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Old 01-23-2005, 07:54 PM   #91
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Metacrock
faunt your ignroance all you want.
Well, Metacrock, asking a question is normally understood as a rather direct admission of lack of information. If "f[l]aunt" is your preferred term, so be it.

My question, to repeat, is this: "does anyone know of any principled attempt to come up with a generalization about [the circulation and travel time of ideas and writings in Roman provinces]"?

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I can show the quote in the Koester book where he says this is the standard assumption made by all textual Critics.
Okay. I entirely believe that Koester says this. Now, can you answer my question?

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It's axiomitic in the field, just all all physicists assume that a really tight statistical correlation is indicative of cause and effect. This is a procedure that is practiced by the discipline as a whole.
A quote from Koester would hardly suffice to prove this claim. In any case, if it's so utterly basic, you should find it especially effortless to explain the reasoning. No large fonts, strange colours, or charges that I hate religion, please: just explain the reasoning behind 10 years, 20 years, or any particular such estimate.

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your attempt to remake the first century like a lesser version of the 20th wont wash.
Since I said absolutely nothing of the sort, you can stop worrying about it.

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First, the inrestest in new ideas and writtings was pretty much limitted to upper class Romans.
Really? Merchants coming in from the Orient, from Egypt, from Greece and Asia Minor, didn't talk of such things? The evidence for this claim would be very interesting; I look forward to seeing it.

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Secondly, No one would care about this Palestinian Jew and his littel sect of followers. Only other groups of Jesus followers would care. they would be the audience.
Well, on one hand surely there would be a lot of interest in the region to hear the details of what happened that day when the sky went dark, there was an earthquake, the saints rose from the dead to go home, etc. But set that aside. Suppose we grant this claim of yours arguendo. How then do you suppose Koester comes up with his figure of 10 years? I'm no expert, but it looks like the inductive base applicable to this case is going to be pretty small.

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Sholars almost universally assume that the Gospels were produced by communities, not by individuals. So the transmittion of a Gospel like mark would be dependent upon the spread of the community that produced it.
This is just a non-sequitur. Of course that's one way that a narrative can travel. But "produce" is not "disseminate". Communal production of a gospel in no way means that the dissemination of the gospel is a matter of the spread of the community.

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The would have to travel to a place, get set up, make a living, be there long enough for someone to go get the copy and then copy it.
"Get set up"? "Make a living"? Er... and have a career? Cut down the tallest tree in the forest with a herring? So far as I can see what would have to happen is: someone would have to write it down. 10 years?

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they didn't have book stalls for the masses. No NYT book reviews. no bookbeat or Charlie Rose on PBS.
Indeed. Hence my pointing out that, nevertheless, "poets and playwrights became famous in their own lifetimes in the Hellenistic and Roman worlds, didn't they? Trade and other kinds of travel were common, weren't they?"

If anyone has any insight on my original questions, I'd be grateful. Thanks.
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Old 01-23-2005, 08:11 PM   #92
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Originally Posted by Metacrock
faunt your ignroance all you want.
Meta, you can abuse me and the other regulars who know you all you want, but Clutch is a published philosopher and scholar who has never insulted you and deserves respect for his brains and accomplishment. Not to mention courage in sticking a toe into this catfight.

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Old 01-23-2005, 08:17 PM   #93
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Clutch
My question, to repeat, is this: "does anyone know of any principled attempt to come up with a generalization about [the circulation and travel time of ideas and writings in Roman provinces]"?

Indeed. Hence my pointing out that, nevertheless, "poets and playwrights became famous in their own lifetimes in the Hellenistic and Roman worlds, didn't they? Trade and other kinds of travel were common, weren't they?"

If anyone has any insight on my original questions, I'd be grateful. Thanks.
Sorry, man, none of my sources has anything definite.

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Old 01-23-2005, 08:17 PM   #94
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The Gospels for All Christians: Rethinking the Gospel Audiences, edited by Richard Bauckham contains a chapter titled "The Holy Internet" by Michael B. Thompson, which argues that the early churches were in constant communication, based on the Roman roads and shipping routes. Christians were called upon to spread the word by preaching and writing. News did not travel at internet speed, but could travel from one end of the empire to the other within months. Thomas estimates that the gospels could have been written within a few years of each other, rather than the usual 10 years that has been the conventional assumption.
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Old 01-23-2005, 08:28 PM   #95
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I think the ten years assumption is only for the gap between Mark and Matthew. Luke and John are dated by other means.

How long does Thompson think it took to make copies and disseminating them more widely than the churches on a select route?
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Old 01-23-2005, 08:34 PM   #96
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Your apparent inability to follow what is written from thread to thread is getting tiresome, Metacrock. In fact, you appear to have lost track of the claim you are supposed to be trying to support (ie that the "core story" is historically reliable). Whether this is due to your age or the fact you have too many things going on at once, it makes it very difficult to have a discussion. I fear this effort is doomed.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Metacrock
(1) show me any circular reasoning I've done.
Reread the thread and note the specific examples cited. One that really stands out is when you clearly assume the Gospel story is historically reliable to establish that the Gospel story is historically reliable. That is textbook circular reasoning yet you declared it to be a standard method of all historians.

