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12-28-2009, 09:32 AM | #521 | ||
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Very briefly, my reasons for thinking there was probably no historical Jesus is that all the canonical writings are, in general, inconsistent with what I would expect if their authors had believed that Jesus of Nazareth was a real man who had been the real founder of their religion. The few apparent exceptions are insufficient, all things considered, to outweigh the evidence of all the rest of the material. |
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12-28-2009, 09:52 AM | #522 | |||||
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Here's an example of a parsimonious induction: you don't answer my repeated question, because there is no such example, and my initial hypothesis is correct. Quote:
I could ask you a fourth or a fifth time to be more precise, or a fourth or a fifth time to show me what, specifically I should be doing to form more accurate descriptions of what's wrong with my car, or how plants convert sunlight into usable energy, or whether I should dig up my relatives to see if they're still dead. But the question is, should I? My hypothesis is that "but you're just assuming naturalism!!" is a rhetorical trick apologists teach believers to throw out when their evidentialist arguments start to run dry, as they inevitably must when talking about flying rabbis ascending into the clouds with their magic powers. You try to portray corpse-resurrection as a "reasonable" induction from the observation of some old anonymous texts, and when it's pointed out that corpse-resurrection would be an insanely unreasonable induction even given much, much, much better evidence, in order to hide the blatant question-begging just say the other guy is "dogmatic" and "biased". Quote:
The upshot of this is that there is no difference between saying that something is more probable and saying that it is more likely to be true. Try saying "I believe there is a 100% chance that this will happen, but I don't believe it will happen" with a straight face. Try saying "There's an 85% chance of rain today, but you'd be foolish to bring an umbrella." Try saying "your chances of winning the lottery are one in 10,000,000, therefore spending your last fiver on that ticket is much more reasonable than buying food." Probability defines what reasonable conclusions are. Are you conceding that it is wildly, astronomically more plausible that some anonymous texts may not be literally true than that everything we know about biology and physics is fundamentally wrong? This is all I need to make the special-pleading charge stick. |
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12-28-2009, 06:23 PM | #523 | ||
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Thanks for being thoughtful about this and wanting to be helpful. |
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12-28-2009, 06:56 PM | #524 | ||||||
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(1) By quoting a number of the most respected scholars whose own conclusions form part of this trend, and (2) I will quote a number of reviewers who have summed up the situation in the above terms. I don't suggest that mere numbers are normally indicative of historical truth, but in this case we are not talking of the truth of the gospels, but the fact of what scholars are saying. Quote:
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Richard Bauckham: Jesus and the Eyewitnesses Craig Blomberg: The historical reliability of the gospels. M Bockmuehl (ed), Cambridge University: The Cambridge Companion to Jesus - about 20 scholars. M Borg: Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time. M Borg & J D Crossan: Last Week. M Borg & T Wright: The meaning of Jesus: Two visions. Dr J Charlesworth, Princeton Theological Seminary: Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls Dr J Charlesworth (ed): Jesus and Archaeology (about 30 scholars - I have read portions on the web only) J D Crossan: Jesus: a Revolutionary Biography. Robert Crotty: The Jesus Question. John Dickson: The Christ Files. Craig Evans: Fabricating Jesus C Evans & NT Wright: Jesus: the final days Prof P Fredriksen, Boston University: Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews Robert Funk and the Jesus Seminar: The Acts of Jesus M Grant: Jesus: an historian's review of the Gospels. AM Hunter: The Work and Words of Jesus Prof L T Johnson, Emory University: The Real Jesus. M A Powell: The Jesus Debate. A review of the views of the Jesus Seminar, J D Crossan, M Borg, E P Sanders, J Meier N T Wright. Lee Strobel: The Case for Christ. (Not a scholar, but he quotes them - but I won't use these because they can be viewed as apologists) Prof Geza Vermes, formerly of Oxford University: The Changing Face of Jesus. G Vermes: The Nativity. R Van Voorst: Jesus Outside the New Testament L Michael White: From Jesus to Christianity (on the web only) There may be others I have forgotten, but that is the main list. You will note a range of scholars from apologist to sceptical. So, what do you say? I don't want to go to the trouble, but I will if you are willing to do the same. Best wishes. |
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12-28-2009, 07:32 PM | #525 | |||||
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12-28-2009, 09:51 PM | #526 | ||||
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If I don't speak to you again, please accept my thanks for the courteous and thoughtful way you have discussed this with me. Best wishes. |
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12-28-2009, 09:59 PM | #527 | |
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Thanks, Chaucer |
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12-28-2009, 10:14 PM | #528 | |||
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You worship Jesus as the son of God and believe he has supernatural ability. If the existence of any god is a metaphysical question then Jesus of the NT, Lord and Saviour Son of God MUST BE a metaphysical question. Why are you denying that Jesus is one of your Gods that you worship? Mt 14:33 - Quote:
Jesus, the son of the Living God, himself asked the question and Peter answered. Matthew16.15-16 Quote:
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12-29-2009, 12:23 AM | #529 | |||
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To be specific, you said: "My assertion is that you .... can, must, and do accept the level of evidence supplied for every claim except your pet religious beliefs." You clearly claimed that I use a different level of evidence and/or a different process for my religious beliefs compared to everything else. In response, I said this was not the case. I said: "In all things I do, including metaphysics and the historical Jesus, I try first of all to get the facts and apply reason. But few things in life can be resolved by those things alone. We are human, we are imperfect, we have valid emotions, we don't know everything, somethings are unknowable or subjective, etc. So when I make decisions about relationships, politics, ethics, aesthetics, even the football team I support, I apply evidence and reason as far as I can, and then I move forward using other aspects of human thinking. It is the same with my beliefs about Jesus, as I have explained to others - I start with the historical facts as I can ascertain them, and then I make decisions on what I can belief as a result." You have continued to argue that I don't make religious decisions like that, and those are the statements I asked you to support, and which you haven't. Quote:
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Anyway mate, I think I've had enough of going round the same circles. I think it is time I quit this thread, and definitely time I quit this abortive discussion. So I'll bid you farewell. :wave2: |
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12-29-2009, 12:31 AM | #530 | |
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What are all the good Christian missionary boys going to do when they see that you’ve abandoned us like this? What type of example are you setting? |
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