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10-20-2006, 04:13 PM | #41 | |||
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Do we believe that Pythagoras, Plato, Alexander the Great, and Augustus Caesar had gods as their biological fathers? That is what biographers like Iamblichus, Diogenes Laertius, Plutarch, and Suetonius had claimed about them, or at least had mentioned such claims about them. Quote:
There are both multiple sources and archeological evidence that one can check against; in some cases, one can even date archeological remains. So we can be confident that Alexander the Great was not only real, but that he did what he was described as doing, even though he is the sort of person who tends to attract myths to himself. And myths he did attract, like his biological father being Zeus and the temple of Artemis in Ephesus burning down when he was born because he would become a great disaster for Asia. Alexander the Great was described as having made it into India, and what Greek historians like Arrian describe of it agrees fairly well with what we know directly of India. King Sandracottus -- Chandragupta The priestly caste of Brachmanes -- Brahmans Several other castes, each with different occupational specialties Gymnosophists ("naked philosophers") -- ascetic mystics Quote:
So if there was a historical Jesus Christ, that part of the Gospels' description of him is likely unhistorical. |
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10-20-2006, 04:16 PM | #42 | ||||||||||
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We are dealing with textual analysis in a number of different aspects. Quote:
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I think you are being willful in your efforts to undermine Alexander for your own religio-tendentious purposes. Quote:
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spin |
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10-20-2006, 04:46 PM | #43 | ||
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You've shown a good reason why one should be careful when using Wiki in that one needs to know something about the subject to be able to criticise the material before citing it. a procuratorship was a more formal way of denoting a prefect’s authority to governA procurator was an imperial appointment. A prefect was a military appointment. Procurators were answerable to the emperor. Pilate was answerable to the Syrian legate. Procurators had financial control over their province while Judea's finances were handled by Syria. Your selected citation from Wiki is actually misinformation. The upgrading of the province of Judea took place under the reign of Claudius. Tacitus in forms us in H.5.9 The kings were either dead, or reduced to insignificance, when Claudius entrusted the province of Judaea to the Roman Knights or to his own freedmen, one of whom, Antonius Felix, indulging in every kind of barbarity and lust, exercised the power of a king in the spirit of a slave.Tacitus wrote the Histories before the Annals, so we can see that he had a clear understanding of the political administration of Judea at the time he wrote about Nero. Entrusting Judea into the hands of equestrians and royal freed men puts Judea's finances directly into the hands of the province's administration, ie into the hands of procurators and no longer in the hands of the Syrian legate. Quote:
spin |
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10-20-2006, 07:18 PM | #44 |
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Thanks, spin. I absolutely love watching you slice through others arguments like a hot knife through butter!
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10-20-2006, 07:23 PM | #45 | ||
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To begin with, there was no such a thing as an imperial appointment as opposed to a military one. Military appointments were either imperial or senatorial, though it is true that procuratorship was always an imperial appointment. But the theory that Pilate was answerable to the Syrian legate is an invention of yours. Philo, in his Embassy to Gaius, calls Pilate “one of the emperor’s lieutenants” (31:299), and he complains of Pilate’s behavior to Gaius Norbanus Flaccus, a former consul but for the time being without an official post, while the sons of the King of Judea complain to Tiberius, with full success, rather than to the Syrian legate. All this quite strongly suggests that Pilate was answerable to the emperor and that his post was an imperial appointment. Quote:
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10-20-2006, 08:37 PM | #46 | |||||||
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Do you know of evidence in classical sources for procurators who were in charge of provinces before the time of Claudius? I would be interested in that. spin |
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10-20-2006, 09:04 PM | #47 | ||
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Now, I find Ynquirer persuasive. But you’ve solidly stated your own case that there is no basis for belief in an historical Jesus. As Xaxxat has said, “You slice through our arguments like a hot knife through butter.” So you’ve peaked my interest. I’m intrigued by your position. I read what the Internet tells me about these sources (I seem to have found the same translations). I’ve hit Wiki. I’ve linked to the sites they cite. But I’m ready to move beyond the Internet. So that was why I asked if you could direct me to a scholar who has conducted the same independent research as yourself, backed by the education of an ancient historian with the ability that gives to review the sources in their original language and context, someone who has published peer-reviewed work (I don’t dispute your position on “popular” historians; I don’t want someone trying to hit the top ranks on Amazon like a Strobel—though I enjoy his books, I don’t put him in the peer-reviewed, academic scholar category). Let me give you an example of why for me (not a scholar) the original source approach alone doesn’t work: Ynquirer points out that Pilate could have been both procurator and prefect. You hot-knife back that Pilate answered to the Syrian Legate. Ynquirer ripostes that Pilate was buddies with the emperor (paraphrasing). Now me, I know just enough to be dangerous. Pilate served longer than usual for a prefect. Tiberius didn’t put a legate in Syria for the first six years of Pilate’s term. But this simply makes my head spin when I try to analyze your respective positions. I suddenly feel like the “What Should I Do Retard” on Yahoo Answers. What does it mean? Do I go back to Crosson? He’s readable. But then I just regurgitate support for my own position (disputes prophecy-remembered Jesus, argues some form of historical Jesus). But that’s not growth. So I’d rather dive into some weighty academic tome that debunks the historical Jesus (though I enjoy your and Ynquirer’s debates, I don’t’ feel comfortable relying on either of you as my “reliable source.” Quote:
"Alexander the Great, Caesar Augustus, Cyrus, King Arthur, and others have nearly suffered this fate. What keeps historians from dismissing them as mere myths, like Paul Bunyan, is that there is some residue." God bless, Laura |
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10-20-2006, 09:53 PM | #48 | |||||
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One of the most important issues I believe that should come out of participation in this forum is that good methodology is the fundamental issue for much of the discussion. We may not follow it at times, but it is our aim. We try to say what we can show (and by show we mean from the primary sources as best as we can access them). spin |
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10-20-2006, 11:07 PM | #49 | |
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But in many (most? all?) cases of known legendary figures, the conclusions you would draw from such an analysis are patently false. For example, if we analyze Santa using such a standard, we would conclude that he was a real man who really wore a red suit and distributed gifts via a reighndeer drawn sleigh. He lived in the arctic circle, and he had a team of individuals he paid to manufacture toys all year long. He must have been quite wealthy to afford all this. We would reject the part about the sleigh flying, and we would reject the magical aspects about going up and down chimneys, but the other details would stay because they are reasonable. But if we are to accept the history of St. Nick as presented by the Catholic church, not one shred of our conclusions are correct. The moral is that once you transition from mostly historical to mostly legend and myth, there is no longer anything conclusive you can claim, not even the existence of the individual in question. |
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10-20-2006, 11:30 PM | #50 | ||
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