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07-20-2010, 10:18 AM | #21 |
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You Know ABernardo, I Try, I Really Try
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07-20-2010, 10:26 AM | #22 |
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It is an appropriate word to be used in mathematics. In every other field of empirical inquiry (especially history), you can never plug all of the holes. There will always be many different openings where someone can claim, "But it is possible for this fact to have an alternative interpretation..." And, it will be true. Some people use the word more loosely, that "proof" is the extreme incontestable supremacy of the best explanation. Well, you might have that occasionally in science, but not so much in history. In history, anyone can doubt just about anything.
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07-20-2010, 10:40 AM | #23 |
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From the wikipedia link:
Josephus's Discourse to the Greeks concerning Hades is a short work published in the translation of Josephus by William Whiston. Erroneously attributed to the Jewish historian since at least the 9th century, it is now believed to be (at least in its original form) the work of Hippolytus of Rome. |
07-20-2010, 11:24 AM | #24 |
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Abe:
As is often the case in history there is no slam dunk evidence either way on this issue. I do however think that the weight of the evidence preponderates on the side of there being some real guy who formed the basis of the Jesus story. An itinerent Jewish preacher about whom fanciful things were later said. Steve |
07-20-2010, 11:25 AM | #25 | |
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Your OP is an embellished embarrassment. |
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07-20-2010, 11:59 AM | #26 | ||
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how can fictional stories provide useful data?
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I cannot think of a single question, the answer to which, is found in reading the gospels. I certainly cannot establish, based upon the text therein, how the writers were thinking. The text is so muddled and contradictory, and one does not know if this confusion is deliberate or accidental. But, even if it were a clean text, somehow logically consistent, could one truly deduce from reading a story, a fable, any work of fiction, something about the ideology of the author? Consider Tolstoy, for example, let's say, War and Peace. Can you imagine, from reading that novel, how Tolstoy would preach sexual abstinence among his communal, "Christian" followers? What about the author(s) of "Catch-22". Can you predict their ideology based upon reading the novel(s)? Quote:
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07-20-2010, 12:37 PM | #27 | |
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Abe - this is an essay from R Joseph Hoffman that he has just republished. What part of this quote do you disagree with?
The importance of the historical Jesus Quote:
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07-20-2010, 12:42 PM | #28 | ||||||||
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In case you are not with me on this point, I typed out some lines from a book by G. R. Elton. In his book, The Practice of History (or via: amazon.co.uk), 2nd Ed., 1967, on pages 78-79, under the heading, "Imagination," he writes: The point is that the historian comes to the stage of his work at the end of a process which has taken him through the much more independent standards of judgment produced by a rigorous study of the evidence; it is only in the end, when he considers the answers so obtained, that he is entitled to apply the last test: could this have been? And if it clearly could not, he is entitled - indeed, obliged - to reconsider his evidence imaginatively, for he knows that it does not tell him all unless his imagination recreates the circumstances and interdependencies within which the evidence has arisen. The problem most commonly occurs when a sequence of events needs to be explained in which there are gaps. For instance, we know beyond doubt that in the course of the sixteenth century the English Privy Council changed its composition, working habits, and real place in government. We can say with certainty that its numbers were at some point reduced by the exclusion of certain men, hitherto members but thereafter described as councillors at large, not privy councillors. We do not know when this happened; no order exists making this change. Two ways of explaining the sequence are therefore possible. The historian may say that the change was carried out on some particular occasion of which we are ignorant. Or he may say that the reorganized body developed gradually, or by stages, from the other. The latter has usually been the alternative chosen, for historians faced with uncertainty, trained to adhere to the known facts and unwilling to stick their necks out, commonly prefer the safe vagueness of a gradual transition. But apply the criterion of probability, and what happens? Is it possible to envisage a situation in which part of a group of men gradually turned from privy councillors into councillors at large, a title hitherto unknown? Could a change happen without someone telling them that from now on they would be known by this new title, with its reduced functions? And if someone told them, must he not have done so at some particular point in time? In short, is not the second, and usual, explanation simply an evasion of the answer, a vague attempt to cover up ignorance, rendered unconvincing by an unimaginative reconstruction of how things must have happened? Known experience and a little thought prove that they could not have happened according to the formula used.G. R. Elton has been a highly-respected contributor to the study of history, and he is a historiographer strongly supported by Neil Godfrey, whose blog post led me to read much of the book. Quote:
OK, so we can actually figure out why Origen may have distorted Josephus' account of Ananias. Origen was a Christian apologist who thought it proper that punishment is inflicted on the enemies of Christianity. So, what is your explanation for why he may have distorted Josephus on Jesus? Is it a probable explanation, or is it merely designed to fit your conclusion that Josephus didn't write anything about Jesus? Quote:
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07-20-2010, 12:43 PM | #29 | |
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07-20-2010, 12:51 PM | #30 | ||
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