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View Poll Results: Christ-mythicists, do you think dissimilarity is a valid criteria of historical study | |||
I am a Christ-mythicist, and yes I think dissimilarity is a valid criteria for ascertaining history |
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1 | 5.88% |
I am a Christ-mythicist, but no, I do not think dissimilarity is a valid criteria |
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7 | 41.18% |
I am NOT a Christ-mythicist, and yes I think dissimilarity is a valid criteria. |
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2 | 11.76% |
I am NOT a Christ-mythicist, and no, I do not think dissimilarity is a valid criteria |
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6 | 35.29% |
What the hell is the criteria of dissimilarity? I can't find it in wikipedia. |
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1 | 5.88% |
Voters: 17. You may not vote on this poll |
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#1 |
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Christ-mythicists, do you think dissimilarity is a valid criteria of historical study?
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#2 |
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The criteria of dissimilarity is one of those made-up tests that the historical Jesus scholars have invented. It only applies if you accept that there was a historical Jesus and want to try to separate the legendary accretion from the historical core in the gospel stories.
I have never seen this criteria used in any other branch of study. |
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#3 | |
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#4 |
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Who is Susan Smith? or should I say, which Susan Smith?
I should clarify. There are branches of engineering and social science that compute indices of dissimilarity. But there is no other area of history that uses a criterion of dissimilarity the way NT studies does, to try to judge historical validity. |
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#5 |
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I am a Jesus-fictionalist. I think that the overwhelming similarity to pre-existing myth is exactly what you would expect from such poor writers as the gospel authors.
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#6 | |
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Clearly the Biblical story is based on something like the EoG, if not the EoG itself., yet due to the differences many Christians try to deny this, as though when a story teller reinvents a story they don't reinterpret it and make changes ![]() |
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#7 |
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#8 |
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#9 | |
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This is how the criterion of dissimilarity is used and justified:
The Search for the Historical Jesus: Why start with the sayings? (emphasis added) Quote:
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#10 |
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I disagree. I don't view it as "lifting". I think that the Gospel of Mark is genius, it is incredibly sophisticated, and its use of scripture does not come from weakness, it is it's strength.
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