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Old 11-08-2011, 03:37 PM   #61
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You repeatedly ask aa5874, and not K, about their first language .... was your primary university education in the humanities or the sciences?
More in the humanities - actually social science.

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Would you mind addressing the OP in the diagram?
Do you mean the diagram in the OP, which is not actually in the OP but in post 16?

How should I address it? It does not look very helpful.

You have evidences and postulates in separate boxes, which feed into a "black box theory generator" which I assume means that you don't know how the theory is formulated, that turns out conclusions. What is this supposed to illustrate? How do you test this?

You claim that the "postulates" cannot be refuted by the evidence, but otherwise it's not clear where they come from.
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Old 11-08-2011, 03:47 PM   #62
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You repeatedly ask aa5874, and not K, about their first language .... was your primary university education in the humanities or the sciences?
More in the humanities - actually social science.
Quote:
Would you mind addressing the OP in the diagram?
Do you mean the diagram in the OP, which is not actually in the OP but in post 16?

How should I address it? It does not look very helpful.

You have evidences and postulates in separate boxes, which feed into a "black box theory generator" which I assume means that you don't know how the theory is formulated, that turns out conclusions. What is this supposed to illustrate? How do you test this?

You claim that the "postulates" cannot be refuted by the evidence, but otherwise it's not clear where they come from.
I could be wrong, but I am prepared to hazard the guess that mountainman is suggesting that it is acceptable historical methodology to make up whatever story one prefers and do nothing to defend it beyond defying other people to give a mathematically certain refutation of it.

If that is not in fact the same as mountainman's position, perhaps some clarification would be in order.
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Old 11-09-2011, 04:15 PM   #63
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You have evidences and postulates in separate boxes, which feed into a "black box theory generator" which I assume means that you don't know how the theory is formulated, that turns out conclusions.
Deductive and inductive reasoning works inside the "black box theory generator" and operates on the INPUT of evidence and postulates (hypotheses) to produce output conclusions. The postulates are of two types (not represented in the diagram).

(1) Each evidence item En (which we may consider to be a registry item only) has with it associated a series of postulates (or hypotheses) not all of which may be agreed to by all the various theorists, but which neverthess effectively represent a "package" of hypothetical attributes related to each and every evidence item within the "Black Box".

(2) Additionally, general postulates (or hypotheses) are introduced into the list of postulates which are not necessarily related to the evidence items En to be discussed. In some cases these are derived from analysis of patterns in the overall evidence.

Thus deductive and inductive reasoning also works outside the "black box" in the identification, formulation, refinement and comparsion of the postulates in accordance to McCullaugh's cited analysis.

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What is this supposed to illustrate?
It illustrates that that INSIDE the "black box" at the detail level we are effectively dealing with a very very large number of detailed postulates (or hypotheses) about each item of evidence. The treatment by McCullaugh equally applies to the set of postulates which the theorist associated with each item of evidence to be discussed. The treatment by McCullaugh is not just applicable to the high level summary hypothesis. (See below). The theorists often then introduce general postulates to explain patterns in the evidence, and then at a higher meta-level summarise the theory (a massive collection of hypotheses) by one or more over-riding summary hypothesis.

It illustrates that what appears to many people on the surface as one (or a few) summary overview hypotheses (known on the surface as the theory or the major hypothesis) is in fact, under the surface, a very deep ocean of detailed hypotheses associated with the evidence, all of which are (in theory) continually compared with each other and ranked, tested against evidence, revised with new evidence, etc, etc in accordance to McCullaugh's process.


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How do you test this?
By paying attention to the detailed items of evidence, and to the series of detailed hypotheses which are directly associated with each and every item of evidence, the order of magnitude of the detail may be gauged.


