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03-09-2012, 03:32 PM | #1 |
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Parallelomania, the Luxor Image & the Gospels: Richard Carrier and Acharya S discuss
In the last few days, an acrimonious dispute between Richard Carrier and Acharya S is occurring on their blogs (though most of the acrimony seems to be on Acharya S's side, it should be stressed). I've avoided reproducing any acrimonious text below wherever possible.
Richard Carrier writes on his blog: Parallelomania is the particular disease of Jesus myth advocates who see “parallels” everywhere between early Christianity and all manner of pagan religions. Many of those parallels are real; don’t get me wrong. Some are even causal (Christianity really is a syncretism of Judaism and paganism, which point I will soundly prove in my coming book On the Historicity of Jesus Christ). But most parallels are not real, or are not causally related (remember that basic rule in science: correlation is not causation). Some don’t even exist (and here bad scholarship becomes the disease: see my cautionary review of Kersey Graves’ Sixteen Crucified Saviors).Carrier goes on to examine Acharya S's claims regarding the Luxor image, citing it as an example of "non-parallel" (i.e. Acharya S got her facts wrong): More important is that Acharya/Murdock says the bulk of my details come from the “D” text and not the one at Luxor. The D text she refers to is the narrative accompanying the panels at the Deir el-Bahri Temple Complex built by Queen Hatshepsut in the 15th century BC. The Luxor Temple was built at the same time by the same queen. The visual panels at Deir el-Bahri are in all essentials identical to those at Luxor (with a few minor variances in the section after the nativity sequence, which are thus not relevant here). The D text simply expands the abbreviated text at Luxor. To claim that the shorter text at Luxor doesn’t simply abbreviate the full narrative provided at Deir el-Bahri is thus nonsense. To claim that the two stories are somehow intended to be completely different (despite being visually identical and inscribed in the same decades by the same queen) is even more nonsense.Further details can be read on his blog. Acharya S responded on her blog (all emphasis below in the original): Despite the denials and distractions, the fact is that Carrier has been working with the wrong artifact. From my detailed analysis of Brunner's German - which, again, I provided in my lengthy section in CIE on this subject - it became clear Carrier was looking at Hatshepsut's birth scene, not that of Amenhotep III, which is the artifact in question...One of the points of contention is whether the inscriptions at Deir el-Bahri and the Luxor inscriptions were created at the same time or not. I've been googling this, but can't find any details. I don't want to rely on Acharya S for this. Can anyone confirm this? |
03-09-2012, 04:44 PM | #2 |
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Thanks Don. I really need to pick up all these blogs on an aggregator....
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03-09-2012, 04:58 PM | #3 |
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No problem. It's interesting browsing through these blogs. What caught my eye here was that there was a disagreement not relating to interpretation, or the opinions of 19th C Egyptian hobbists like Massey, but to an objective statement of fact. Either Carrier is wrong or Acharya S is wrong. (I'd be disappointed if it isn't Acharya S).
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03-09-2012, 09:38 PM | #4 |
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03-10-2012, 12:03 AM | #5 | |
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Quote:
Andrew Criddle |
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03-10-2012, 12:20 AM | #6 |
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Thanks for the cite, Andrew. Looking at it, it looks like there is a 60 year gap between the two, which means the claim that the two inscriptions were done by the same person at the same time can't be correct. Disappointing!
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03-10-2012, 02:31 AM | #7 | ||
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Quote:
Here's what concerns me: Quote:
I am not surprised to learn that Carrier has erred here. When the dust settles, those forum members, who have been extolling the virtues, of his purported use of Bayesian theory to advance our understanding of the supposed "historicity" of jesus of nazareth/aka christ, will, I believe, be eating crow. Carrier and others belittle D.M.Murdoch, for reasons opaque to me. I find her analysis refreshing, intuitive, logical, and rigorous. I wish I could the write the same for those who defend use of fuzzy-bayesian-AI this, that, or the other, to clarify details about ancient papyrus documents. |
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03-10-2012, 02:32 AM | #8 |
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Why disappointing? It's a good opportunity to fight and conquer 'confirmation bias'! Read it loud: 'Carrier was wrong and Acharya was right, Carrier was wrong and Acharya was right...' Yes, I know it may sound horrible (I like Carrier's texts), but...
It's always unusual to read or hear 'you were right and I was wrong'. I wonder if Carrier is great enough to say it. |
03-10-2012, 03:14 AM | #9 |
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03-10-2012, 04:37 AM | #10 | ||
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Quote:
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Thank you D.M. Murdoch! Judge, can you summarize in a sentence or two, what it is about D.M.Murdoch's publications, that you find objectionable? Has she committed some errors, conducted sloppy research, ignored opposing viewpoints, expressed opinions with which you disagree, or for some other reason? |
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