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I said when you have a document that has a good reason on its face to be taken seriously, you dont' doubt it as a matter of course, you assume it until you have a reason not to.
You have yet to provide the "good reason" for the assumption. This is just a big circle without it.

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why is Papias and Clement not evidence? It looks like that would be almost firs thand. They both say "I knew this guy, he was there, he saw it, he heard it."
Their names are not evidence and that's all you cited so far. It isn't even "almost" firsthand. Papias' sources are either disciples of the apostles or disciples of disciples of the apostles. As you later noted in your post, Clement is not firsthand either.

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why is PMR not evidence?
Here is your circular reasoning. It is entirely circular to suggest that the PMR should be considered evidence of the PMR's historical reliability.

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Like all rules of thumb, give or take. I dont' how it got conflated. I said 10 for comp and 10 for travel. So I dont' know. Even if you want to say 60 that's still pretty early.
For the third time, what is the basis for this alleged "rule of thumb"?

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you are wasting my time, in forcing me to defend basic things that anyone with introductory knowledge to the subject should know you are just trying my patenence. I have things to do. I have atrticles to write.
If you are unwilling or unable to defend your claims, don't waste IIDB bandwidth with your assertions.

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Argument silence is a bleeding fallacy!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I'm sure you know that this is not necessarily true. The strength of an argument of silence corresponds to the expectation of something other than silence. This isn't really relevant, though, because I'm not making an argument from silence. I'm simply noting that you are filling Paul's silence with information from the Gospel story and claiming consistency. That is flawed reasoning.

Regarding your attempts to argue for the historical reliability of the core gospel story:

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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
Paul provides evidence of belief in a crucifixion and in a resurrection. Are you reducing your story to these two beliefs?
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why would I do that?
These are apparently the only "elements of Paul" you've got that can be used to support the historical reliability of the Gospel story.

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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
How do these revised versions of what you contend is the original story establish that story's historical reliability?
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they contian verious of the 11 points, and not of them contradict the 11 points.
That does not answer my question.

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why were there no alternate versions?
Already addressed. Reread the thread.

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what do you think the point of multiple source is? I say I have evidence from x,y,z becasue that's multiple soruce, it give credence. It's all backing each other up. That's a valid reason, confirmation..
What "multiple sources"? You've referred to multiple subsequent variations of a single story. That is a single source.

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I mean like why assume there weren't a "12?"
I already made it clear this is not an assumption I make.

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A lot of things I'm willing to see as embellisment, fabrication, propaganda, or just out and out mistakes. The prophecy about Is 7 and the virigin brith, or the shepards keeping watch of the flocks by night, or all kinds of things. It's all up for grabs, but what is not up for grabs is the basic famrework that makes it all make sense, because no ever disputes it!.
Who disputes the things above that you are willing to reject as historical?

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well you are being petulant to dismiss the PMR as not real evidence.
If it can't actually be examined, it isn't really evidence. It is hypothetical. More importantly, however, it is what you are trying to establish is historically reliable so it cannot be used as evidence to reach that conclusion without applying circular reasoning.

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Originally Posted by Ameleq13
Please specify what passages in Acts make the claims you indicate.
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I dont' even remember what calims you have in mind now.
Then reread the goddamned thread, Metacrock. This is ridiculous.

Regarding Peter, you wrote:
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He is certinatly a leading disciple in paul's world. and certianly he has a major palce as leader of he chruch.
He is a leading apostle. There is no justification for retrojecting the role of disciple into Paul's letters.

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But its unrealistic to expect to find Paul confirming things in such a rudementory way. why should he re tell the story and point out who Peter is, when everyone knows it?
I'm not suggesting we should expect Paul to retell the gospel story. I'm suggesting that we should expect Paul to mention more of it than he does if it was so widely told at such an early date. At the very least, we certainly have very good reason to expect him to mention Peter's betrayal or, for that matter, the fact that all of the disciples fled initially.

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but do you really think it's reasonable to assume that he was so used because he was unknown and unimportant? Obviously he was listed frist to be appeared to becasue he was the leader.
That is not obvious. He could just as easily be a leader because he was the first to claim to have witnessed the risen Christ.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Amaleq13
It doesn't require canonization to be embraced
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to be exclusive! It could be embrace,but also challenged there would be other versions if the public didnt' know better.
How do you know it was exposed to the unbelieving public?

How do you know there were no challenges?

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You are assuming Mark's Gospel would have been universeally accepted, there's no reaosn to assume that.
No wonder it doesn't make sense to you. You didn't read it carefully enough. I'm not making that assumption at all. In fact, it is founded on the exact opposite assumption that Mark's Gospel was only told to those who had already accepted the gospel Paul preached. We know that Paul's gospel was preached in public and that it obtained converts. We do not know the same is true for your PMR even if we assume it existed at the same time.

