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02-26-2005, 06:20 AM | #291 | |
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02-26-2005, 07:06 AM | #292 | |
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ameleq, respectfully, you are wrong on this issue. the only shifting done in this thread has been by the skeptic. the skeptic makes the claim (the bible is false), states they don't require proof of their claim, defends an unfalsifiable position, and then cowardly doesn't even attempt to provide an alternate explanation. how in the world can you or any other skeptics consider this scholarly? why should anyone listen to anything a skeptic has to say with an approach like this? i offer this challenge to anyone with the courage to answer. please explain: what constitutes as historical evidence? how do we know that anything from any first century writer is true? how can there be proof of the miraculous claims of the bible since they are beyond the purview of science? since there can be no proof, explain why the miraculous claims are being considered by skeptics an indictment against the bible. |
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02-26-2005, 08:15 AM | #293 | ||||||
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We also tend to assume that impossible claims are impossible. For instance, nobody believes Herodotus' claims about giant ants mining gold in India. Quote:
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02-26-2005, 08:39 AM | #294 | ||||
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1) Is the account about natural, human events? History is about humanity's past, not about gods. If you read modern historical analysis, you'll find that descriptions of supernaturals events are always discounted. Heck, as Diogenes points out, even the merely absurb (giant ants mining gold) is not believed. Right there, the resurrection has to be considered non-historical. (Note: I'm not saying this disproves that it happened. I'm saying that the Christian can't use historical analysis to prove that it did.) 2) Are there independent accounts? And by independent accounts I mean people working from different perspectives. Both Caesar and Cicero, for example, wrote proligately about the events of their times, and were political opponents. Thus, when they both say something happened, we can be fairly confident that that happened. The trouble with Christian sources is that they are all working under the same tradition and community. Luke and Matthew copied extensively from Mark, and John is widely considered to be a theological gospel with little historical content. If there were Roman records that Jesus was crucified, that would bolster the Christian story (though not the resurrection account). 3) What do we know of the authors and what axes were they grinding? Historians do not accept everything that is written down in ancient texts. Julius Caesar generally accepted credit for his victories but tended to fob off defeats on his underlings. Guess what? Historians don't buy that. The sources we have for ancient history are well known and the biases of the authors taken into account when their work is analyzed. Where they appear to be writing dispassionately and objectively, we credit their accounts more highly than when they are pushing an agenda. The problem with the gospels is a) we don't know who the authors even were. The authorship wasn't assigned until well into the second century, and were assigned using the ancient practice of using famous people from the past. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John as described almost certainly weren't the authors of the gospels. And b) they had a huge axe to grind. They weren't writing history; they were writing hagiography with the view of promoting their religious beliefs. A historical work with virgin births, walks on water, feedings of multitudes, resurrections of the dead, is not going to get a lot of credence in the historical community. It doesn't work that way. 4) How does the described events fit in with other events of the time? This is a little harder to understand, but one event tends to ripple through to other events of the time. The rise of the Caesars, for example, makes little sense without the Roman Civil War. The problem with the Christian accounts is that Jesus had very little effect during his lifetime. (In fact, the gospel stories record a remarkable failure, making is post-mortem success all the more suspect). None of his contemporaries sees fit to mention him, and later mentions of him (as sparse as they are) could probably be better explained by the existence of the Christian religion than by the existence of Jesus himself. Christians are right to claim that the development of their religion in the first century is prima facie evidence that there was a charismatic religious leader called Jesus who was crucified (though the case is weak). They are wrong, however, in insisting that this implies that all the gospels stories are true. They can't be considered so, for reasons already mentioned. 5) Is there archeological evidence supporting the events? For example, archeologists have been able to visit areas where Caesar had his battles and uncover artifacts that Caesar described in his accounts. That is powerful evidence that things happened as described. There isn't a single bit of archeological evidence that supports any of the events of Jesus's life. What ought to be clear, bfniii, is that, by historical standards, the evidence for the life of Jesus is very poor, and there are Christian scholars who will tell you the very same thing I'm telling you. And I haven't even gotten into some of the other problems with the accounts where historians believe that much of the events were mined from OT accounts to fit the authors preconceived notions. The problems with the gospel accounts are myriad, and beyond the capabilities of a interested amateur such as myself. There are, however, good books on the subject I can suggest if you're interested. Quote:
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02-26-2005, 09:43 AM | #295 | ||||||
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But then they live a fantasy life too. Like your straw man world where you bravely take on this bizarre fictitious "skeptic". You are not quoting anyone here because there is no such person present - and Amaleq13 in particular has disabused you of this falsity. Cowardly? That's pretty funny. This from fellow who has gone a dozen pages with the cornerstone of his entire argument being that there were eyewitness accounts, and failing to provide even the tiniest shred of evidence. Quote:
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02-26-2005, 10:11 AM | #296 | |
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That some followers might have thought there was no need to commit the events to writing because the end was near might explain why there are no contemporaneous accounts of Jesus, but if enough of them choose to avoid pointless writing, would not shepherding and agriculture also have been pointless? Might someone, not a follower, have written ‘I just got two goats from a guy who thinks the world is about to end.’? Not finding such items is not conclusive proof of the non-existence of Jesus, but leads one in that direction. Even so, as I said earlier, I cannot say for certain whether or not Jesus existed. But mere existence is not much. |
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02-26-2005, 10:27 AM | #297 | |
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02-28-2005, 11:57 AM | #298 | |||
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2. any such questions presuppose that you do indeed have a preconceived notion about how historical events transpired, otherwise why ask the question? 3. any criticisms are the result of prima facie assertions already made by you. by assessing the believability of an event, you are doing so from a preexisting base, whether you have outlined it or not. otherwise, you would have no frame of reference from which you are drawing from. whether you physically type out your version or not, it's there whenever you assess the historicity of a particular narrative. if you do not do so, you are agnostic toward history and therefore exclude yourself from judging the account. Quote:
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02-28-2005, 02:21 PM | #299 | ||||||
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No, I am talking about empirical methodology. You want to assert against all evidence and logic that a dead guy came back to life 2000 years ago. Since it is physically impossible for dead guys to come back to life it is incumbant upon you to provide some pretty good evidence for such an absurd assertion. Thus far you have presented no evidence at all that this dead guy even existed, much less that he came back to life. Therefore, as it stands, you made an assertion and failed to support it. I have made no counter assertion, I've only pointed out that you've failed to prove yours. Quote:
It is your position that all four of these stories are somehow literally historically true (even the stuff that contradicts the other stuff) and my position is "prove it." I am not offering an alternative explanation for your "resurrection" event. I'm saying you have not yet proven there WAS a resurrection event. Demanding an alternative explanation for a mythological event is silly. Do you believe that Athena guided Odysseus on his way back to Ithaca? If not, then how the heck did he make it back home? Quote:
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02-28-2005, 02:31 PM | #300 | |
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