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12-10-2006, 07:15 PM | #11 | |
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Most of what you wrote I agree with, at least to a point. What you wrote above is crucial to my point on this thread. You are asserting that no evidence has been brought forward that has strengthened historicity, and are challenging me to produce that kind of evidence. All I can say is: Bravo! That is what I am talking about here. You are (according to your statement) willing to argue the case on the merits of each point. The statement with which I was disagreeing looked like it wanted to make the whole Jesus story stand in its entirety or not at all. I reject that approach, and it looks like you do too. Thanks for the response. Ben. (BTW, I do not intend to take you up on your challenge at this time. I am on record as wishing that mythicism had a slightly wider hearing than it does at present so as to bring out the best in historicist scholarship. I am presently working on a detailed argument for the historicity of Jesus that does not in any way start with the presumption that he existed, but it may be many moons before that is ready.) |
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12-10-2006, 08:00 PM | #12 | ||
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of the meaning of historicity, I have started another thread in order to attempt to understand whether or not this thing everyone is calling "historicity" may be reduced to a simple percentage value. I have attempted to explain myself there. Best wishes, Pete |
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12-11-2006, 01:16 AM | #13 | |
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Can you give examples of figures comparable to Jesus, but whom we know were not historical? Most that I can think of -- Apollonius of Tyana, Vespasian (healed a sick man, star showed him to be the Messiah), Honi the Circle Drawer -- are thought to have a historical person at their root. |
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12-11-2006, 11:39 AM | #14 | |
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But let me try some. Achilles. He has a book written about him (possibly by more than one author according to some "H-Homer" theories), but he is generally agreed to be fictional. Same with Odysseus. Icarus, Atlas, many others from the Greek mythology. Then we have the whole Norse mythology, full of fictional characters. How about Merlin? Going by Robert Price's "Of Myth and Man" article, Buddha also qualifies. I would say there is a wide range of myth with generally agreed fictional characters, some more some less like the Jesus character. I don't think we disagree about the existence of myth with fictional characters. The question, I think, is: why do you thing the Jesus story does not fall under that category? Gerard Stafleu |
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12-11-2006, 12:23 PM | #15 | |
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12-12-2006, 12:13 AM | #16 | |||
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12-12-2006, 04:41 AM | #17 | |
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To address your question I'd need to be thinking of specific cases where this is indeed the case. Do you have specific illustrations of this point in mind? It also appears from the earlier posts that you are thinking of "evidence" as if all that is called "evidence" (archaeological inscriptions and coins, writings a generation later...) is of equal value. It is integral to any historian's job to evaluate everything that is presented as 'evidence' and consider its authorship, provenance, date, genre, political and social contexts, and so forth. It may well be that a document that one culture treats as a historical verification another culture regards as a childish fiction. I am by no means a post-modernist but one does not have to be a post-modernist to appreciate the significance of first establishing genre, purpose, authorship, etc etc before drawing concrete conclusions from a document. If there are sound grounds for treating any document as fictional then one cannot simply default to treating that document as "historical evidence" of what is plausibly its most fictional contents. Historians familiar with the questions of modern history are often gob-smacked to see the near total naivety with which so many "biblical scholars" treat the scant sources of the questions of ancient "biblical-related" history. Neil Godfrey http://vridar.wordpress.com |
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12-12-2006, 05:28 AM | #18 | |||||
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It is quite probable that, in the case of Alexander, this historical core will be more robust than the historical core of a Galilean peasant, but hypothetically the process is possible in both cases. The statement to which I was responding seemed to imply that, in the case of Jesus, it was the full-blown legend or bust, right from the get-go. Quote:
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Thanks. Ben. |
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12-12-2006, 06:41 AM | #19 |
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Merlin probably has a testable historical core!
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12-12-2006, 01:22 PM | #20 |
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Yep. And if gstafleu wants to claim that Merlin and Jesus are in the same "category", and Merlin turns out to have a historical core, gstafleu should only be able to conclude that this adds credibility towards the historicity of Jesus.
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