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You claim that the "postulates" cannot be refuted by the evidence, but otherwise it's not clear where they come from.
Each of these postulates discussed above are invented or "supposed" by using deductive and inductive reasoning based on the evidence items and the conceptual framework of each of the theorists. The evidentiary rule that postulates cannot be refuted by the evidence essentially translates to the condition that postulates cannot be invented or supposed about the evidence items that are antithetical to postulates which are "already held to be true" about the evidence items, by the prevailing paradigm.
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Old 11-09-2011, 04:27 PM   #64
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The point about your diagram is the same as the point I’ve already made twice before and which you haven’t responded to. Your diagram does not make clear that part of the process is the abandonment of postulates whenever competing postulates produce better theories.
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I could be wrong, but I am prepared to hazard the guess that mountainman is suggesting that it is acceptable historical methodology to make up whatever story one prefers and do nothing to defend it beyond defying other people to give a mathematically certain refutation of it.

If that is not in fact the same as mountainman's position, perhaps some clarification would be in order.

See post # 63 above.
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Old 11-09-2011, 05:26 PM   #65
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The classic postulate is that Jesus was an historical figure is one of the oldest, but we have all seen the introduction of the antithetical postulate - that Jesus was not an historical figure....
The historical Jesus is NOT oldest postulate. The OLDEST Postulate is the Jesus of FAITH, Jesus the Child of a Holy Ghost and Mary.
This postulate seems to describe the hypothetical Canonical Jesus as defined by the authors of the books of canonical new testament. The century in which these books first became available for the edification of the Greek speaking citizens of the Roman empire in antiquity involves further postulates or hypotheses related to chronology.


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People ARGUED AGAINST the Jesus of FAITH.

Thank Christ.


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The HJ postulate is even a PHANTOM.
I think there is a case to be made that the HJ postulate is a non-explicit and "Hidden Postulate" resident somewhere in the mass of postulates that are required in order to make sense of the evidence involved with the history of christian origins. The same applies for the MJ postulate, which is just the antithesis of the HJ postulate. The HJ (and its antithetical MJ postulate) appear on the surface as theoretical conclusions of a vast mass of research and examination of the evidence, but appearances can sometimes be deceiving.

I have far more respect for those theorists who clearly just started with the HJ postulate as an explicit working hypothesis, than for those theorists who conjure up an HJ as a theoretical conclusion based on an extremely small and very suspicious set of evidence and an extremely vast set of postulates related specifically to those evidence items.

I am sure that there may be theorists here who disagree with me on this issue because they think that their extremely vast set of postulates related specifically to that extremely small and very suspicious set of evidence items are accurate assumptions, and that the conclusion of the HJ follows - in fact may be logically inferred - from their postulates about the evidence.
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Old 11-09-2011, 05:32 PM   #66
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...

Deductive and inductive reasoning works inside the "black box theory generator" and operates on the INPUT of evidence and postulates (hypotheses) to produce output conclusions. The postulates are of two types (not represented in the diagram).
Curiouser and curiouser.

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(1) Each evidence item En (which we may consider to be a registry item only) has with it associated a series of postulates (or hypotheses) not all of which may be agreed to by all the various theorists, but which neverthess effectively represent a "package" of hypothetical attributes related to each and every evidence item within the "Black Box".

(2) Additionally, general postulates (or hypotheses) are introduced into the list of postulates which are not necessarily related to the evidence items En to be discussed. In some cases these are derived from analysis of patterns in the overall evidence.
But then they go into the "black box" where unknown processes occur . .
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Thus deductive and inductive reasoning also works outside the "black box" in the identification, formulation, refinement and comparsion of the postulates in accordance to McCullaugh's cited analysis.
How many different definitions do you have for postulates?

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It illustrates that that INSIDE the "black box" at the detail level
Your diagram does not illustrate anything INSIDE the black box.

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we are effectively dealing with a very very large number of detailed postulates (or hypotheses) about each item of evidence. The treatment by McCullaugh equally applies to the set of postulates which the theorist associated with each item of evidence to be discussed. The treatment by McCullaugh is not just applicable to the high level summary hypothesis. (See below). The theorists often then introduce general postulates to explain patterns in the evidence, and then at a higher meta-level summarise the theory (a massive collection of hypotheses) by one or more over-riding summary hypothesis.

It illustrates that what appears to many people on the surface as one (or a few) summary overview hypotheses (known on the surface as the theory or the major hypothesis) is in fact, under the surface, a very deep ocean of detailed hypotheses associated with the evidence, all of which are (in theory) continually compared with each other and ranked, tested against evidence, revised with new evidence, etc, etc in accordance to McCullaugh's process.
No, that is not how McCullaugh's process works. It operates at a high level only.

