claim as "inconceivable". Since it would be hard to find a vector from an original text to the later texts with 22. However I did not see that Richard actually made that claim. So what is the base ?

Shalom,
Steven Avery
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Messianic_Apologetic
Steven Avery is offline  
Old 02-22-2007, 07:31 PM   #86
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: In the dark places of the world
Posts: 8,093
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by praxeus View Post
[COLOR="Navy"]Sauron, greetings.

Imho you are mixing a couple of issues.
No, actually I'm not.

Quote:
Yet a person can be open-minded and yet still write their articles with lots of baggage and presumptions that really have problems.
No, because the same open-mindedness you noticed will also influence their receptivity to the idea that they might be wrong.

You are trying to have your cake and eat it too :

(a) you want to to call Richard open-minded, but

(b) simultaneously accuse him of having hard & fast positions that he is unaware of, even though the assumptions he is working from have been the target of critical examination.

Doesn't wash.
Sauron is offline  
Old 02-22-2007, 07:36 PM   #87
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: In the dark places of the world
Posts: 8,093
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by judge View Post
The reliabilty of Josephus is crucial for Richard Carrier, it is inconceivable Josephus may be wrong.
Incorrect. Carrier concludes that Josephus is correct; he is not operating from some a priori insistence on that point.

Quote:
From the errancywiki article
Carrier mentions evidence for Josephus- you clearly missed that.

Quote:
Richard Carrier hangs a lot on this dispute.
You're repeating yourself.

1. But you haven't yet shown that Carrier insists - without supporting evidence - that Josephus is correct.

2. And you'll never succeed in showing that Carrier believes that Josephus is some kind of historian's foolproof gospel.

If I can spot mistakes in Josephus, I know that Carrier can do so 10-fold. The reality is that on this particular question, Carrier has examined the evidence and it supports what Josephus says. A point you have yet to refute. As I said: you're attempting to poison the well. You simply got caught doing so.

Quote:
So what if Josephus cannot be relied upon? What if Josephus is not 100% relaible?
That is why Carrier relies on more than simply reading Josephus.

I mean *really*, judge. This isn't rocket science. All you have to do is read the actual article, instead of snippets.
Sauron is offline  
Old 02-22-2007, 07:38 PM   #88
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

prax - you have to actually read the entire article.
Quote:
So, the fact of the matter is, Josephus reckoned Herod's reign as beginning in 40 B.C. with a coronation in 37 B.C. There is no way around this, and thus when he dates Herod's death, he can only mean 4 B.C., since he relates it to both events precisely (and one is confirmed by another extant historian). That Josephus is wrong about something so central to his histories and for which he had such good, eyewitness sources is simply not credible.
It is all the surrounding circumstances which make an error by Josephus on this particular point so inconceivable.
Toto is offline  
Old 02-22-2007, 07:43 PM   #89
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 2,293
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sauron
simultaneously accuse him of having hard & fast positions that he is unaware of...
Hi Sauron,

Actually I would not say his positions are "hard & fast". I would say he writes with a particular ideological goal, which causes him to lose objectivity and colour an argument, as in the two examples we are currently discussing.

Or as we saw on the LXX thread, where his terminology and concepts were a mess precisely because he was trying to demonstrate a case of Matthew having multiple Greek OT's in front of him. (That fit his case that the other guy had bad methodology.) There was an ideological goal and it made it difficult for Richard to write about the Greek OT in a sensible manner, leading to the current necessary but very difficult rewrite attempt (really, he cannot get where he wants without a lot of chocolate fudge).

More consequential perhaps, on the LXX, why did Richard miss the 'weakest link' aspect of his presentation? It is good that it is being corrected but it is something a little research would have easily caught. It was not in his ideological interests to pursue that aspect and so he dropped the ball for a few years until it was pointed out to him here.

Shalom,
Steven Avery
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Messianic_Apologetic
Steven Avery is offline  
Old 02-22-2007, 08:22 PM   #90
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

praxeus - we discourage people from speculating about others' motives or impugning their objectivity.

We know that one of Richard Carrier's primary purposes is to get a PhD in ancient history and maintain his professional reputation. To that end, he publishes on the web and encourages people who find any errors in his work to email him, and makes corrections where warranted.

Anything else is involves your overactive imagination. And charges of ideological motives are likely to blow back in your face.
Toto is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 10:03 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.