I'll have to look for the full versions of variations of myths since you only provide the changes but I question your claim that a collection of invariant core points cannot be identified in any of them.
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Old 01-23-2005, 08:40 PM   #97
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There are at least two interesting figures here. First, the amount of time that it would take for a document to go from point O (Origin) to some point P if there was little "down time" (for example, a letter for which a duplicate is made the same day and which goes on a boat the next day to arrive at the port seven weeks later for a total time to delivery of 50 days). This is a figure which is more easily found (of the two).

Second, the amount of time that it would take for it to be more likely than not that the document would reach point P. There are at least two important factors here, the distance of point P from the origin (measured along the routes that communication takes place) and the average throughput of communications and the priority of the document to be sent along said routes. For example, suppose that the Book of Revelation was written on the island of Patmos in the Aegean in 95 A.D. The seven churches mentioned as recipients would have the highest priority for receiving copies, and they are not a great deal of distance away. Still, making a copy as long as Revelation is a laborious process. One might say (arbitrarily perhaps) that a month's time is the average it took to one of these cities. After that, Rome was both an important church and is mentioned in the text, so the ETA might have an average of six months or so. Meanwhile, although there were Romans in Britain and the boat trip could be made in a few months, I would expect the probability of arrival to be much more than ten years, because of its low priority in the Christian world of the time.

Just being geeky...

best,
Peter Kirby
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Old 01-23-2005, 08:45 PM   #98
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
I think the ten years assumption is only for the gap between Mark and Matthew. Luke and John are dated by other means.

How long does Thompson think it took to make copies and disseminating them more widely than the churches on a select route?
I've never seen any reason given for dating gLuke to ~90 CE other than the 10 year gap - except for skeptics who date it to the 2nd century based on presumed influences from Josephus.

Thompson seems to think that all churches were on select routes. I would not endorse everything he says; he accepts the usual dating of the beginnings of Christianity and the historicity of Acts as far as Paul's travels, and thinks that there were Christian churches between 30-70 CE, which I tend to doubt. He also seems to think that gMark was actually written by Mark based on Peter's preaching. But his observations about communications in the Roman Empire seem solid.

He says in his conclusion,
Quote:
. . . many churches were less than a week's travel away from a main hub in the Christian network. News from Ephesus and Corinth, the twin poles of trade in the Aegean Sea and the two places where Paul extended his visits, could reach Rome and Jerusalem in a month or less, if conditions were favorable. Because of the winds, news from the west spread eastward more quickly than news from the east.

It would thus not take long for the word to spread eastward from Rome that Mark had produced a helpful account about Jesus, especially if it was based on Peter's preaching. If the composition of Mark predates the fall of Jerusalem, news of that Gospel would move even quicker oncer Roman Jewish-Christian pilgrims traveled to the Holy Land for a festival (whether they approved of Mark's theology or not.) From there, the information would radiate back to other hubs in the network of Jesus' followers.

It is one thing to say that information could spread quickly, and quite another to prove that it did. . . .
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Old 01-23-2005, 09:09 PM   #99
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Hmmm...he also thinks Mark predated the destruction of Jerusalem.

I think that Thompson is massaging his thesis by cherry picking a lot of best case scenario hypotheses to better frame a preconceved conclusions. I;ve seen worse, he's not patently ridiculous or unreasonable but he's definitely pushing a wishful case.

The case for Luke knowing Josephus is pretty strong, by the way. Have you read it?
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Old 01-23-2005, 09:21 PM   #100
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Kirby
There are at least two interesting figures here. First, the amount of time that it would take for a document to go from point O (Origin) to some point P if there was little "down time" (for example, a letter for which a duplicate is made the same day and which goes on a boat the next day to arrive at the port seven weeks later for a total time to delivery of 50 days). This is a figure which is more easily found (of the two).

Second, the amount of time that it would take for it to be more likely than not that the document would reach point P. There are at least two important factors here, the distance of point P from the origin (measured along the routes that communication takes place) and the average throughput of communications and the priority of the document to be sent along said routes. For example, suppose that the Book of Revelation was written on the island of Patmos in the Aegean in 95 A.D. The seven churches mentioned as recipients would have the highest priority for receiving copies, and they are not a great deal of distance away. Still, making a copy as long as Revelation is a laborious process. One might say (arbitrarily perhaps) that a month's time is the average it took to one of these cities. After that, Rome was both an important church and is mentioned in the text, so the ETA might have an average of six months or so. Meanwhile, although there were Romans in Britain and the boat trip could be made in a few months, I would expect the probability of arrival to be much more than ten years, because of its low priority in the Christian world of the time.

Just being geeky...

best,
Peter Kirby



have you not seen Textual critics allude to the 20 year assumption? That's par to of the dating of John Rylands. They figure it had to go form Jeruslaem to Egypt. I can't believe you don't know about that. It's just a standard rule of thumb. find a textual critic and ask him.
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