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By paying attention to the detailed items of evidence, and to the series of detailed hypotheses which are directly associated with each and every item of evidence, the order of magnitude of the detail may be gauged.
Is there any information in this sentence? If you pay attention to the details, you pay attention to the details?

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You claim that the "postulates" cannot be refuted by the evidence, but otherwise it's not clear where they come from.
Each of these postulates discussed above are invented or "supposed" by using deductive and inductive reasoning based on the evidence items and the conceptual framework of each of the theorists. The evidentiary rule that postulates cannot be refuted by the evidence essentially translates to the condition that postulates cannot be invented or supposed about the evidence items that are antithetical to postulates which are "already held to be true" about the evidence items, by the prevailing paradigm.
:constern02:

Have you said anything here at all? Yes, theories are based on evidence, the evidence needs to be evaluated as to its trustworthiness and relevance.

Are you trying to confuse or clarify things? What conclusions would you draw from this?
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Old 11-09-2011, 05:40 PM   #67
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Yeah, but back then it was taken for granted that gods, angels, demons, ghosts, spirits, goats, donkeys and whatever else, could knock-up a women, and cause them to give birth to various types of monstrosities, such as the Nephilim giants.

Men were likewise thought be in danger from night visits by the 'succubus's' who could drain their 'spirits' from their bodies (most likely their foolish explanation for their 'wet dreams' and nocturnal emissions)
With this kind of a religious and 'scientific' background these ancient people were wide open to believing all kinds of stupid horse-shit and taking it dead seriously.

They had no problem at all with the idea that a 'holy ghost' humping young Mary's bones could actually produce viable physical offspring.
The idea would never have even been thought of as being made up out of myth to these primitives, but just another real fact of their daily lives.

We read their elaborate and sophisticated sounding NT religious works, and often tend to forget just how ignorant, how uneducated, how superstitious, and how primitive most of this ancient society really was.

A zombie living-dead Jebus would not have been all that remarkable, as their ancient religious texts, and their sages/shaman had plenty of tales about dead people coming back to life, along with many promises that they also would, thus they were fully primed and inclined by both their religion and superstitious traditions to receive such information (and urban gossip) as being factual.
Thanks for pointing out a few of the "negative postulates" Shesh.

We might say they enjoyed (if they were lucky) a different conceptual framework of reality.


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And when such was promulgated by erudite and respected religious 'Holy' authority figures such as the apostles or 'Paul', it was accounted as being of the 'sacred' mysteries, and 'Holy' facts beyond any hard-working, pious, right-thinking common man or woman's right to question.

Emperor worship and cult was part of this "brainwashing". The argument from authority was a very pragmatic logical construct with plenty of weight behind it. The common people could often see the "logic" in adherance to the argument from authority.


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They simply could not realize that they were being fed a line of woo. Because this type of woo was integral to their primitive culture, those cultural paradigms that they had been fully indoctrinated into right from infancy.

What's changed Shesh?



Pete
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Old 11-09-2011, 05:48 PM   #68
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Your diagram does not illustrate anything INSIDE the black box.
We may assume that deductive and inductive reasoning occurs INSIDE the black box, and operates on whatever is INPUT to the box, which is mainly postulates about the evidence items.

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we are effectively dealing with a very very large number of detailed postulates (or hypotheses) about each item of evidence. The treatment by McCullaugh equally applies to the set of postulates which the theorist associated with each item of evidence to be discussed. The treatment by McCullaugh is not just applicable to the high level summary hypothesis. (See below). The theorists often then introduce general postulates to explain patterns in the evidence, and then at a higher meta-level summarise the theory (a massive collection of hypotheses) by one or more over-riding summary hypothesis.

It illustrates that what appears to many people on the surface as one (or a few) summary overview hypotheses (known on the surface as the theory or the major hypothesis) is in fact, under the surface, a very deep ocean of detailed hypotheses associated with the evidence, all of which are (in theory) continually compared with each other and ranked, tested against evidence, revised with new evidence, etc, etc in accordance to McCullaugh's process.
No, that is not how McCullaugh's process works. It operates at a high level only.
My claim is that McCullaugh's process operates at both the high level and at the detailed level. At the high level it operates for those high-level hypotheses by which the theorist draws together out of the entire work one or more high level hypotheses (which at this end become synonymous with theories). At the detailed level it can be seen to operate on the series of hypotheses which are associated with each and every detailed item of evidence.

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Quote:
By paying attention to the detailed items of evidence, and to the series of detailed hypotheses which are directly associated with each and every item of evidence, the order of magnitude of the detail may be gauged.
Is there any information in this sentence? If you pay attention to the details, you pay attention to the details?
We all know the devil lives in the details. In theories related to the historical appearance of Christian origins we need to take very particular care to deal with the devil in the details. We dont want to get surprised by the inadequacy of our own conceptual framework and our postulates regarding the evidence itself.



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Are you trying to confuse or clarify things?

Clarify.


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What conclusions would you draw from this?
From post # 65, in response to aa5874, I think there is a case to be made that the HJ is not a theoretical conclusion as such, but a postulate which a non-explicit --- a "Hidden Postulate" --- resident somewhere in the mass of postulates that are required in order to make sense of the evidence involved with the history of christian origins. For more detail see above #65.
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Old 11-09-2011, 06:03 PM   #69
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...

My claim is that McCullaugh's process operates at both the high level and at the detailed level. At the high level it operates for those high-level hypotheses by which the theorist draws together out of the entire work one or more high level hypotheses (which at this end become synonymous with theories). At the detailed level it can be seen to operate on the series of hypotheses which are associated with each and every detailed item of evidence.
McCullaugh's set of criteria are used for testing models where we do not have good evidence, and we need to decide which model best explains what evidence we do have.


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.. I think there is a case to be made that the HJ is not a theoretical conclusion as such, but a postulate which a non-explicit --- a "Hidden Postulate" --- resident somewhere in the mass of postulates that are required in order to make sense of the evidence involved with the history of christian origins. For more detail see above #65.
For some scholars, the Historical Jesus is explicitly an assumption. For others, it is a conclusion based on the evidence, such as it is.

I don't think that this thread has clarified anything.
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Old 11-09-2011, 06:16 PM   #70
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...

My claim is that McCullaugh's process operates at both the high level and at the detailed level. At the high level it operates for those high-level hypotheses by which the theorist draws together out of the entire work one or more high level hypotheses (which at this end become synonymous with theories). At the detailed level it can be seen to operate on the series of hypotheses which are associated with each and every detailed item of evidence.
McCullaugh's set of criteria are used for testing models where we do not have good evidence, and we need to decide which model best explains what evidence we do have.
My claim is that is can be also applied to each and every individual item of evidence which is to be introduced into the argument. Take any item of evidence for example. Looking carefully at the detail, associated with any item are a series theoretical hypotheses or postulates.

For example take an epigraphic item "Inscription of Abercius" or a fragmentary manuscript item such as P.Oxy. 3035. Associated with these two example items of evidence is a vast series of discussion which is resolvable to a list of postulates or hypotheses held about that one single item.

My claim is that McCullaugh's set of criteria are also used for testing models of the hypotheses which are put forward to deal with each separate item of evidence. Its equivalent to the microcosm and the macrocosm working with the one set of criteria.



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Quote:
.. I think there is a case to be made that the HJ is not a theoretical conclusion as such, but a postulate which a non-explicit --- a "Hidden Postulate" --- resident somewhere in the mass of postulates that are required in order to make sense of the evidence involved with the history of christian origins. For more detail see above #65.
For some scholars, the Historical Jesus is explicitly an assumption.
For others, it is a conclusion based on the evidence, such as it is.

I don't think that this thread has clarified anything.
Perhaps it has not clarified anything in your mind, but I cannot really speak for others. The discussion has certainly clarified some things for me, for which I am thankful.


BTW, how do those scholars who treat the HJ as an assumption view the attempts of the other scholars to reconstruct an HJ as a conclusion based on the evidence, such as it is? And vice versa? Do you happen to know?
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